A Citrusy Oatmeal to Chase Away the Winter Blues
All products featured on Bon Appétit are independently selected by Bon Appétit editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, Condé Nast may earn an affiliate commission.
Photo by Travis Rainey, Food Styling by Micah Marie Morton, Prop Styling by Gerri Williams
What does “feel-good food” mean? It depends on who you ask. That’s why each month our Feel-Good Food Plan—with delicious recipes and a few wild cards—is hosted by someone new. This month writer and editor Karen Yuan writes about combatting the darkest days of winter with a good breakfast, how she unwinds without bedrotting, and more.
As winter drags on with its frigid weather and afternoon sunsets, I tend to start feeling that capital-letters SADness—Seasonal Affective Disorder. My energy and mood drop low. I’m plopped on the couch more and seeing people less often. I become a pajamaed creature of darkness that emerges only to ransack the fridge and online shop.
Millions of Americans get Seasonal Affective Disorder during the winter, according to the National Institute of Mental Health. As a common affliction, it has lots of purported treatments. Over the years, I’ve tried almost everything in pursuit of that sunny notion of mental wellbeing: antidepressants, SAD lamps, yoga, long walks, vitamin D supplements, CBD snacks, meditation, you name it. They’ve helped in varying degrees in lifting a Grinchy mood when it sets in. But one thing that always helps me feel better, no matter how cliché, is a comforting meal.
Good food doesn’t replace other remedies, of course. But there’s something reliably gladdening about sitting down with a warm bowl that promises to nourish. Lately, I’ve been embracing seasonal, colorful fruits like citrus and pomegranate. That boost of sour-sweetness always perks me up, especially in the mornings when it’s still dark out. And that vitamin C doesn’t hurt to bolster against whatever cold might come my way.
February’s Feel Good Recipes
This is the month when winter feels unending, so I’m leaning into recipes that are cheery and bright, just like the warm weather and sun that’s around the corner. Yes, I hear it’s on its way! In the meantime, these energizing dishes will fuel your body and boost your mood. Keep you upright and uplifted, if you will. No bedrotting here.
A super citrusy oatmeal
This breakfast is my personal remedy to the winter blues. I use steel-cut oats for a hearty, chewy base infused with orange zest, freshly squeezed orange juice, cinnamon, and ground ginger. Then I top it all with slices of orange and pomegranate seeds. I like to drizzle on a ginger syrup for an extra zing; you can use maple syrup or honey too. I love this in the morning, but go ahead and make it for lunch or dinner or any time you’re in a funk.
Super Citrusy Oatmeal
Karen YuanWarming fried rice to soothe your stomach
I’ve learned it’s hard to feel bad while eating fried rice, and this ginger fried rice is sunshine in a skillet (or wok). The fresh ginger, which always wakes up my palate, can also help ease stomach issues. As the recipe creator Hetty Lui McKinnon writes, “Consider this recipe as a pick-me-up when feeling poorly.” I love it for those days when my digestion is off, I’m battling a mild hangover, or I’m just craving a quick and easy meal. McKinnon advises sizzling those ginger bits just briefly to keep their zing front and center. Another pro tip: Use leftover rice for a perfectly crispy texture.
Ginger Fried Rice
Hetty Lui McKinnonA citrusy dessert with a cheerful look
My oatmeal puts citrus in my breakfast routine, and these crostatas put citrus in my desserts. (You know scurvy hates to see me coming.) These tarts from San Francisco restaurant Che Fico transform wintry fruits into a comforting treat: The semolina frangipane creates a light, airy base that cradles juicy rounds of grapefruit and orange. As the crostatas bake, the semolina absorbs the fruit’s juices, and the whole thing ends up delicately sweet. It’s a lovely dish to brighten a dinner party or house hang. And those pink and gold slices give its face a cheery expression too.
Grapefruit-Orange Crostatas
Che Fico, San Francisco, CAA spicy tea to combat a cold
This recipe’s the most potent of the bunch—think of it as a culinary IV for those sluggish mornings, mid-afternoon slumps, and stubborn colds. It’s a spicy tea full of fresh ginger, fiery chiles, and honey, lemon, and turmeric, and it wallops me wide awake whether I’m ready for it or not. Not for the faint of heart but absolutely for the clogged of sinus. Drink it when you need burst of brightness to cut through the dreariest of winter days.
All products featured on Bon Appétit are independently selected by Bon Appétit editors. However, when you buy something through our retail links, Condé Nast may earn an affiliate commission.
If you aren’t tearing up, it’s not spicy enough.
More Feel-Good Finds for the Month
My favorite at-home yoga routine
I got really into Yoga With Adriene during the pandemic, and I still find Adriene Mishler’s videos to be the most effective at-home yoga routines out there. They’re short, free, and easy on the limbs, with frequent delightful cameos by Benji the blue heeler, an internet celebrity in his own right. When I’m loathe to leave the apartment and face the elements for an in-person class, but still want to get a bit of movement in, I turn to any one of Mishler’s videos to wake up my body. They’re a great way to ease into a morning or wind down a night.
A lamp for light therapy
SAD lamps have never really worked for me. But lamps that emit a soft, yellow ambiance? I can feel my stress settling the instant that light goes on. I recently bought a dupe of the Noguchi Akari 25N lamp, which has an adorable snowman-like shape and, thanks to its paper shell, casts a gauzy, soothing light through my apartment. The original is $1,800 but this dupe by Hüga Collective (the name plays on the word hygge) costs much, much less.
Hüga Collective Aura Glow Akari Paper Lamp
$240.00, Hüga Collective
My favorite bev to unwind with
Instead of a glass of wine, I’ve lately reached for a can of Cann, a mildly THC- and CBD-infused seltzer that loosens me up the way a bit of alcohol does, without the hangover. An eight-ounce can includes sparkling water, natural flavors, agave nectar, two milligrams of THC, and four milligrams of CBD. I love sipping it as a night cap or offering it as an alternative to alcohol at house parties. My favorite flavor is cranberry sage, which has an herbaceous taste, but the rest (lemon lavender, blood orange cardamom, grapefruit rosemary) are just as fun.
Cann All-Natural Social Tonic
$66.00, Cann
Next Time
March’s Feel-Good Food Plan will be hosted by associate director of social media Urmila Ramakrishnan, who’s sharing how she makes savory swaps to keep herself, and her blood sugar, well-regulated. Until then, I hope there’s sunshine in your forecast. Happy February!
Originally Appeared on Bon Appétit