A complete revision · moodfoods.com · est. 1998

Nourishing the Feeling Brain

A vegan guide to mood foods, nutraceuticals, and nutritional medicine — incorporating two decades of advances in psychoneuroimmunology, the gut–brain axis, and evidence-based supplementation.

Fully Plant-Based Evidence-Rated Updated 2026 Nutritional Medicine
Vegan Must-Supplements
Methylcobalamin (B12) Algae DHA+EPA Vitamin D3 (lichen) Iodine Vitamin K2 (MK-7)

From Serotonin Foods to the Psychobiome

When moodfoods.com launched in 1998, nutritional psychiatry barely existed as a field. The intervening quarter-century has transformed our understanding: the gut produces roughly 90% of the body's serotonin; neuroinflammation underlies many treatment-resistant mood disorders; and the gut microbiome communicates with the brain via multiple pathways collectively called the gut–brain axis. A vegan diet, when intelligently constructed, can be among the most neuroprotective and mood-stabilising dietary patterns available.

90%
Serotonin made in gut
100B+
Gut microbiome organisms
39%
Lower depression risk — Mediterranean-style plant diet
2x
Remission rate with nutritional intervention (SMILES trial)

What Is Nutritional Medicine?

Nutritional medicine uses targeted dietary choices and supplementation as primary or adjunctive treatments for physical and mental health conditions. Unlike general dietary advice, it applies clinical evidence, individualised biochemistry, and therapeutic dosing to specific outcomes — from reducing inflammatory depression to enhancing cognitive resilience.

Why a Vegan Lens in 2026?

Plant-exclusive diets are now the fastest-growing dietary pattern globally and have documented anti-inflammatory, microbiome-diversifying, and neuroprotective advantages. However, they require careful attention to several nutrients that are absent or poorly bioavailable in plant foods alone. This guide addresses both the extraordinary opportunities and the specific vulnerabilities of eating for mood on a vegan diet.

The Neuroinflammation Paradigm

The cytokine model of depression, now mainstream in biological psychiatry, holds that chronic low-grade inflammation dysregulates tryptophan metabolism, impairs neuroplasticity, and drives depressive symptoms. Dietary polyphenols, omega-3 fatty acids, and specific nutraceuticals (curcumin, NAC, saffron) target this pathway directly, explaining why food choices have measurable clinical effects on mood disorders.

Neuroplasticity: The New Target

Modern nutritional psychiatry aims not merely at neurotransmitter balance but at promoting BDNF (Brain-Derived Neurotrophic Factor) and structural neuroplasticity. Lion's Mane mushroom, physical exercise, caloric restriction, flavonoids, and magnesium all raise BDNF. Chronic stress, ultra-processed food diets, and micronutrient deficiencies lower it. Mood nutrition in 2026 is fundamentally about growing a more resilient brain.

Foods That Shape How You Feel

The following foods exert measurable effects on neurotransmitter synthesis, neuroinflammation, gut microbiome composition, and neuroplasticity. All are plant-based; several represent unique advantages of a vegan diet.

Filter:
🌱
Serotonin
Pumpkin Seeds
Cucurbita pepo

Weight for weight, the highest plant-based source of tryptophan — the dietary precursor to serotonin and melatonin. Also rich in zinc, magnesium, and iron, all cofactors for neurotransmitter synthesis. Raw or lightly toasted preserve optimal nutrient density.

Tryptophan 576mg/100g Zinc 7.8mg Magnesium 534mg

30g daily — on salads, in smoothies, or as a standalone snack. Soak overnight to improve mineral absorption.

🫘
Serotonin
Tempeh
Fermented Glycine max

Fermented soybeans provide both tryptophan and a live prebiotic substrate. Fermentation dramatically increases bioavailability of amino acids, B vitamins, and minerals compared to unfermented soy. Contains isoflavones that modulate oestrogen receptors relevant to mood.

Tryptophan 330mg/100g Complete protein Isoflavones

One of the few whole-food sources of both tryptophan and a probiotic substrate. Marinate and pan-fry; do not over-process.

🌾
Serotonin
Oats
Avena sativa

Rolled oats provide slow-release carbohydrate that promotes serotonin synthesis by facilitating tryptophan crossing the blood-brain barrier (insulin-mediated clearance of competing large neutral amino acids). Also uniquely rich in avenanthramides with anti-inflammatory and anxiolytic properties.

