Anupāna and the Doṣa-Effects of Foods, Waters, Dairy, Oils, and Preparations
वातानुलोमनी लघ्वी पेया वस्तिविशोधनी / सतक्रदाडिमव्योषा सगुडा मधुपिप्पली
vātānulomanī laghvī peyā vastiviśodhanī / satakradāḍimavyoṣā saguḍā madhupippalī
La peyā (bouillie claire de riz) est légère ; elle remet vāta dans son mouvement descendant et purifie la vessie et les voies urinaires. Préparée avec babeurre, grenade et la triade piquante (gingembre sec, poivre noir, poivre long), puis mêlée de jaggery, de miel et de pippalī, elle devient tout particulièrement bénéfique.
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Dosha: Vata
Concept: Saṃyoga (proper combination) enhances efficacy; gentle foods can become targeted medicine through intelligent additions.
Vedantic Theme: Skill in action (kauśala): applying knowledge to daily acts like eating as a form of disciplined living.
Application: Use light peyā for vāta regulation and urinary cleansing; enhance with takra, dāḍima, trikaṭu, plus guḍa, madhu, and pippalī as indicated (and as tolerated).
Primary Rasa: shanta
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.169 (peyā/maṇḍa/pāyasa/kṛśarā formulations and doṣa effects)
This verse treats proper vāta movement as key to health; peyā is praised for restoring vāta’s normal flow and preventing digestive and eliminative imbalance.
It lists specific additives—takra, dāḍima, vyoṣa, plus guda, madhu, and pippalī—indicating a targeted, medicinal-style porridge rather than plain food.
Use light, spice-balanced gruels to support digestion and elimination, and avoid heavy meals when vāta or digestive irregularity is present.