The Ohsawa Map: Coriander’s GeoEnergetic Logic
George Ohsawa and the macrobiotic framework
🌍 GeoLogic, Not Just Flavor Logic
According to George Ohsawa and the macrobiotic framework, a herb’s power isn’t just in its compounds — it’s in its climate, its directionality, and its seasonality. Coriander is a perfect example of whole-plant polarity.
🌿 Leaves for Heat, Seeds for Storage
Coriander (Coriandrum sativum) splits its medicinal nature between:
Leaf (Cilantro): cooling, dispersing, volatile — eaten fresh, in hot climates, during warm seasons.
Seed: warming, digestive, grounding — used dried, in stews or teas, in transitional or colder seasons.
This is Ohsawa 101: yin vs yang, ephemeral vs preserved, moist vs dry, light vs heavy.
❄️ Why It Disappears in Cold Climates
You’ll rarely find coriander used in traditional Scandinavian or Eastern European cuisines. Why?
Volatiles degrade in cold/dry air — cilantro becomes flat, bitter, and unpalatable.
The leaf doesn’t preserve well — no role in winter pantries.
The body’s winter needs are yang (warming, fatty, dense), and cilantro offers cooling dispersion — the wrong message for the season.
In contrast:
Coriander seed survives drying and integrates into baked goods, pickles, and curries where warming digestion is needed.
🌺 Summer Leaf = Dispersing Wind
In hot, humid places:
Cilantro leaf disperses internal heat
Clears liver fire, calms gut wind
Helps eliminate toxins via bile and sweat
Added fresh just before serving to preserve its volatile integrity
It’s no accident it appears in:
Thai soups
Indian curries
Mexican salsas
Middle Eastern salads
All dishes built to cool the body, assist digestion, and lighten heat-heavy meals.
🧂 Seed = Autumn-Winter Support
In colder seasons or climates:
Seed is toasted or simmered
Activates digestion, warms gut, reduces fermentation
Supports pancreatic enzyme secretion, regulates bile, and balances gut flora
You’ll find coriander seed in:
Eastern European pickles
Winter stews in Morocco
Digestive bitters
Persian teas for liver regulation
⛰️ Habitat + Humoral Logic = Placement
Where coriander thrives tells us how it functions:
Grows best in Mediterranean and tropical zones
Appears in diets where spice cooling and bile clearance are critical
Not suited for temperate, high-latitude winter diets
Its energetic direction is downward and outward:
Seed: descends gut fire, grounds energy
Leaf: disperses upward heat, clarifies liver
⚡️ The Dual Doctrine: Coriander’s Split Identity
“The leaf is the exhale. The seed is the sigh.”
Ohsawa would say coriander offers us a seasonal mirror:
One plant
Two expressions
One for the hot scatter, one for the cold collapse
🌿 GeoEnergetic Summary:
Part Season Climate Use Energetics Application Leaf Summer Tropical/Hot Cooling, dispersing (yin) Raw garnish, post-cook infusion Seed Autumn/Winter Temperate/Cold Warming, grounding (yang) Toasted, steeped, preserved
The “Muddy Middle” — and Real Life
“To use coriander well is to know when to cool the liver and when to warm the gut. That’s the wisdom of weather.”
— Dr. Deepak B