Beta-glucan 4g/100g Avenanthramides Slow GI

Overnight oats maximise beta-glucan content. Pair with pumpkin seeds and berries for a comprehensive mood-breakfast.

🌿
Omega-3
Walnuts
Juglans regia

The richest nut source of ALA (alpha-linolenic acid), the plant omega-3 that is partially converted to EPA and DHA in vivo. Epidemiological studies consistently associate regular walnut consumption with lower depression scores. Also contains ellagic acid, a powerful anti-inflammatory polyphenol.

ALA 9.1g/30g Ellagic acid Melatonin

A small handful (30g) daily. Note: ALA–EPA/DHA conversion efficiency is low (~5–8%); algae DHA/EPA supplementation remains essential.

🌱
Omega-3
Ground Flaxseed
Linum usitatissimum

The highest ALA plant source by weight. Lignans in flaxseed act as phytoestrogens and potent antioxidants with demonstrated antidepressant-like effects in preclinical models. Must be ground (milled) for omega-3 absorption — whole seeds pass through largely undigested.

ALA 22.8g/100g Secoisolariciresinol Mucilage

2 tablespoons of freshly ground flaxseed daily. Store sealed in the freezer to prevent rancidification of omega-3 fatty acids.

🌊
Omega-3
Sea Vegetables
Nori, Wakame, Dulse

Marine algae and sea vegetables are the only plant foods to contain preformed EPA and DHA — the long-chain omega-3 fatty acids that are the direct building blocks of neuronal membranes and anti-inflammatory eicosanoids. Seaweed also provides iodine, a critical mood-relevant mineral absent from most plant foods.

EPA + DHA (trace–moderate) Iodine Fucoxanthin

Use nori in wraps, add wakame to miso soup. DHA/EPA content is variable; algae oil supplementation provides reliable pharmacological doses.

🥬
Microbiome
Kimchi
Fermented Brassica rapa

Traditional lacto-fermented Korean vegetables deliver billions of live Lactobacillus plantarum organisms per serving. A 2021 RCT demonstrated kimchi consumption significantly reduced anxiety and improved psychological wellbeing in healthy adults. Verify vegan preparation (traditional kimchi may use fish sauce or shrimp paste).

Lactobacillus plantarum GABA (fermented) Glucosinolates

Seek vegan-certified kimchi or prepare at home. 1–2 tablespoons daily is a meaningful psychobiotic dose.

🫙
Microbiome
Sauerkraut
Fermented Brassica oleracea

Wild-fermented cabbage is among the richest naturally fermented foods available. Raw, unpasteurised sauerkraut provides a diverse ecosystem of Lactobacillus species that colonise the gut and produce mood-relevant metabolites including GABA, short-chain fatty acids, and B vitamins. Pasteurised versions lose this benefit entirely.

L. mesenteroides SCFA producers Vitamin K2

Store-bought must say "raw" or "unpasteurised" and be refrigerated. Or ferment at home in 5–7 days with just cabbage and salt.

🧅
Microbiome
Jerusalem Artichoke
Helianthus tuberosus

The richest prebiotic food per gram, with inulin content up to 19g/100g. Inulin is the preferred substrate for Bifidobacterium and Lactobacillus species most strongly associated with reduced anxiety and depression scores in clinical studies. Also an exceptional source of iron and potassium.

Inulin up to 19g/100g FOS Iron 3.4mg

Introduce gradually — high inulin can cause bloating initially as the microbiome adapts. Roast or steam; eaten raw it is more prebiotic but more gas-producing.

🍫
Neurogenic
Raw Cacao
Theobroma cacao

The original mood food. Raw cacao contains a pharmacological cocktail: flavanols that raise BDNF and cerebral blood flow; theobromine (a mild stimulant); anandamide (the endocannabinoid "bliss molecule"); PEA (phenylethylamine, a trace amine that promotes dopamine release); and magnesium at 500mg/100g. Distinct from processed milk chocolate; minimally processed 85%+ dark chocolate retains most benefits.

Epicatechin Theobromine Anandamide PEA Mg 500mg/100g

2 tablespoons raw cacao powder or 25–30g of 85%+ dark chocolate daily. Avoid Dutched (alkalised) cacao — it destroys flavanols.

