Anonymous wrote:OK so help me out. I am not Indian but have been experimenting with Indian dishes lately to try at eat healthier. Less meat & more veggies. I like how Indian spices make vegetables more tasty than plain old salads or weird vegetarian dishes. So what would you say is the worst part of Indian cuisine? The white rice & naan? Excess oils?
Anonymous wrote:Interesting -- didn't realize diabetes was prevalent among Indians. I grew up in a home with boring, bland Indian food -- NOTHING was drowning in oil; veggies were cooked in like 1-2 spoons of oil, just with Indian spices so they didn't taste like American food, and daal was basically just boiled lentils w spices -- no oil at all.
Anonymous wrote:OK so help me out. I am not Indian but have been experimenting with Indian dishes lately to try at eat healthier. Less meat & more veggies. I like how Indian spices make vegetables more tasty than plain old salads or weird vegetarian dishes. So what would you say is the worst part of Indian cuisine? The white rice & naan? Excess oils?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting -- didn't realize diabetes was prevalent among Indians. I grew up in a home with boring, bland Indian food -- NOTHING was drowning in oil; veggies were cooked in like 1-2 spoons of oil, just with Indian spices so they didn't taste like American food, and daal was basically just boiled lentils w spices -- no oil at all.
That's not typical of any desi food I've had. I always complain of how much oil they use.
+1. When my mother in law comes over and cooks Indian food at my home, I notice that half the bottle of Canola oil is finished! That's when I truly realized how much oil is in her food. Yikes!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting -- didn't realize diabetes was prevalent among Indians. I grew up in a home with boring, bland Indian food -- NOTHING was drowning in oil; veggies were cooked in like 1-2 spoons of oil, just with Indian spices so they didn't taste like American food, and daal was basically just boiled lentils w spices -- no oil at all.
That's not typical of any desi food I've had. I always complain of how much oil they use.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up on Indian food and now treat it like dessert and eat it very infrequently. The amount of oil used is startling and my system just can't take it. I shudder to think what my arteries would look like today had I stayed on that diet. Like many other many of my relatives have diabetes and most all older Indian women I know carry an enormous amount of belly fat. I'm think the high carb diet causes much of that.
Glad to have a diet of an educated American now. Lots of vegetables, none of my food drowning in oil and lean meats. For carbs we do a lot of sold salads that are often half carb (such as quonia, orzo, and bulgur ) and half veggies. I do cook daal, but once again skip the oil and only use enough to saute onions. I look nothing like the Indian women in my family who still eat a traditional diet, no belly fat and most importantly no Insulin shots!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up on Indian food and now treat it like dessert and eat it very infrequently. The amount of oil used is startling and my system just can't take it. I shudder to think what my arteries would look like today had I stayed on that diet. Like many other many of my relatives have diabetes and most all older Indian women I know carry an enormous amount of belly fat. I'm think the high carb diet causes much of that.
Glad to have a diet of an educated American now. Lots of vegetables, none of my food drowning in oil and lean meats. For carbs we do a lot of sold salads that are often half carb (such as quonia, orzo, and bulgur ) and half veggies. I do cook daal, but once again skip the oil and only use enough to saute onions. I look nothing like the Indian women in my family who still eat a traditional diet, no belly fat and most importantly no Insulin shots!
I hope you're speaking for yourself.
It would be silly to lump all the diverse Indian cuisines under this description.
I grew up in Southern India in a health conscious family. Nothing was drowning in oil, and we are vegetarians. There are people who love the rich oily food but plenty of folks even in the India of 50 years ago knew the importance of eating healthfully.
Not everyone eats Indian-restaurant style meals at home everyday.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up on Indian food and now treat it like dessert and eat it very infrequently. The amount of oil used is startling and my system just can't take it. I shudder to think what my arteries would look like today had I stayed on that diet. Like many other many of my relatives have diabetes and most all older Indian women I know carry an enormous amount of belly fat. I'm think the high carb diet causes much of that.
Glad to have a diet of an educated American now. Lots of vegetables, none of my food drowning in oil and lean meats. For carbs we do a lot of sold salads that are often half carb (such as quonia, orzo, and bulgur ) and half veggies. I do cook daal, but once again skip the oil and only use enough to saute onions. I look nothing like the Indian women in my family who still eat a traditional diet, no belly fat and most importantly no Insulin shots!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Interesting -- didn't realize diabetes was prevalent among Indians. I grew up in a home with boring, bland Indian food -- NOTHING was drowning in oil; veggies were cooked in like 1-2 spoons of oil, just with Indian spices so they didn't taste like American food, and daal was basically just boiled lentils w spices -- no oil at all.
+1
But my parents weren't what I would call health conscious. Our food wasn't drowning in oil. It's definitely different from what you would get in an Indian restaurant. I love some restaurant food, but it's not as healthy has a home cooked Indian dinner. At least not the kind in my house or my parents.
(They were immigrants, I'm 2nd gen)
Anonymous wrote:I grew up on Indian food and now treat it like dessert and eat it very infrequently. The amount of oil used is startling and my system just can't take it. I shudder to think what my arteries would look like today had I stayed on that diet. Like many other many of my relatives have diabetes and most all older Indian women I know carry an enormous amount of belly fat. I'm think the high carb diet causes much of that.
Glad to have a diet of an educated American now. Lots of vegetables, none of my food drowning in oil and lean meats. For carbs we do a lot of sold salads that are often half carb (such as quonia, orzo, and bulgur ) and half veggies. I do cook daal, but once again skip the oil and only use enough to saute onions. I look nothing like the Indian women in my family who still eat a traditional diet, no belly fat and most importantly no Insulin shots!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I grew up on Indian food and now treat it like dessert and eat it very infrequently. The amount of oil used is startling and my system just can't take it. I shudder to think what my arteries would look like today had I stayed on that diet. Like many other many of my relatives have diabetes and most all older Indian women I know carry an enormous amount of belly fat. I'm think the high carb diet causes much of that.
Glad to have a diet of an educated American now. Lots of vegetables, none of my food drowning in oil and lean meats. For carbs we do a lot of sold salads that are often half carb (such as quonia, orzo, and bulgur ) and half veggies. I do cook daal, but once again skip the oil and only use enough to saute onions. I look nothing like the Indian women in my family who still eat a traditional diet, no belly fat and most importantly no Insulin shots!
You know that cooking food at home means you can control the amount of oil you use, right? We cook and eat Indian vegetarian food four nights a week and nothing is drowning in oil. It's quite healthy if you make it properly.
Anonymous wrote:I grew up on Indian food and now treat it like dessert and eat it very infrequently. The amount of oil used is startling and my system just can't take it. I shudder to think what my arteries would look like today had I stayed on that diet. Like many other many of my relatives have diabetes and most all older Indian women I know carry an enormous amount of belly fat. I'm think the high carb diet causes much of that.
Glad to have a diet of an educated American now. Lots of vegetables, none of my food drowning in oil and lean meats. For carbs we do a lot of sold salads that are often half carb (such as quonia, orzo, and bulgur ) and half veggies. I do cook daal, but once again skip the oil and only use enough to saute onions. I look nothing like the Indian women in my family who still eat a traditional diet, no belly fat and most importantly no Insulin shots!