There was a time when summer in India came with its own quiet rhythm. Kitchens turned lighter, grandmothers reached for earthen pots, and meals were built around ingredients that cooled the body rather than burdened it. They were common sense, passed down through habit, memory and necessity. Today, much of that wisdom is slipping away. In its place: chilled packaged drinks, iced coffees, fast food, overly refined snacks and convenience meals that feel modern but often leave the body working harder in the heat. The tragedy is not just cultural. It is nutritional. Many traditional summer foods were designed for Indian weather, Indian kitchens and Indian bodies. They were hydrating, cooling, restorative and often surprisingly rich in fibre, minerals and natural probiotics. Here are eight such foods that deserve a better fate than quiet disappearance.
8 traditional summer foods Indians are abandoning despite their health benefits
