🫛 beans Khadra
Verdict: Not recommended / avoided in the strict circulating Tayibat list.
Category: Legumes
Short answer
Not recommended ❌ — Not recommended on Tayibat: beans Khadra — High fiber and hard to digest. See the official allowed list for swaps.
Why is it avoided?
Tayibat focuses on digestive ease and residue load, not calorie counting alone. Category: Legumes.
- Reference list classification on the official platform.
- Individual tolerance may differ — medical follow-up is advised.
- Pair with simple cooking and whole-food staples from the allowed list.
What Dr Diaa Al-Awadi teaches
Dr Diaa Al-Awadi frames therapeutic nutrition around reducing digestive burden and improving absorption. Food choices are discussed in his Tayibat lectures and the @mytayibat video library — always as education, not a personal prescription.
Suggested substitutes
From the same allowed list: Food item, Food item. Transition gradually over 1–2 weeks.
Practical steps
- Read the full allowed/forbidden hub.
- Ask the AI assistant with your health context.
- Log meals in the dashboard if you use the free tracker.
Potential benefits (educational)
Followers often report lighter digestion, steadier daytime energy, and less post-meal heaviness when staples stay simple (rice, potatoes, dates, gentle proteins). Individual results vary — this is not a medical promise.
How to use "beans Khadra" on Tayibat
Prefer boiling, grilling, or slow cooking without heavy sauces. Eat at true hunger, stop before uncomfortable fullness, and pair with allowed staples from the allowed & forbidden hub.
Selection & storage
Choose fresh, simple ingredients without ultra-processed add-ons. Store per food safety basics; reheat thoroughly. If tolerance is low, introduce small portions over a week.
Nutritional notes
Tayibat prioritizes digestive ease over calorie math. This page reflects the public reference list on Mytayibat — not a personalized prescription. Chronic conditions need clinician follow-up.
⚠️ Information on this page is for education only and does not replace advice from your clinician. Consult your doctor before any diet change, especially with diabetes, hypertension, pregnancy, or chronic conditions.