🫐
Neurogenic
Wild Blueberries
Vaccinium angustifolium

The most studied brain-food berry. Anthocyanins cross the blood-brain barrier and accumulate in the hippocampus, where they promote neurogenesis and BDNF expression. Multiple RCTs demonstrate improvements in memory, processing speed, and mood in both children and older adults. Wild varieties have roughly twice the polyphenol content of cultivated.

Anthocyanins (wild: ~300mg/100g) Pterostilbene Resveratrol

150–200g daily, fresh or frozen (freezing does not damage anthocyanins). Wild frozen blueberries are a cost-effective, year-round option.

🥦
Neurogenic
Broccoli Sprouts
Brassica oleracea var. italica

Three-day-old broccoli sprouts contain 50–100× more sulforaphane than mature broccoli. Sulforaphane is a potent Nrf2 activator — the master regulator of antioxidant and anti-inflammatory gene expression in neurons. Clinical trials demonstrate effects on depressive symptoms, autism-spectrum social function, and schizophrenia biomarkers. Among the most pharmacologically active common foods.

Sulforaphane ~50–100× Glucoraphanin Nrf2 activator

Grow at home in 3 days from broccoli sprouting seeds. Consume raw — heat destroys the myrosinase enzyme needed for sulforaphane formation. Add mustard powder to cooked broccoli as an alternative.

Adaptogen
Matcha
Camellia sinensis (powdered)

Powdered shade-grown green tea at high concentrations delivers both L-theanine (an anxiolytic amino acid that crosses the blood-brain barrier) and caffeine in a uniquely synergistic ratio that produces calm alertness without the jitteriness of coffee. Shade-growing increases L-theanine content up to fivefold. The only food source providing meaningful pharmacological L-theanine doses.

L-theanine ~30–45mg/serving EGCG Caffeine ~35mg

1–2 teaspoons ceremonial-grade matcha whisked in warm (not boiling) water. Avoid sweetened lattes that dilute the medicinal effect.

🍄
Adaptogen
Reishi Mushroom
Ganoderma lucidum

Known as the "mushroom of immortality" in Chinese medicine, reishi contains ganoderic acids that modulate the HPA (stress) axis, reduce cortisol, and exert anxiolytic effects via GABAergic pathways. Meta-analyses support use for fatigue, anxiety, and immune regulation. Best consumed as dual-extract (water + alcohol extraction) to access both beta-glucans and triterpenes.

Ganoderic acids Beta-glucans Triterpenes

Dual-extract tincture or powder (1–2g daily). Mild bitterness is a marker of triterpene content; insipid extracts may be glucan-only.

🌿
Serotonin
Dark Leafy Greens
Spinach, Chard, Kale, Collards

Dark leafy greens are the cornerstone of plant-based mood nutrition: rich in folate (a cofactor for monoamine synthesis and methylation), magnesium (cofactor for 300+ enzymes including those synthesising serotonin and dopamine), vitamin K, and lutein. High folate intake consistently correlates inversely with depression risk in epidemiological studies. The MTHFR polymorphism — present in ~40% of people — impairs folate conversion, making dietary folate and methylfolate supplementation particularly important.

Folate 194mcg/100g (spinach) Magnesium 87mg Nitrates → NO

Aim for 2–3 large handfuls daily. Lightly wilted or raw both work; cooking increases folate bioavailability from some sources but destroys some heat-sensitive forms.

🌼
Neurogenic
Saffron
Crocus sativus

Saffron is the only common culinary spice with RCT evidence comparable to antidepressants for mild-to-moderate depression. Its active constituents — crocin and safranal — inhibit serotonin reuptake, reduce cortisol, and possess neuroprotective antioxidant activity. Small amounts used in cooking (30mg/day equivalent) show clinical efficacy. The most evidence-supported mood spice.

Crocin Safranal Crocetin

A generous pinch steeped in warm water before adding to dishes preserves active compounds. Both culinary use and supplement form are evidence-supported.

