Ah, the beauty of exploring Ayurveda is discovering how intricate food combinations can actually be! It’s great that you are diving into this world. About your question—curd with brinjal—it’s an interesting combo indeed. Ayurveda suggests certain guidelines about food pairings to maintain the balance of the doshas and overall digestion.
Brinjal, or eggplant, is generally considered to be mildly pungent and heating, though it can vary slightly with preparation. Spicy brinjal, like you’re preparing, enhances these heating qualities. Curd, fresh and cooling, might feel like a contradiction, yet in Ayurveda, it’s actually heating too because of the fermentation process. Hence, there’s this inherent clash between the digestive outcomes they’re aiming for when had together. It really can lead to bloating or sluggishness.
Regarding how you prepare them, yes, it could make a difference. Frying might make brinjal even more heavy, hindering digestion further when consumed with curd. Steaming or roasting can lighten its impact on the agni, or digestive fire, making it less of a strain. You could try taming the spices a bit too, as very spicy food can exacerbate Vata or Pitta doshas, which could be contributing to your discomfort.
As for your dosha concerns, if you feel bloated and dry-skinned, those sounds indeed like signs of Vata imbalance. Eating curd with brinjal might be aggravating it. Curd is usually heavy and sticky in nature which doesn’t quite sit well with Vata’s airy and erratic vibe. It might jam up the energy flow instead of grounding it.
Replacing curd with something lighter like buttermilk could be gentler on your system. Buttermilk modulates the properties of curd and is more tridoshic (works for all doshas). Coconut chutney, though cooling, could be another wonderful alternative and quite complementary with spicy foods.
In terms of doshas, look out for how your body reacts after eating: if it’s Vata, you’ll feel more bloating and dryness; Pitta issues might pop up as acidity or irritability; and Kapha would feel heavy and slow.
Also, if it helps, try having curd earlier in the day, maybe as a part of a different meal altogether. Experiment a bit, listen to your body, it often tells you what’s best. Ayurveda is less about hard rules, more about tuning in.


