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โ˜ฎSattvic & ISKCON ยท Yogic food traditions

Sattvic cooking โ€” food as spiritual practice

No onion, no garlic, gently spiced, freshly cooked. The Ayurvedic food philosophy and ISKCON prasadam tradition โ€” where the act of cooking is as important as the eating.

Food as spiritual practice

Sattvic cooking is the Ayurvedic food philosophy โ€” pure, fresh, mildly spiced, freshly cooked. No onion, no garlic (rajasic foods that agitate the mind), no heavily processed ingredients. ISKCON (Hare Krishna) follows a closely related tradition โ€” prasadam cooking where food is prepared as an offering, producing a meditative quality in both the cooking and the eating.

The flavour approach in sattvic cooking is gentle โ€” warming spices (cumin, coriander, turmeric, ginger, cardamom) rather than aggressive heat. The result is subtler and more aromatic than standard Indian cooking, with a clarity of individual flavours that heavily spiced dishes do not produce.

โ˜ฎ The sattvic flavour approach

Sattvic food avoids anything that strongly stimulates the senses. No onion, no garlic, no excessive chilli. Warming spices are used gently โ€” cumin, coriander, turmeric and ginger provide depth without aggression. Fresh ingredients, freshly cooked. Asafoetida (hing) is used by some sattvic cooks โ€” it is not uniformly avoided. Marked optional throughout.


Gentle, fresh, complete