🫚
Neurogenic
Extra-Virgin Olive Oil
Olea europaea

A cornerstone of the Mediterranean diet's antidepressant effect. EVOO's oleocanthal has NSAID-equivalent anti-inflammatory activity; hydroxytyrosol crosses the blood-brain barrier to provide direct neuroprotection; and oleic acid modulates the endocannabinoid system. 4+ tablespoons daily (as in PREDIMED study populations) are associated with 30–40% reduced risk of depression.

Oleocanthal Hydroxytyrosol Oleic acid 73%

Use generously cold; do not reserve for special occasions. Quality matters: look for PDO certification and harvest date within 18 months.

🧬
The Vegan Omega-3 Gap — and How to Close It

Plant foods provide only ALA, which must be converted to the neurologically active EPA and DHA. Conversion efficiency in healthy adults is approximately 5–8% for EPA and under 1% for DHA — woefully inadequate for brain health. Factors that further impair conversion: excess omega-6 (competes for the same desaturase enzymes), low dietary zinc, and the FADS1/2 polymorphisms present in ~20% of populations. The only reliable vegan solution is direct supplementation with algae-derived DHA and EPA — the same original source from which fish accumulate their omega-3s.

ALA (plant) → [Δ6-desaturase + elongase + Δ5-desaturase] → EPA → DHA · Bottleneck at multiple steps · Algae oil bypasses entirely

Evidence-Rated Vegan Nutraceuticals

Nutraceuticals are substances found in food or derived therefrom that provide medical or health benefits beyond basic nutrition. All compounds below are vegan-compatible; several are verified vegan by source (e.g. algae DHA, lichen D3). Evidence ratings reflect the quality and consistency of human clinical trial data.

Evidence Key
★★★★★ Multiple high-quality RCTs; meta-analysis ★★★★ Multiple RCTs; generally consistent ★★★ Some RCTs; promising but mixed ★★ Mechanistic / pilot data Preclinical / emerging
Methylcobalamin (B12)
Active form; methyl donor
★★★★★ Evidence

Essential Vegan Supplement

Vitamin B12 is absent from all plant foods in bioactive form. Deficiency — which is almost universal in unsupplemented vegans after several years — causes elevated homocysteine (neurotoxic), cognitive decline, depression, fatigue, and peripheral neuropathy. Methylcobalamin is the neurologically preferred form, bypassing the MTHFR conversion step required by cyanocobalamin.

Typical dose
1000–2000mcg sublingual, daily
Target
Serum B12 >400 pmol/L
Form
Sublingual lozenge (best absorption)
Monitor
Annually via blood test; MMA, homocysteine
Essential — not optional for vegans
Algae DHA + EPA
Schizochytrium / Nannochloropsis
★★★★★ Evidence

Omega-3 — Neurological Architecture

DHA constitutes ~25% of the brain's dry weight and is essential for neuronal membrane fluidity, synaptogenesis, and anti-inflammatory eicosanoid production. EPA is the more potently antidepressant omega-3 in clinical trials. Algae oil bypasses the fish entirely: it is the original source from which all marine omega-3 derives, and is now available in high-potency vegan soft gels.

Dose for mood
1000–2000mg EPA+DHA combined
EPA:DHA ratio
≥2:1 EPA preferred for depression
Take with
Largest meal of the day (fat)
Check
Omega-3 Index >8% (blood test)
Essential — not optional for vegans
Vitamin D3 (Lichen)
Cholecalciferol from Cladonia
★★★★ Evidence

Neurohormone — Mood, Immunity

Vitamin D3 functions as a neurosteroid, with receptors throughout the limbic system and prefrontal cortex. Deficiency (below 50 nmol/L, affecting the majority of populations above 35°N latitude) is strongly associated with depression, seasonal affective disorder, and cognitive impairment. Lichen-derived D3 is biologically identical to animal-derived forms and is now widely available in vegan capsules.

Maintenance dose
2000–4000 IU daily with K2
Target serum level
100–150 nmol/L (40–60 ng/mL)
Always co-supplement
Vitamin K2 (MK-7, 100–200mcg)
Test
25-OH-D3 blood test annually
Vegan: lichen-derived D3 available
Saffron Extract
Crocus sativus · Affron®
★★★★ Evidence

Antidepressant — Serotonin, Cortisol

The most evidence-dense plant-based antidepressant nutraceutical. Over 15 RCTs show 30mg/day standardised saffron extract is comparable to SSRIs (fluoxetine, sertraline) for mild-to-moderate depression with substantially fewer side effects. Mechanisms include serotonin reuptake inhibition, NMDA antagonism, and cortisol reduction. Also shows evidence for PMS, premenstrual depression, and anxiety.

