Anupāna and the Doṣa-Effects of Foods, Waters, Dairy, Oils, and Preparations
रक्तिपित्तहरा वृष्या सस्नेहा गडशर्करा / सर्वपित्तकरं मद्यमम्लत्वात्कफवातजित्
raktipittaharā vṛṣyā sasnehā gaḍaśarkarā / sarvapittakaraṃ madyamamlatvātkaphavātajit
گھی کے ساتھ تیار کی گئی شکر رکت پِتّ (خون بہنے کے عوارض) اور پِتّ کو شانت کرتی ہے، سنیگدھ اور مُقوّیِ باہ بھی مانی گئی ہے۔ مگر مَدیہ اپنی ترشی کے سبب ہر قسم کے پِتّ کو بڑھاتا ہے، اگرچہ کَف اور وات کو دباتا ہے۔
Lord Vishnu (in instruction to Garuda/Vinata-putra)
Dosha: Mixed
Concept: Moderation and context: nourishing preparations can heal, while intoxicants—though doṣa-reducing in one axis—can aggravate deeper imbalance.
Vedantic Theme: Indriya-nigraha (sense restraint) supports sattva; avoid what inflames rajas/tamas and bodily heat.
Application: Use ghṛta-yukta śarkarā judiciously for pitta/raktapitta weakness; avoid or strictly limit madya in pitta-prakopa, acidity, bleeding tendencies.
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: bhayanaka
Related Themes: Garuda Purana 1.169 (discussion of madya, fermented drinks, and pathya preparations)
This verse links diet to doṣa-balance, warning that sour alcoholic drinks strongly increase pitta, which is associated with heat and bleeding-type disorders.
It states that alcohol (madyam) is pitta-provoking due to acidity, even though it may reduce kapha and vāta—showing a doṣa-specific, not universally beneficial, effect.
If one is prone to acidity, inflammation, or bleeding tendencies, avoid sour alcohol and favor mild, unctuous, cooling foods under proper guidance.