What We Lost When We Stopped Eating With the Seasons
For most of human history, people ate according to what the land naturally provided at different times of year. Spring greens appear briefly after winter. Summer brings abundance...
For most of human history, people ate according to what the land naturally provided at different times of year. Spring greens appear briefly after winter. Summer brings abundance...
For most of human history, people ate according to what the land naturally provided at different times of year.
Spring greens appear briefly after winter. Summer brings abundance and sweetness. Autumn offers grounding foods and preservation. Winter encourages slower, heartier meals.
Food was deeply connected to climate, migration, sunlight, rainfall, and local ecosystems.
Today, many people can eat the same foods every day of the year regardless of season. Imported produce from across the world and ultra-processed snacks are the go-to.
Eating seasonally naturally created dietary diversity.
Different plants emerged throughout the year, bringing changing nutrients, fibers, antioxidants, and flavours. Seasonal eating also created appreciation and mindfulness around food.
Traditional cultures frequently observed that foods appearing in certain seasons complemented the body’s changing needs.
Examples include:
These patterns supported digestion, immunity, hydration, and energy in ways people intuitively understood long before nutritional science existed.
In warmer weather, the body naturally loses more fluids and electrolytes through sweating. Appetite also tends to shift toward lighter, fresher meals.
Traditional summer diets often included:
These foods tend to feel hydrating, mineral-rich, and energising during hotter months.
Summer is also a time when gardens and local markets become more abundant and colourful, therefore, meals naturally become brighter and more plant-diverse.
In colder weather, people have traditionally gravitated toward slower-cooked, grounding meals that provide warmth and satiety.
Winter diets often centered around:
These meals often contain more cooked foods, which many people find easier to digest during colder seasons.
There is also something emotionally comforting about warm seasonal meals during darker, colder months.
Spring has long been associated with renewal in traditional herbal systems. After the heaviness and slower rhythms of winter, many cultures welcomed spring with bitter greens, cleansing herbs, lighter meals, and increased movement.
This seasonal transition naturally supported digestion, bile flow, and the body’s own detoxification processes.
Today, you can continue these traditions through practices like eating more greens, drinking herbal teas, and incorporating supportive formulas such as Jennah Organics Liver Cleanse into their spring wellness routines.
When people eat more seasonally, they often become more aware of:
Seasonality creates relationship and reminds us that nourishment is part of an ecological system rather than something that simply appears on shelves.
Seasonal eating does not need to become rigid or extreme, even small shifts can reconnect you to natural rhythms, like:
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