Nutrition · 5 min read
Protein on an Indian Vegetarian Plate: Why Your Roti Should Work Harder
Dr. Nimarjeet Rajpal
B.A.M.S. — Ayurvedacharya · 23 April 2026
Here's a pattern the clinic sees weekly: a patient comes in for hair fall, or fatigue, or weight that won't move — and the diet history reveals the same quiet culprit. Not too much food; too little protein in it. A typical Indian vegetarian day (tea, poha, dal-chawal-roti, biscuits, roti-sabzi) often delivers barely 60% of the protein an adult body needs.
How the gap shows up
- Hair and nails: both are protein structures — they're the first budget cuts your body makes.
- The 4 pm slump: carb-heavy meals spike and crash; protein steadies the curve.
- Stubborn weight: protein preserves muscle while losing fat — without it, "weight loss" becomes weakness.
- Cravings: chronic protein hunger frequently masquerades as a sweet tooth.
The usual advice — and its problem
"Eat more paneer, more dal, add eggs." Fine advice that collides with reality: budgets, family menus, and the fact that nobody eats a bowl of dal at breakfast. Supplements? Most households won't sustain a shaker-bottle habit either.
Fix the staple instead
The roti is eaten two to four times a day in most homes — which makes it the highest-leverage food in the kitchen. This is exactly why Dr. Nimarjeet formulated Ayustasya Flour: defatted soya, wheat and peas milled into an atta with 26 g protein per 100 g — one roti quietly out-proteins an egg. Same rotis, parathas and cheelas; several times the protein; and eight carminative herbs so it digests light.
A day, upgraded (no new dishes)
- Breakfast: besan-or-protein-atta cheela instead of plain poha.
- Lunch: the same thali — with protein-atta rotis and dal served first, not last.
- Snack: roasted chana or peanuts where biscuits used to sit.
- Dinner: lighter, earlier — khichdi with a spoon of ghee is a complete protein pairing.
Protein needs vary with age, kidneys and conditions — if you have a diagnosis in the mix (PCOS, thyroid, diabetes, kidney issues), calibrate the plan properly: book a consultation and bring your reports.