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Delicious Recipes Using Spring Fruits and Vegetables

Delicious Recipes Using Spring Fruits and Vegetables

Eat the Season for Flavor, Nutrition, and Energy

Spring produce arrives after months of heavier winter foods, bringing freshness, brightness, and renewed vitality to meals. Seasonal fruits and vegetables are not only more flavorful, but they are also more nutrient-dense because they’re harvested at peak ripeness.

Spring foods naturally support detoxification, hydration, and digestion. Their higher water content and phytonutrient profiles help the body transition from winter’s slower metabolism into a more active state. Below are easy, nourishing recipes designed to highlight the best produce of the season.

Why Seasonal Eating Matters

Spring foods tend to be:

  • Lighter and hydrating
  • Rich in vitamin C and antioxidants
  • Naturally cleansing for the liver
  • Supportive of gut bacteria diversity

Common spring produce includes vegetables like asparagus, peas, radishes, spinach, arugula, carrots, and artichokes. Spring fruits include strawberries, cherries, apricots, pineapple, and citrus.

Lemon Garlic Roasted Asparagus

This recipe supports detox pathways and digestion and has simple Spring ingredients. Asparagus contains prebiotic fibers and glutathione precursors that help liver detoxification. 

Ingredients

  • 1 bunch asparagus
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • 2 garlic cloves (minced)
  • Zest of 1 lemon
  • Salt and pepper
  • Parmesan (optional)

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 400°F.
  2. Toss asparagus with olive oil and garlic.
  3. Roast 10–12 minutes.
  4. Finish with lemon zest and Parmesan.

Spring Pea and Mint Soup

Unlike the heavy soups we enjoy in winter, this recipe supports gut health and hydration. Light, refreshing, and rich in plant protein.

Ingredients

  • 2 cups fresh peas
  • 1 small onion
  • 2 cups vegetable broth
  • Handful fresh mint
  • 1 tbsp olive oil
  • Salt & pepper

Instructions

  1. Sauté onion in olive oil.
  2. Add peas and broth.
  3. Simmer 5 minutes.
  4. Blend with mint until smooth.

Strawberry Spinach Salad with Citrus Dressing

Time to round things out with a salad. This refreshing recipe supports skin health and immunity. Vitamin C from strawberries enhances iron absorption from spinach making this a perfect nutritional pairing.

Ingredients

  • Baby spinach
  • Sliced strawberries
  • Walnuts
  • Goat cheese
  • Orange juice
  • Olive oil
  • Honey
  • Dijon mustard

Instructions

Whisk dressing and toss everything together.

Spring Vegetable Frittata

Supports: This is a great option for breakfast, brunch, or dinner. The protein in this recipe stabilizes blood sugar while the vegetables provide a good source of fiber.

Ingredients

  • 6 eggs
  • Asparagus pieces
  • Cherry tomatoes
  • Green onions
  • Feta cheese

Instructions

Bake at 375°F for 18 minutes.

Honey-Lime Fruit Bowl

This is a kid friendly option that is refreshing and is great for hydration and recovery.

Ingredients & Instructions

Combine:

  • Pineapple
  • Berries
  • Kiwi
  • Lime juice
  • Honey

Eating seasonally reconnects nutrition to nature. Spring foods help the body shift toward energy, activity, and renewal. By choosing fresh produce and simple preparations, meals become lighter, brighter, and more nourishing; exactly what the body needs after winter.

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Cupping + Acupuncture: More Than the Sum of its Parts

Cupping + Acupuncture: More Than the Sum of its PartsDo any of these scenarios sound like your life: a stubborn knot between the shoulder blades, a low-back flare that keeps returning, or a neck that feels “stuck” after long hours at a desk? Acupuncture needles can calm the nervous system and change pain signaling and cupping can mechanically decompress tight tissue and improve local circulation. Used together thoughtfully and safely they’re often paired to help pain move from “sharp and guarded” to “dull and workable,” and then to “resolved or manageable.” continue reading »

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Electroacupuncture: Ancient Wisdom, Modern Current

Electroacupuncture: Ancient Wisdom, Modern Current

The clinic was quiet except for the soft hum of a small device on the treatment table. A runner lay comfortably, acupuncture needles placed along her calf and lower back to address chronic pain that kept her from her regular running routine. 

Because of the chronic and nagging injury, she turned to acupuncture to find healing. But it wasn’t quite what she expected. Rather than simply resting with the needles inserted, the practitioner gently attached thin leads to several of the needles and turned on a device that sent a gentle electrical current through them. A subtle pulsing sensation began, almost like tiny waves moving through her muscles. Within minutes, she felt her body responding, warming, releasing.

This therapy was electroacupuncture, a technique blending the longstanding principles of traditional acupuncture with modern electrical stimulation. continue reading »

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The Healing Landscape of Scalp Acupuncture

The Healing Landscape of Scalp Acupuncture

Many healing journeys begin in unexpected places. For some, recovery starts not in the muscles of the back or the ligaments of a knee, but in the quiet landscape of the scalp, an area often overlooked except for styling, washing, and the occasional headache. Yet, for many people seeking relief from neurological, physical, and emotional challenges, scalp acupuncture is becoming a compelling bridge to healing. continue reading »

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Chinese & Japanese Acupuncture: Two Traditions, One Lineage

Chinese & Japanese Acupuncture: Two Traditions, One Lineage

Both Japanese and Chinese acupuncture spring from the same classical East Asian medical roots, yet they diverged over centuries into distinct clinical styles. In Japan, techniques evolved toward gentler, highly tactile methods. And in China, the practice of acupuncture tended to emphasize stronger needle sensation and standardized point prescriptions within Traditional Chinese Medicine, also known as TCM. While some have their preferences, neither is “better” than the other. The right choice often depends on the patient’s condition, sensitivity, and their goals. continue reading »

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