Latest Updates
-
Bharti Singh Welcomes Second Son: Joyous News for the Comedian and Her Family -
Gold & Silver Rates Today in India: 22K, 24K, 18K & MCX Prices Fall After Continuous Rally; Check Latest Gold Rates in Chennai, Mumbai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, Ahmedabad & Other Cities on 19 December -
Nick Jonas Dancing to Dhurandhar’s “Shararat” Song Goes Viral -
From Consciousness To Cosmos: Understanding Reality Through The Vedic Lens -
The Sunscreen Confusion: Expert Explains How to Choose What Actually Works in Indian Weather -
On Goa Liberation Day 2025, A Look At How Freedom Shaped Goa Into A Celebrity-Favourite Retreat -
Daily Horoscope, Dec 19, 2025: Libra to Pisces; Astrological Prediction for all Zodiac Signs -
Paush Amavasya 2025: Do These Most Powerful Rituals For Closure On The Final Amavasya Of The Year -
As The Last New Moon Of 2025 Approaches, Make A Wish Based On Your Rising Sign -
Throwback Thursday: This Aishwarya Rai Lookalike Had A 'Lucky' Debut But Not So Lucky Bollywood Career!
Feeling Sluggish This Monsoon? These 3 Soups Might Be Just What Your Body Needs
Monsoon isn't gentle on the body. The damp air messes with digestion, the fluctuating temperatures strain your immunity, and your appetite swings from ravenous to non-existent. It's a time when you feel bloated, the gut gets sluggish, and your system is more vulnerable to infections.
Ayurveda offers a simple but effective answer: soups. Not the thick, creamy kind that leaves you feeling heavy. But brothy, warm, lightly spiced ones that comfort and cleanse at the same time. Below are three Ayurvedic soups suggested by Nutritionist Shweta Shah that do more than just warm you up. Each one supports immunity, aids digestion, and calms seasonal imbalances.
1. Carrot And Ginger Soup
For when you need something light, bright, and gut-friendly.
This soup brings together the natural sweetness of carrots with the gentle fire of ginger and the digestive magic of fennel. It's perfect after a heavy meal, during recovery, or when you want something light but nourishing.
What You'll Need
- 2 medium carrots, chopped and steamed
- ½ inch piece of fresh ginger
- ½ teaspoon fennel seeds (saunf)
- 1 tsp ghee or sesame oil
- Rock salt, to taste
- Black pepper (optional)
- 1.5 cups water or thin vegetable broth
How To Make It
Start by dry-roasting the fennel seeds until they release a warm, sweet aroma. In a separate pan, heat ghee or sesame oil and sauté freshly chopped ginger for about a minute. Add in the steamed carrots and stir for another minute. Pour in the water or broth along with the roasted fennel seeds. Let everything simmer together for 5-7 minutes.
Transfer the mixture to a blender and purée until smooth. You can strain it if you prefer a silky texture. Season with rock salt and optional black pepper. A dash of lime just before serving takes it up a notch.
2. Ash Gourd And Curry Leaf Soup
Clean, light, and perfect for cooling down internal heat.
Ash gourd is cooling without being cold. That's important in Ayurveda, especially during the monsoon, when excess humidity can trigger acidity, puffiness, or skin issues. Curry leaves, ginger, and pepper cut through the blandness and help with digestion.
What You'll Need
- 1.5 cups ash gourd (peeled, deseeded, chopped)
- 5-6 fresh curry leaves
- ½ inch grated ginger
- ½ tsp crushed black pepper
- 1 tsp ghee or coconut oil
- Rock salt, to taste
- 1.5 cups water
How To Make It
Boil the ash gourd until tender - it should break apart easily with a spoon. In a pan, warm up some ghee or coconut oil, toss in the curry leaves, grated ginger, and black pepper. Once they release their aroma, add the cooked ash gourd and sauté everything for a couple of minutes.
Blend the mix with water until smooth. Return it to the stove, let it simmer briefly, and add rock salt to taste. This soup is mild, hydrating, and surprisingly satisfying - especially when you feel overheated or bloated.
3. Pumpkin Tridoshic Soup
Balancing, grounding, and surprisingly indulgent.
This one's built to balance all three doshas making it ideal for any body type, especially during seasonal transitions. Pumpkin provides earthy sweetness, nutmeg calms the nervous system, and coconut milk (if you choose to add it) brings creaminess without heaviness.
What You'll Need
- 1.5 cups steamed pumpkin (cubed)
- 4-5 curry leaves
- A pinch of nutmeg
- ½ tsp black pepper
- 1 tsp desi cow ghee
- ¼ cup coconut milk (optional)
- Rock salt, to taste
- Warm water, as needed
How To Make It
Steam the pumpkin until completely soft. In a pan, heat ghee and toss in the curry leaves and pepper. Let them crackle and infuse the fat with flavour. Add the steamed pumpkin and cook it together for a couple of minutes.
Transfer to a blender with enough warm water to reach your desired consistency. Once smooth, return it to the pan. Stir in a pinch of nutmeg and coconut milk if using. Simmer gently for two minutes and serve with a drizzle of ghee on top.
Why These Soups Make Sense In The Monsoon
Monsoon isn't the time to overload your system with dense, rich foods. Your body is already working harder to adjust to the moisture and unpredictability. These soups strike a balance - warm enough to aid digestion, light enough to avoid bloating, and spiced just enough to keep immunity in check.
Ginger, fennel, curry leaves, pepper stimulate digestion, regulate fluid retention, and support your respiratory system. The ingredients are simple, but their effects are layered and intelligent.
Comfort food isn't always about indulgence sometimes, it's about care. These Ayurvedic soups offer just that. Whether you're feeling foggy, run down, or just in need of something grounding, these bowls give your body what it needs without overwhelming it.
As the rain pours outside, these are the kinds of meals that quietly help you stay balanced inside.
Boldsky - Get breaking news alerts. Subscribe to Boldsky.



Click it and Unblock the Notifications















