HOW TO TELL IF FOOD IS MORE YANG OR MORE YIN
By Dr. Lawrence Wilson
© July 2016, L.D.
Wilson Consultants, Inc.
All information in this article is for
educational purposes only. It is
not for the diagnosis, treatment, prescription or cure of any disease or health
condition.
The two charts below explain how the yang and yin qualities of foods are determined.
________________________________
CHART #1
This chart shows the
general order of yang to yin of foods.
The most yang foods are at the top, and the most yin foods are at the
bottom:
THE FOOD LIST
(most yang at the top and most yin at the bottom)
Eggs
Red meat
Poultry
Fish
Shellfish
Cooked whole grains
Cooked root vegetables
Cooked cruciferous vegetables
Cooked leafy green vegetables
Raw vegetables or salads
Nightshade vegetables (tomato, potato, eggplant and peppers) and vegetables that are really fruits (squashes, cucumber, okra, and pumpkin)
Most herbs
Northern, and smaller-sized fruit
Tropical fruit (mango, papaya and others)
Sub-tropical Fruit (coconut, dates, figs)
Most drinking water
Alcohol
Drugs, including marijuana
_________________________________
CHART #2
This chart goes into much more detail about what determines the yang or yin qualities of a food. On the left are types of foods. The middle column gives the most yang qualities of them, and right column shows the most yin qualities of these foods.
FOOD TYPE |
MORE YANG QUALITY |
MORE YIN QUALITY |
IN GENERAL |
|
|
Inner and outer qualities |
Harder outside, soft inside |
Softer outside, and hard inside |
Source |
Eggs, animal foods |
Plant foods, fruit is most yin |
Color |
Red, black |
White, light blue, green |
Density |
Hard, compact, contracted, more dense |
Softer, expanded, fluffy, light weight, low density |
Size |
Smaller |
Larger |
Preparation |
Cooked |
Raw |
Preparation |
Fresh |
Old, canned |
Cooking |
High Pressure (pressure-cooking) |
Lower pressure |
Cooking |
Longer cooking time |
Shorter cooking time |
MEATS/EGGS |
|
|
Type |
Mammal, bird, fish |
Reptile, bug |
Movement |
Faster |
Slower |
Shell |
Yes, and thicker |
No, or soft |
Personality |
Happy |
Angry, sad |
Where grown |
Colder climate |
Warmer climate |
Speed of growth |
Slow |
Faster |
Toxicity |
Low |
Higher |
Taste |
Starchy, bitter |
Sweet, pungent, sour |
Ether content |
Higher |
Lower |
Souls (number) |
More |
Fewer |
Water content |
Less, drier |
More, wetter or moist |
GRAIN |
|
|
Type |
Grasses |
Other, seeds, etc. |
Cook time |
Longer |
Shorter |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Way of eating |
Whole |
Fractionated, flour, flakes, cut |
VEGETABLES |
|
|
Growth location |
Underground |
Above (higher is more yin) |
Part |
Root |
Stem and leaf most yin |
Type of root |
Vertical or tap |
Tuber or bulbous |
LEGUMES |
|
|
Form |
Whole beans, pressure cooking |
Sprouts |
FRUITS (ovaries) |
|
|
Number of seeds |
More |
Fewer |
Sweetness |
More |
Less |
Seed location |
Outside |
Inside |
Seed size |
Smaller |
Larger |
Seed hardness |
Harder |
Softer |
FATS/OILS |
|
|
Saturation |
Saturated, solid |
Unsaturated, liquid |
Source |
Animal (egg yolk, then beef fat, then chicken fat, then sardine, then butter, then cream) |
Vegetable, especially fruit oils (coconut, palm) |
OTHER |
|
|
Sea vegetables |
Kelp (kombu), wakame |
Dulse or Irish moss, hijiki |
Algae |
|
All, and not recommended |
Yeast |
|
All |
Herbs |
Coffee, ginger, curry, garlic, sea salt, dandelion |
Most all other herbs are quite yin |
DRINKING WATER |
|
|
Mineral content |
Higher |
Lower, reverse osmosis, distilled |
Acidity |
More Acidic |
More alkaline |
Bond angle |
Smaller |
Larger |
Ability to hydrate |
Excellent |
Not as good |
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