
Enjoying Tasty and Healthy Foods
“Ishoku-dogen” is an idea of preventing and curing disease by eating healthily on a daily basis. In order to do this, it is important to have a balanced diet. To have a balanced diet, it is necessary to prepare a variety of ingredients and know appropriate cooking methods. Soils and water have to be healthy and rich to provide a variety of good-quality food. The interrelationship between diets, health and biodiversity is obvious.
How should we think about biodiversity in order to enjoy “eating” and stay “healthy”?
Ms. Nozomi Tanabe, Broadcaster, Weather Forecaster and Vegetable Sommelier, answered our questions.
- Questions answered by: Nozomi Tanabe
- Broadcaster, Weather Forecaster and Vegetable Sommelier
 
	
    Q1
Why is it healthy to eat “seasonal” and a variety of foods?
A
Foods in season are rich in nutrients and umami. Seasonal vegetables make our bodies adaptable to natural rhythms that change seasonally. For example, wild vegetables which have a bitter taste such as fukinoto (butterbur bulb-like shoots) that are available in spring. As older Japanese people say, “add something bitter to spring dishes,” bitterness of wild vegetables awakens our bodies that became rusty during winter. In the heat of summer, sun-ripened tomatoes and bell peppers rich in vitamins are in season. Also, juicy gourds such as cucumbers and water melons help turn down body heat. In autumn, harvesting of root crops increases. We can prepare for winter by eating root crops such as sweet potatoes that warm our bodies. In winter, Chinese cabbage and garland chrysanthemum necessary for nabemono (hot pot winter cuisine) become more delicious and provide us vitamins in winter. The term “Shindofuji” indicates that human bodies and their environment are connected. Eating “foods in season” appropriate to the local climate where you live leads making us seasonally adaptable.

Q2
It is said that vegetables typical of local climates are called “traditional vegetables.” What are traditional vegetables?
A
Traditional  vegetables are adapted to local climates.   In the Edo Period, a  priest in Nozawa Onsen (hot spring)  Village, Nagano  Prefecture, brought back Ten-noji radish, a  traditional vegetable of Osaka Prefecture.  But when he raised the radish, only leaves  and stems grew large: it is said that this is the birth of a traditional  vegetable of Nagano, “Nozawana.”  Osaka’s radish tried to survive in Nagano’s  severe winter and snowy climate by making its leaves and stems large.  This is the vigor of traditional vegetables.  There are a variety of radishes such as  Nerima daikon radish that Tokugawa  Tsunayoshi (the 5th shogun of the  Tokugawa dynasty) ordered cultivated, or Miura daikon radish that grows in the  mild climate of Miura Peninsula of Kanagawa  Prefecture.   These are both daikon radish – but the taste and shape are very  different.  
		Traditional  Vegetables are responsive to natural rhythms.   Therefore, regions and seasons are limited.  Since climate adaptable traditional  vegetables are less dependent on agricultural chemicals, soils are also  preserved.  In the soils a variety of  living things thrive and the biodiversity is accordingly conserved. 
Left:  Nozawana field (Photo: Nozomi Tanabe)
		Right:  Nozawana (Photo: Nozomi Tanabe)
 
    Q3
How can we conserve biodiversity by eating healthy and tasty foods?
A
Kanji  characters used for shizen (Japanese  word representing nature) mean “as it is.”   Nature is self-reliant and artificial power is not added.  Humans eat living things in nature in order  to live.  It is important for us to  realize that we are allowed to live as part of nature.  Vegetables that survive in severe climates  are not only tasty but also remind us of powerful energy of the land.  For example, the taste of tap water and spring  water are very different.  Spring water  is dainty and delicious due to a variety of natural elements including  purification by microbes.  When walking  through a beech forest, we can feel a soft layer under foot as the forest is  covered by leaf mulch rich in nutrients. Mulch soils are produced by  decomposition mediated by tiny bugs and microbes.  Rain and snow slowly penetrate into the soils  and the water is thereby purified.  The  soils store nutrients, including minerals, and tasty groundwater is made.  We can live by using the natural blessings  from various living things.  As part of  nature, we should taste the blessings without disturbing natural rhythms.  Hopefully, we would like to maintain the health of both humans and the  earth.  
		There  are four seasons in the Japanese Archipelago stretching from north to south,  and the food culture appropriate to natural rhythms in each season is  maintained locally.  Local cuisine is  filled with knowledge and nutrients that enable us to live healthily in local  climates.  Local vegetables in season  also tell us of the arrival of the next seasons.  Tasting vegetables in season also means  nurturing rich minds that can feel natural lives.  The appreciation of a variety of local,  seasonal foods leads to biodiversity conservation. 
Thank you very much, Ms. Tanabe

