Clinical dose
15mg twice daily (30mg/day)
Onset
4–6 weeks (similar to SSRIs)
Best studied brands
Affron® (Bioactive Naturals), Satiereal®
Caution
Do not combine with SSRIs (serotonin syndrome risk)
Plant-derived · Fully vegan SSRI interaction: consult physician
Magnesium L-Threonate
Also: Glycinate / Malate
★★★★ Evidence

Mood, Sleep, Cognition, Anxiety

Magnesium is the most common micronutrient deficiency in Western populations (~50% below optimal intake) and is required for over 300 enzymatic reactions including serotonin synthesis. Magnesium L-threonate (Magtein®) is uniquely capable of crossing the blood-brain barrier and raising brain magnesium levels, increasing synaptic plasticity and BDNF. Multiple RCTs show efficacy for depression comparable to antidepressants, with particular benefit in anxiety and sleep-onset insomnia.

L-Threonate dose
1500–2000mg (Magtein®) nightly
Glycinate dose
300–400mg elemental Mg nightly
Timing
Evening; improves sleep quality
Avoid
Oxide form (poor absorption, laxative)
Mineral salt · Vegan
Ashwagandha
Withania somnifera · KSM-66®
★★★★ Evidence

Adaptogen — Cortisol, Anxiety, Resilience

The most clinically studied adaptogenic herb for stress and anxiety. Withanolides modulate the HPA axis, reducing cortisol by 14–33% in placebo-controlled trials. KSM-66 (full-spectrum root extract with high withanolide standardisation) has the strongest evidence: RCTs demonstrate reductions in anxiety, perceived stress, cortisol, and improved sleep quality, as well as antidepressant effects in chronic stress models.

Clinical dose
300–600mg KSM-66® daily
Onset
2–4 weeks for stress/anxiety; 6–8 for sleep
Cycle
8–12 weeks on, 4 weeks off
Caution
Autoimmune conditions, thyroid medication
Root extract · Vegan
Lion's Mane Mushroom
Hericium erinaceus
★★★ Evidence

Neurogenic — BDNF, NGF, Cognition

Unique in the nutraceutical landscape: hericenones (fruiting body) and erinacines (mycelium) are the only known dietary compounds that stimulate Nerve Growth Factor (NGF) synthesis and cross the blood-brain barrier. A 2024 RCT in adults aged 50–80 demonstrated significant improvements in cognitive function after 12 weeks. Multiple trials confirm reductions in anxiety and mild depression. The leading candidate for dietary neuroregeneration.

Dose
500–1000mg fruiting body extract, 2× daily
Seek
>1% hericenones; dual extract preferred
Onset
4–8 weeks; neurogenic effects cumulative
Best for
Brain fog, cognitive aging, mild anxiety
Fungi · Fully vegan
5-MTHF (Methylfolate)
L-methylfolate · Deplin®
★★★★ Evidence

Methyl Donor — Monoamine Synthesis

The biologically active form of folate that directly enters the methylation cycle without MTHFR enzyme conversion. Low folate and impaired MTHFR function are among the most common biochemical drivers of treatment-resistant depression, affecting an estimated 40% of the general population. 5-MTHF at 7.5–15mg is FDA-approved as an adjunct to antidepressants in the USA and outperforms standard folic acid for carriers of MTHFR C677T polymorphism.

Dose
400–800mcg daily (maintenance); 7.5–15mg (therapeutic)
Test first
MTHFR genotyping; serum folate
Always pair
Methylcobalamin B12 (prevents folate trap)
Note
Standard folic acid is inadequate for MTHFR variants
Synthetic vitamin · Vegan
Rhodiola Rosea
Arctic root · SHR-5 extract
★★★ Evidence

Adaptogen — Fatigue, Depression, Resilience

One of the best-studied adaptogens with a particularly strong evidence base for stress-induced fatigue and "burn-out" states. Rosavins and salidroside modulate monoamine oxidase and stress response proteins. A Scandinavian RCT demonstrated equivalence to sertraline for mild-to-moderate depression with superior tolerability. Energising rather than sedating; best taken in the morning.

