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Forum Thread - Diets ?

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AskCy, on 16/1/2006 09:17pm

Is there such thing as Indian diet food?...or to phrase that more correctly.. what sort of foods would be eaten when wanting a reduced calorie diet selecting from Indain dishes?

I tend to make all my indian style foods using a little olive oil rather than ghee, but obviously when you have a pile of Naan breads,chapaties to go with it, you start adding the calories...

So are there a whole host of tasty (and more importantly interesting) dishes than don't break the diet bank...

(can't you tell those that celebrate Christmas have over indulged again... LOL )

Kavey, on 16/1/2006 10:21pm

Hiya,

Just to let you know mum's away for a short while, but she'll respond on her return. In the meanwhile, anyone else please do jump in.

I'm sure part of the answer will be to use less ghee and less higher-fat ingredients than normal and to stick more to dishes using healthy and lower-calorie ingredients.

Kavita

Ian H, on 23/1/2006 09:04am

Hi,

I'm speaking from the perspective of an European here, so if I'm emtirely wrong, will you please forgive me. As I understand it, the tradtional cultural position about weight would be caricatured by "the bigger the better". So there's not much dieting about. However, that needn't stop _us_ indian food lovers of all races trying to do what we can. With that preamble out of the way. What can we do?

1. We all know that the only way to lose weight is to absorb fewer calories than we expend.

2. So what's the problem in indian food? 1. Fat is very calorie rich, 2. Rice and breads are too.

What _we_ do about it is the following.

1 Fats. I don't think it makes the slightest difference to your calories to use oil instead of ghee. You may have other reasons to do so but dieting to lose weight is not one of them. I don't like using olive oil in indian food, unless it's the entirely tasteless cheapo stuff, but even then you can get cheaper from sunflowers or safflower.

That said, I have a slight preference for using ghee, because of what we do to reduce absorbed fat content. We cook more or less normally, and then let the dish cool and sit overnight in the fridge. In the morning, we can lift off the solidified ghee and have a VERY low fat dish left.

2. Rice and other starches.

Use less. Instead of allowing some 80 gms of rice a head, cut down to 20 or 30 and cut out the breads. Alternatively, be prepared to eat with a knife (spoon) and fork and cut right down on breads and leave out rice. If you find that means you find your dishes too hot, you can either cut back on the chillies in your usualy dishes, or make slightly less hot ones.

Lastly, cut back on high calorie foodstuffs. Fewer lentils/beans/potatoes. One of my favourite dishes is a black-eyed pea and mushroom dish, of course you need protein, so in a vegetarian meal, cut down on the black-eyed peas in the recipe and increase the mushrooms. If you are eating meat, then instead of having more than one meat dish, have several vegetables instead. Aubergines (if you can resist frying them in oil) bhindi (okra, ladies fingers), cabbage, spinach, carrots, cauliflower all make really good indian dishes and are all relatively low in calories, use two of these in place of a potato curry and lentils!!

Infian food is FAR too good to be deprived of it when dieting, but with a little care, you can cut right back on the calories. A little exercise and you won't know yourself. And lastly, remember that the body is VERY clever at adapting. If you cut down drastically on calories, and manage to lose weight, your body adapts to _need_ fewer calories and then when you go back to a normal diet, where previously you were in balance, you'll now find that you put on weight again! Once you start drastic dieting, you need to ease back to a normal diet very gradually, to give your body a chance to pick up again.

Hope all that helps.

ATB

Ian (currently trying to shed a dozen kilos or so)

AskCy, on 24/1/2006 09:34pm

I use Olive Oil as its much much lower in saturated fats which are the main problem with having fats... and I only use a little...

AskCy, on 24/1/2006 09:36pm

A very good overview of indian food and dieting Ian, thanks

Mamta, on 29/1/2006 03:21am

Greetings from Miami, Steven and Ian

Well, we do exactly as you do, eat less, less calories than you need. Most everyday Indian cooking does not use a lot of fat. I would often use only 1 tsp. oil for tempering or tarka. I never put ghee or butter on my chapatties, roties or nans. We moostly eat boiled rice, except when I am cooking a special meal.

You have to reduce the quantity you eat, stop eating any fried dishes, eat less desserts and more fresh vegetables and fruits. Rice and chapatties are okay, in controlled quantities, just like potatoes and past are.

Mamta

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