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​​6 vegetables you should avoid in winters even if they’re available in the market​

etimes.in | Last updated on - Jan 19, 2026, 13:00 IST
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6 vegetables you should avoid in winters even if they’re available in the market

Winter markets can be confusing. The stalls are full, the vegetables look shiny, and almost everything seems available year-round. But availability does not always mean suitability. Ayurveda and traditional Indian food wisdom have long believed that eating seasonal produce is not a trend, it’s a survival instinct refined over centuries. Many vegetables sold in winter are either cold-storage leftovers, imported from warmer regions, or grown unnaturally with chemicals. They may look fine, but they often lack taste, nutrition, and digestive compatibility with the season. Some may even carry higher pesticide residues. Here are six vegetables that are best avoided in winters, even if they appear fresh on the shelf.

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2. Parwal (Pointed Gourd)

Parwal is another vegetable that naturally belongs to warmer months. Fresh parwal has a subtle taste and soft texture, but winter parwal is often hard, fibrous, and tasteless.

Most winter parwal is either imported or stored for long durations, which strips it of both flavour and benefits. Worse, stored parwal is often treated with preservatives and surface chemicals to maintain its green colour.

Digestively, parwal can feel heavy in winter and may not break down easily, especially for people with weak digestion or joint issues.

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3. Torai (Ridge Gourd)

Torai is highly seasonal and extremely sensitive to storage. Once harvested, it loses freshness very quickly. The torai available in winter is almost always cold-stored, which explains why it tastes rubbery and cooks poorly.

Stored torai lacks the natural enzymes that aid digestion and is often sprayed with pesticides to prevent spoilage during transport. Consuming it regularly in winter may lead to gas, acidity, or indigestion, especially when eaten at night.

Winter digestion prefers warming, grounding vegetables; torai does the opposite.

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4. Tinda (Apple Gourd)

Tinda is another water-rich vegetable that does not belong to winter eating. Fresh tinda is soft and mildly sweet, but winter tinda is usually hard, hollow from inside, and nutritionally weak.

Because tinda spoils easily, winter supplies are often heavily treated to extend shelf life. This not only affects taste but also increases chemical load on the body.

In colder months, tinda can aggravate kapha and ama (toxins), leading to heaviness, sluggishness, or mucus-related issues.

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5. Kakdi / Cucumber

Cucumber might be available all year, but it is one of the worst vegetables to consume in winter. It is deeply cooling and water-dominant, designed for summer hydration, not cold weather digestion.


Winter cucumbers are usually imported or greenhouse-grown and often contain wax coatings and pesticide residues. Eating cucumber in winter can weaken digestive fire, increase cold sensitivity, and worsen joint pain or sinus congestion.

If your body already feels stiff or cold, cucumber quietly adds to the problem.

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6. Chichinda (Snake Gourd)

Snake gourd is rarely grown naturally in winter, yet it appears in markets due to storage and transport. Like other gourds, it loses its medicinal value quickly once harvested.

Winter chichinda is often stringy, tasteless, and nutritionally empty, offering bulk without benefit. It may also be chemically treated to prevent shrivelling.

From a traditional perspective, snake gourd in winter can disturb digestion and increase internal coldness, especially when eaten frequently.

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1. Lauki (Bottle Gourd)

Lauki is a classic summer vegetable, cooling, hydrating, and light. In winter, however, the lauki you see is rarely fresh. Most of it comes from cold storage or distant regions, harvested weeks ago.


Because lauki has a high water content, it does not age well. Stored lauki often tastes bitter, watery, or bland, and its nutrient profile drops sharply. In winter, when digestion slows down, lauki can cause bloating, loose stools, or a feeling of coldness in the body.

If lauki tastes unusually bitter, it should be discarded immediately; bitterness is a sign of chemical imbalance or improper storage.

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Copyright © Jun 3, 2026, 12.31AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service