Dose
200–400mg standardised extract AM
Seek
≥3% rosavins + ≥1% salidroside
Best for
Burnout, fatigue-depression, exam stress
Timing
Morning — can disrupt sleep if taken later
Root extract · Vegan
N-Acetylcysteine (NAC)
Glutathione precursor
★★★ Evidence

Antioxidant — Depression, OCD, Addiction

NAC is the rate-limiting precursor to glutathione, the brain's master antioxidant. Multiple RCTs support use as an augmentation strategy for depression (particularly melancholic/treatment-resistant), bipolar depression, OCD, and trichotillomania. Also shows efficacy in reducing compulsive drug use. Addresses the glutamate/glutathione dysregulation common to many psychiatric conditions.

Dose
600–1800mg daily (split doses)
Onset
8–12 weeks for psychiatric effects
Take with
Food to reduce nausea; alpha-lipoic acid synergy
Caution
Asthma; theoretical MAOi interaction
Synthetic amino acid derivative · Vegan
Curcumin + Piperine
BCM-95® · Theracurmin®
★★★ Evidence

Anti-inflammatory — Depression, Cognition

Curcumin is the primary bioactive polyphenol in turmeric and a potent NF-κB inhibitor — targeting the same neuroinflammatory pathway implicated in inflammatory depression. Meta-analyses confirm antidepressant effects comparable to SSRIs in moderate depression. Standard turmeric has <1% bioavailability; enhanced forms (BCM-95® phospholipid complex or Theracurmin® colloidal dispersion) are required for clinical effect. Piperine (black pepper extract) increases bioavailability by 2000%.

Clinical dose
500–1000mg enhanced form daily
Best form
BCM-95® or Theracurmin® (not plain powder)
Best for
Inflammatory depression, metabolic syndrome
Caution
Blood thinners; gallstones; piperine raises many drug levels
Plant extract · Vegan Drug interactions: check if on medication
L-Theanine
γ-glutamylethylamide
★★★ Evidence

Anxiolytic — Calm Focus, Sleep

A non-protein amino acid found almost exclusively in tea. L-theanine crosses the blood-brain barrier within 30 minutes and promotes alpha-wave activity in the cortex — a state associated with relaxed alertness. Multiple RCTs demonstrate reductions in anxiety, stress response, and improvements in sleep quality. The L-theanine:caffeine combination (100mg:50mg or 200mg:100mg) is consistently superior to either alone for sustained focus and working memory.

Dose — acute
200mg (with or without caffeine 100mg)
Dose — sleep
400mg 1 hour before bed
Food source
Matcha (highest); gyokuro; shade-grown teas
Safety
Excellent; no known serious interactions
Amino acid from tea · Vegan
Bacopa Monnieri
Brahmi · CDRI-08 / Synapsa®
★★★ Evidence

Nootropic — Memory, Learning, Anxiety

The most evidence-supported nootropic herb in Ayurvedic medicine. Meta-analyses of 12 RCTs confirm improvements in memory acquisition, verbal learning, delayed recall, and information processing speed. Bacosides A and B inhibit AChE (increasing acetylcholine) and adaptogenically reduce cortisol. Unusually, benefits accumulate over months — bacopa improves memory consolidation during sleep, making consistent long-term use necessary.

Dose
300–450mg (45% bacosides) daily
Take with
Fat (improves absorption significantly)
Onset
8–12 weeks minimum; 6 months for peak
Note
Mild nausea initial weeks; take with food
Herb extract · Vegan
Zinc Bisglycinate
Amino acid chelate form
★★★ Evidence

Antidepressant Augmentation — BDNF

Zinc is significantly lower in the blood of depressed individuals than controls — one of the most replicated biomarker findings in psychiatric research. It is a cofactor for BDNF synthesis, hippocampal neurogenesis, and glutamate receptor function. Vegans are at elevated risk of deficiency due to high phytate content of plant foods impairing absorption. Bisglycinate chelate has 2–3× the bioavailability of zinc oxide.

