Hello December: An Ayurvedic Guide to Winter Nourishment
December invites us to slow down, nourish deeply, and realign with nature’s winter rhythm. Discover three simple Ayurvedic shifts—warm foods, earlier evenings, and more oils—to support digestion, immunity, and grounding all month long.
As December arrives, the world naturally begins to slow. The air grows colder, the evenings stretch longer, and nature invites us inward. According to Ayurveda, this shift into deeper winter is not something to brace against—it’s something to honor.
December is the beginning of Vata season, a time marked by more dryness, lightness, cold, and movement. These qualities impact the body and mind in subtle but powerful ways: digestion can weaken, sleep may feel lighter, stress can increase, and skin becomes more dry and sensitive.
But with a few intentional adjustments, winter becomes one of the most restorative, grounding seasons of the year.
Below are three simple Ayurvedic shifts you can begin right now to support your body, mind, and energy through December and beyond.
1. Warm Your Food and Drinks
In winter, your digestive fire—agni—needs more warmth and support.
Cold smoothies, iced drinks, and raw salads dampen digestion and increase Vata, leading to bloating, gas, constipation, and feeling “off.”
Instead, December is the month to lean into:
Nourishing soups and stews
Roasted root vegetables
Golden milk and herbal teas
Warm water throughout the day
Warming spices like ginger, cinnamon, cumin, clove, and cardamom
This single change alone resets your gut, strengthens immunity, and keeps energy steady.
2. Embrace Earlier Evenings
Winter naturally calls us to rest more.
When the sun sets earlier, our bodies follow suit—if we let them.
Supporting your evening rhythm might look like:
Dimming lights after dark
Slowing your pace in the evening
Turning screens off 30–60 minutes before bed
Drinking a warm, calming tea
Going to bed between 9:30–10:00 pm
When we honor this slower winter rhythm, we feel more grounded, more present, and more rested—not just in the body, but in the mind.
3. Add More Oils (Inside & Out)
December dryness is real—for your skin, your sinuses, your digestion, and even your mood.
Ayurveda teaches that oiling the body creates warmth, lubrication, nourishment, and stability.
Here are a few ways to bring more oils in:
Abhyanga: a warm sesame oil self-massage before your shower
Ghee: add 1 tsp to meals for deeper nourishment
Nasya: a drop of warm sesame oil in each nostril to soothe dryness
Oiling the feet before bed: promotes sleep, calm, and grounding
These small rituals strengthen ojas—your vital life force—and help carry you through winter with resilience.
A Season for Nourishment, Not Perfection
You don’t need a full routine overhaul to feel better this winter.
You only need small, steady shifts that match the season.
Let December be the month you move a little slower, nourish a little deeper, and return to the warmth within yourself.
If you found this helpful, save it for later or share it with someone who could use a little grounding right now. And if you want guided winter support, stay tuned for my January cleanse + reset offerings designed to bring your body and mind into harmony for the new year.
Wishing you a beautifully nourishing start to the season.
🤍 Jennifer | Golden Veda Collective
Kids’ Thanksgiving Snack, Ayurvedic-Style
A simple Ayurvedic kids’ snack plate you can make in under a minute during the busy Thanksgiving week. Grounding, digestion-friendly, and perfect for little nervous systems during an overstimulating holiday season. No cooking required — just warm, sweet, Vata-calming foods kids love.
A simple, grounding snack plate for little ones during a very overstimulating week.
Thanksgiving week is beautiful… and let’s be honest, it’s a lot for kids.
The excitement.
The extra people.
The noise.
The travel.
The sugar.
The emotions.
And in true Vata-season fashion, little nervous systems can get tired, overstimulated, and hungry every 45 minutes — even when there’s a giant holiday meal coming.
This year, instead of stressing about kid-friendly appetizers or complicated snack boards, I leaned on something Ayurvedic, simple, and calm:
✨ A Kids’ Thanksgiving Snack Plate, Ayurvedic-style. ✨
Zero cooking.
Zero prep.
Just warm, grounding, digestion-friendly foods that help steady their little bodies (and moods) before the big meal.
Let’s make this easy — for all of us.
