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    The Top Anti-Inflammatory Foods You Can Eat Every Day (No superfoods. No supplements. No food fear.)

    • Writer: TS-Wellness
      TS-Wellness
    • Jan 27
    • 4 min read


     

    Let’s clear something up right away. You don’t need: a turmeric latte budget, a fridge full of exotic powders, or a diet that makes you miserable to eat in an anti-inflammatory way.

    In fact, some of the most powerful anti-inflammatory foods are the same foods people have been eating for generations, quietly doing their job without a marketing team.

    So, let’s talk about what actually works, what the science says, and how to eat this way every day without overthinking it.


    First: what “anti-inflammatory” really means (plain English)

    Inflammation is your body’s alarm system.  Short-term inflammation (like healing a cut) = good, while long-term, low-grade inflammation = not so helpful.

    Chronic inflammation is linked to many conditions we worry about as we age, including heart disease, type 2 diabetes, certain cancers, and cognitive decline (Fuhrman et al., 2019).  Food won’t turn inflammation “off” like a switch, but it can turn the volume way down.


    The Top Anti-Inflammatory Foods (Real-Life Edition)

    These are foods you can actually find, afford, and eat regularly.


    🫘 1. Beans & Lentils (the quiet overachievers)

    Beans don’t get enough credit. They’re rich in: fiber, plant protein, and polyphenol. Remember that fiber feeds gut bacteria that produce short-chain fatty acids, which help regulate inflammation and immune function (Koh et al., 2016).


    Translation: beans help calm inflammation from the inside out.  Easy ways to eat them include in lentil soup, chickpea salad and black beans with rice.  This is just a very small example of the versatility of meals that include beans and lentils.  You can check out my website on the free resources to find recipes that include beans and lentils.


    🍓 2. Berries (small but mighty)

    Blueberries, strawberries, raspberries, all rich in anthocyanins, which are compounds shown to reduce inflammatory markers and oxidative stress (Joseph et al., 2014).  Fresh or frozen both count.  Frozen berries are one of the best deals in the grocery store.

     

    🥬 3. Leafy Greens

    Spinach, kale, collards, arugula.  These provide folate, vitamin K and carotenoids, to name a few of the many nutrients and benefits. Higher intake of leafy greens is associated with lower levels of inflammatory markers like CRP (Barbaresko et al., 2013). You don’t need a giant salad. A handful added to meals is enough. They can be raw or cooked.


    🌾 4. Whole Grains (yes, carbs are allowed here)

    Oats, brown rice, barley, and quinoa are great examples.  Whole grains are associated with lower systemic inflammation compared to refined grains (Gaesser, 2020).  Why? Because they contain fiber and minerals, they slow digesting and stabilize blood sugar. Inflammation loves chaos. Whole grains bring calm.

     

    🥜 5. Nuts & Seeds

    These especially include walnuts, flaxseeds, and chia seeds. These provide healthy fats and polyphenols that are linked to reductions in inflammatory markers (Ros et al., 2018).  A tablespoon or two is plenty. This is not a “more is better” situation.


    🧄 6. Onions & Garlic (the everyday MVPs)

    Garlic and onions contain sulfur compounds and flavonoids that have been shown to influence inflammatory pathways (Ginter & Simko, 2013).  The good news? They’re already in most kitchens and you probably already consume these regularly.

     

    🍵 7. Tea (especially green tea)

    Green tea contains catechins, which have been studied for their anti-inflammatory and antioxidant effects (Singh et al., 2011).  If coffee is your joy, keep it.  Tea is a bonus, not a requirement.

     

    What matters more than any single food

    Here’s the part people skip:

    👉 Anti-inflammatory eating is about patterns, not perfection.  Large reviews show that dietary patterns rich in whole, plant foods are consistently associated with lower inflammation — while ultra-processed foods are associated with higher inflammation (Calder et al., 2011; Lane et al., 2024).  This is not about being “good.”  It’s about being consistent enough.

     

    Simple daily anti-inflammatory plate

    Think beans or lentils, whole grains, vegetables (especially greens), berries or fruit and nuts or seedsNo rules. No tracking. No stress.

     

    Where my FREE plan fits perfectly here

    If you’re thinking: “I want to eat this way, but I need it to feel simple and doable…” this plan is perfect for you.  That’s exactly why I created this free 7-day food plan focused on:

    • calming inflammation

    • supporting the gut-brain connection

    • stabilizing energy and mood

    It’s food-first, plant-based, and designed to lower the background noise in your system — not overhaul your life.

    👉 Download the free plan here: CLICK HERE

    (It’s often called the 7-Day Serotonin Reset, because serotonin and inflammation are closely connected — but think of it as daily anti-inflammatory support.)

     

    Big takeaways (save this)

    ✔ Inflammation isn’t all bad — chronic inflammation is the issue✔ Beans, berries, greens, grains, and seeds do the heavy lifting✔ Food patterns matter more than “superfoods”✔ Anti-inflammatory eating can be simple and affordable✔ Calm, steady nourishment works better than extremes


    Scientific References (Full Citations)

    • Furman, D., et al. (2019). Chronic inflammation in the etiology of disease. Nature Medicine, 25, 1822–1832.

    • Koh, A., et al. (2016). Role of short-chain fatty acids in host health and disease. Cell, 165(6), 1332–1345.

    • Joseph, S. V., et al. (2014). Beneficial effects of berries on inflammation and oxidative stress. Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry, 62(18), 3878–3883.

    • Barbaresko, J., et al. (2013). Dietary pattern analysis and inflammatory markers. American Journal of Clinical Nutrition, 98(3), 701–713.

    • Gaesser, G. A. (2020). Carbohydrate quantity and quality in relation to inflammation. Advances in Nutrition, 11(3), 708–721.

    • Ros, E., et al. (2018). Nuts and cardiovascular disease: mechanisms. Nutrients, 10(3), 292.

    • Ginter, E., & Simko, V. (2013). Garlic (Allium sativum) and cardiovascular diseases. Nutrition, 29(4), 493–498.

    • Singh, B. N., et al. (2011). Green tea polyphenols and inflammation. Antioxidants & Redox Signaling, 13(11), 1723–1753.

    • Calder, P. C., et al. (2011). Dietary factors and low-grade inflammation. British Journal of Nutrition, 106(S3), S5–S78.

    • Lane, M. M., et al. (2024). Ultra-processed food exposure and adverse health outcomes. BMJ, 384, bmj-2023-077310.

     

     
     
     

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