Dose
15–25mg elemental zinc daily
Take with
Evening meal; separate from iron supplements
Balance with
2mg copper (high zinc depletes copper)
Test
Serum zinc; RBC zinc is more accurate
Mineral chelate · Vegan
Creatine Monohydrate
Synthetic (fermentation-derived)
★★★ Evidence

Brain Energy — Depression, Cognition

Creatine is primarily found in meat; vegans have significantly lower muscle and brain creatine levels. Beyond physical performance, multiple recent RCTs demonstrate antidepressant effects — particularly relevant to treatment-resistant and female-predominant depression. Brain creatine phosphate supports neuronal ATP production during high cognitive demand. A 2023 meta-analysis found creatine supplementation significantly improved mood and cognitive performance in vegetarians/vegans.

Dose
3–5g/day (no loading needed)
Form
Monohydrate (most studied; most economical)
Timing
Any time; post-exercise for muscular benefit
Note
Vegans show larger cognitive response than omnivores
Fermentation-derived · Vegan

The Gut–Brain Axis

The enteric nervous system — sometimes called the "second brain" — contains 500 million neurons communicating with the brain via the vagus nerve, immune signalling, and neuroactive metabolite production. Gut microbiome composition directly influences anxiety, depression, stress resilience, and cognitive function. Plant-based diets, rich in diverse fibres and polyphenols, are the most powerful dietary intervention for microbiome diversity.

🔗
Vagus Nerve Signalling

80% of vagal fibres carry signals upward: gut → brain. Microbiome metabolites (butyrate, SCFAs, GABA) directly activate vagal afferents, modulating HPA axis reactivity and emotion regulation.

  • Butyrate from fibre fermentation
  • Lactobacillus → GABA production
  • Short-chain fatty acids → anti-inflammatory
🧫
Psychobiotic Foods

Specific bacterial strains have demonstrated effects on anxiety and mood in human RCTs — termed "psychobiotics." Fermented foods represent an accessible dietary delivery system. The Sonnenburg/Snyder 2021 Science study showed high-fibre diets increased microbiome diversity; high-fermented food diets reduced inflammatory cytokines.

  • Lactobacillus rhamnosus (JB-1) → anxiety ↓
  • Bifidobacterium longum NCC3001
  • L. helveticus + B. longum R0052
  • Fermented foods: kimchi, miso, tempeh
🌱
Prebiotic Architecture

Prebiotics are selectively fermented fibres that feed beneficial microbiota. A diverse prebiotic intake — drawn from varied plant foods — produces a diverse microbiome. Prebiotic supplementation with inulin/FOS and galactooligosaccharides (GOS) has reduced salivary cortisol and self-reported anxiety in human RCTs.

  • Inulin: Jerusalem artichoke, chicory, garlic
  • FOS: onions, leeks, asparagus, bananas
  • Resistant starch: cooled rice, green banana
  • Pectin: apple skin, citrus pith
  • Beta-glucan: oats, barley, mushrooms

Evidence-Based Clinical Protocols

These protocols represent evidence-informed nutritional medicine frameworks for common mood conditions. They are not a substitute for professional medical assessment and should be reviewed with a qualified practitioner, particularly if taking pharmaceutical medication. All compounds are vegan-compatible.

Depression Protocol
Mild to moderate; nutritional augmentation strategy
Foundation (Universal)
  • Algae DHA/EPA
    Core neurological substrate; EPA most antidepressant
    1000–2000mg/d
  • Methylcobalamin B12
    Test serum levels; deficiency → pseudo-depression
    1000–2000mcg/d
  • Vitamin D3 (lichen)
    Target 100–150 nmol/L serum; test first
    2000–4000 IU/d
  • Magnesium glycinate
    Evening; improves sleep and mood concurrently
    300–400mg/d
Primary Interventions
  • Saffron extract (Affron®)
    Best evidence; do NOT combine with SSRIs
    15mg × 2/d
  • 5-MTHF Methylfolate
    Essential if MTHFR variant; test before prescribing
    800mcg–15mg/d
  • Zinc bisglycinate
    Augments existing treatment; check baseline
    25mg/d
Anti-inflammatory Subtype
  • Curcumin BCM-95®
    If raised hsCRP; NF-κB inhibition mechanism
    500mg × 2/d
  • NAC
    Melancholic/treatment-resistant; glutamate regulation
    600mg × 2/d

Dietary foundations: EVOO 4+ tbsp/day; 150g blueberries; 2 tbsp ground flaxseed; diverse fermented foods; minimal ultra-processed food. Allow 8–12 weeks for full effect. Monitor with PHQ-9 at baseline and 8 weeks.