🌿 Why Ayurvedic Snacks Work So Well for Kids
Ayurveda teaches that children have very sensitive digestion. Their Agni (digestive fire) is still developing, and during busy holiday weeks, it can easily get thrown off by:
too much cold food
too many different flavors at once
too much sugar
eating while distracted
long gaps between meals
Warm, simple, sweet, grounding snacks help balance Vata and keep their digestion steady — which means better moods, easier transitions, and fewer post-meal meltdowns.
🍎 Ayurvedic Snack Ideas You Can Make in 30 Seconds
These require zero cooking and you likely already have everything on hand.
🍏 1. Apple Slices + Cinnamon
Cinnamon boosts digestion, warms Vata, and adds sweetness without adding sugar.
🍊 2. Mandarin Orange Segments + Raisins
Easy to digest, sweet, full of prana, and grounding.
🍚 3. Rice Cake + Warm Applesauce
Soothing, comforting, and gentle on little bellies.
🥛 4. Warm Milk with a Dash of Cinnamon
A classic Ayurvedic calming drink — perfect for overstimulated kiddos.
💛 Why These Snacks Help Kids Feel Better
Each snack supports digestion and the nervous system:
Warm foods calm Vata
Sweet taste soothes the senses
Cinnamon boosts Agni
Simple foods digest easily
Familiar flavors bring comfort
And most importantly?
They help bridge the gap before holiday meals without overstimulating or overfilling them.
✨ Make It Cute (Optional)
If you want to make it feel festive:
Use a tiny Thanksgiving-themed plate
Add one cinnamon stick to the side
Cut apples into thin “leaf” shapes
Add a sprinkle of nutmeg to applesauce
Use a warm-toned napkin for the aesthetic
But truly — these snacks don’t need anything fancy.
Kids don’t need Pinterest perfection.
They need nourishment they can actually digest.
🧡 Why This Matters More Than We Think
Holidays create big feelings in little bodies.
Keeping their digestion balanced helps keep their emotions balanced, too.
A grounded belly = a grounded mood.
A warm snack = a calmer child.
Simple food = less overwhelm.
And for moms?
It’s one less thing to stress about.
Wishing you and your little ones a calm, cozy, Vata-balanced holiday week.
🤎🍂
Ayurvedic Sweet Potato Side Dish (Thanksgiving Edition)
A warm, grounding Ayurvedic sweet potato side dish made with cinnamon, ginger, cardamom, and ghee. This easy, digestion-friendly recipe brings a sattvic twist to the traditional Thanksgiving table. Gentle on the belly, nourishing, and perfect for fall gatherings.
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Ayurvedic Sweet Potato Side Dish for Thanksgiving (Warm + Grounding)
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A Grounding, Nourishing Ayurvedic Thanksgiving Side
Sweet potatoes are naturally grounding, warming, and perfect for Vata season — making them one of the most Ayurvedic-friendly Thanksgiving dishes. This simple recipe uses ghee and gentle holiday spices to support digestion, comfort the nervous system, and add a warming, sattvic touch to your holiday table.
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Ingredients
2–3 large sweet potatoes
1–2 tbsp ghee
½ tsp cinnamon
A pinch of cardamom
Toasted pecans (optional but delicious!)
A sprinkle of mineral salt
Optional: drizzle of maple syrup
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Instructions
Peel and chop sweet potatoes into cubes.
Steam or roast until tender.
Mash with ghee, cinnamon, cardamom, and salt.
Adjust sweetness with a touch of maple syrup if desired.
Top with toasted pecans for crunch and grounding.
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Ayurvedic Insights
Sweet potatoes pacify Vata with their warmth, moisture, and natural sweetness.
Ghee enhances digestion and supports ojas, especially during busy holidays.
Cinnamon + cardamom balance blood sugar and improve Agni.
This dish supports grounding, energy, and emotional steadiness.
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If you want deeper seasonal support for digestion, immunity, and energy, explore the Golden Veda Cleanse Kits here:
👉 https://goldenvedacollective.com/shop/cleanse-kits
For tailored Ayurvedic nutrition guidance based on your dosha, book a consultation:
👉 https://goldenvedacollective.com/consult
Ayurvedic Gratitude Ritual (60-Second Reset for Busy Moms)
A simple Ayurvedic gratitude ritual to calm your nervous system and ground Vata during the busy holiday season. This one-minute practice helps you soften, reconnect, and move through the week with more presence and ease.