Anxiety & Stress Protocol
GABAergic, HPA-axis, and cortisol-targeted
Foundation
  • Magnesium L-threonate
    Brain-crossing magnesium; GABAergic and HPA regulation
    2000mg/d PM
  • Algae DHA/EPA
    Reduces neuroinflammatory anxiety; amygdala reactivity
    1000mg/d
  • Vitamin D3
    Deficiency strongly associated with anxiety disorders
    2000–4000 IU/d
Targeted Interventions
  • Ashwagandha KSM-66®
    Best evidence for generalised anxiety; cortisol ↓ 25–33%
    300–600mg/d
  • L-Theanine
    Acute anxiolytic; alpha-wave promoting; daily use safe
    200–400mg PRN
  • Rhodiola SHR-5
    Burnout anxiety; stress-induced exhaustion subtype
    200–400mg AM
  • Reishi dual extract
    GABAergic triterpenes; HPA normalisation; evening
    1–2g/d

Dietary note: fermented foods daily (psychobiotic effects on anxiety are the most replicated finding in nutritional psychiatry). Caffeine audit — even 200mg/day significantly worsens trait anxiety in genetically slow metabolisers (CYP1A2 polymorphism). Consider matcha substitution. Use GAD-7 to track outcomes.

Cognitive Enhancement Protocol
Brain fog, memory, focus, long-term neuroprotection
Neurological Architecture
  • Algae DHA
    Structural: 25% of brain dry weight; synaptogenesis
    800–1000mg DHA/d
  • Creatine monohydrate
    Brain ATP; vegans show largest cognitive effect
    5g/d
  • Methylcobalamin + MF
    Homocysteine control; neurotoxic if elevated
    B12 2000mcg + 5-MTHF 400mcg
Neurogenic Stack
  • Lion's Mane (fruiting body)
    NGF stimulation; memory consolidation; daily
    1000mg × 2/d
  • Bacopa monnieri
    Memory consolidation; 3-month minimum for peak
    300mg/d with fat
  • L-Theanine + Caffeine
    200mg:100mg — gold-standard nootropic synergy
    As needed AM
Polyphenol Neuroprotection
  • Wild blueberries
    150–200g daily; anthocyanins → hippocampal BDNF
    Daily food
  • Broccoli sprouts
    Sulforaphane → Nrf2; neuroprotective; grow at home
    50–100g daily

Sleep is not optional for this protocol: 7–9 hours is when synaptic pruning, memory consolidation, and glymphatic brain-waste clearance occur. No supplement stack compensates for chronic sleep deprivation. Add magnesium glycinate 400mg + L-theanine 400mg nightly if sleep is impaired.

Sleep & Circadian Protocol
Sleep architecture, circadian entrainment, night-time recovery
Primary Interventions
  • Magnesium glycinate
    Most evidence for sleep onset and quality; GABA co-factor
    300–400mg PM
  • L-Theanine
    Alpha-wave initiation; reduces sleep latency without sedation
    400mg 1h pre-sleep
  • Tart Cherry Extract
    Natural melatonin + anthocyanins; RCT: +84min sleep
    30ml juice or 500mg extract
Circadian Anchoring
  • Vitamin D3 (morning)
    Morning timing anchors circadian rhythm; not evening
    2000–4000 IU AM
  • Ashwagandha KSM-66®
    Cortisol normalisation → improved sleep architecture
    300mg PM
  • Reishi mushroom
    Triterpenes → GABAergic calm; traditional sleep herb
    1g PM
Dietary Sleep Hygiene
  • Tryptophan-rich evening meal
    Pumpkin seeds, oats, tempeh with complex carbs
    2–3h pre-sleep
  • Caffeine cut-off
    Half-life 5–7h; no caffeine after 1–2pm
    Noon latest

Circadian note: food timing directly entrains peripheral circadian clocks. Time-restricted eating (8–10 hour feeding window, aligned with daylight) improves sleep quality, mood, and metabolic health independently of caloric intake. The microbiome has its own circadian oscillations: disrupted sleep rapidly dysbioses gut flora, feeding a vicious cycle with mood consequences.