Ayurvedic 60-Second Gratitude Ritual for a Calm, Grounded Holiday Week
A Simple Ayurvedic Ritual for Emotional Grounding
The holidays can overwhelm even the most grounded among us. This 60-second Ayurvedic gratitude ritual reconnects you to your breath, your body, and a sense of safety. Perfect for moms, hosts, and anyone feeling overstimulated during a busy season.
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How to Practice the Ritual
Place your left hand on your heart and your right hand on your belly.
Take three slow, deep breaths, letting your belly rise and fall.
Whisper internally: “I am safe. I am supported. I am held.”
Bring to mind one small thing you’re grateful for today.
Exhale slowly and let your shoulders soften.
You’ll feel your nervous system shift almost instantly.
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Ayurvedic Insights
Hand-to-heart touch activates ojas, your body’s emotional resilience.
Belly breathing calms Vata, which spikes during fall and holiday stress.
Gratitude softens Pitta intensity and lightens Kapha heaviness.
This ritual resets the prana vayus, restoring mental clarity and emotional steadiness.
If you love rituals like this, join my newsletter for Ayurveda practices and seasonal guidance:
Ayurvedic Agni Boost Shot (Pre-Holiday Digestion Support)
A quick, warming Ayurvedic Agni-Boost shot to strengthen digestion before holiday meals. Made with ginger, lemon, warm water, salt, and honey, this simple blend reduces bloating, clears heaviness, calms stress, and awakens your digestive fire—perfect for Thanksgiving week and beyond.
Ayurvedic Agni Boost Shot for Holiday Digestion (Ginger + Lemon)
Wake Up Your Digestive Fire Before a Heavy Meal
Before holiday meals—especially Thanksgiving—your Agni (digestive fire) needs a little support. This simple Ayurvedic Agni boost shot uses ginger, lemon, salt, and honey to gently warm up digestion so you feel lighter, clearer, and more energized throughout the day.
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Ingredients
½ cup warm water
1–2 tsp freshly grated ginger (or a few thin slices)
Juice of ½ lemon
A small pinch of mineral salt
1 tsp honey (added once water is warm, not hot)
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Instructions
Warm the water until comfortable to sip.
Add grated ginger and let it steep for 1–2 minutes.
Add lemon juice and salt.
Stir in honey last.
Sip 10–20 minutes before eating.
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Ayurvedic Insights
Ginger and lemon ignite Agni, helping prevent post-meal heaviness.
Warm water keeps digestion moving, unlike iced drinks which weaken Agni.
Honey supports lightness, making this a perfect pre-feast drink.
Great for Vata and Kapha, and supportive for Pitta in small amounts.
If you want ongoing support for digestion, bloating, and seasonal imbalance, explore the Golden Veda Cleanse Kits here:
👉 https://goldenvedacollective.com/shop/cleanse-kits
Ayurvedic Cleaning Spray for Holiday Season (Non-Toxic + Energizing)
A simple, non-toxic Ayurvedic cleaning spray to calm your space and your nervous system this holiday season. Made with warm water, citrus, spices, and essential oils, this DIY blend purifies your home, supports Sattvic energy, and helps ground Vata during the busiest time of year. Perfect for holiday hosting and everyday rituals.
A Natural + Energetic Reset for Your Home
This simple Ayurvedic cleaning spray supports both the physical and energetic cleansing of your home before the holiday rush. Warming scents like orange, clove, and cinnamon help ground Vata, clear stagnant energy, and create a peaceful environment as you prepare for Thanksgiving gatherings.
Ingredients
1 cup warm water
1 cup white vinegar
10 drops orange essential oil
5 drops clove essential oil
5 drops cinnamon essential oil
Optional: fresh orange peel or 1 cinnamon stick (placed inside the spray bottle)
Instructions
Add warm water and vinegar to a clean glass spray bottle.
Add essential oils.
Shake gently before each use.
Use to wipe counters, tables, and high-touch surfaces.
The warm, aromatic blend creates both a fresh scent and a grounding energetic feel.
Ayurvedic Insights
Orange + cinnamon warm Vata, which spikes during November.
Clove supports circulation and clears heavy, stagnant energy.
A clean, sattvic environment directly supports smoother digestion and calmer meals.
Warm aromas soothe the nervous system—especially helpful for holiday hosting.
If you enjoy simple seasonal Ayurvedic rituals like this, join my newsletter for recipes and practices:










