Protein & Fitness
Evidence-based protein supplement guides for Indian bodies. Whey, plant protein, creatine, BCAAs — what the research actually says for vegetarians and athletes.
Most Indian adults fall short of the recommended 0.8–1g of protein per kilogram of body weight daily. The problem is acute for vegetarians: a typical dal-rice-sabzi diet delivers 50–60g on a good day, against a target of 100–140g for a 70kg person doing regular strength training. The shortfall is not a character flaw — it is a structural feature of Indian plant-based eating patterns where protein is distributed across many small sources rather than concentrated in one or two.
Whey protein, plant protein blends, creatine monohydrate, and BCAAs are the most evidence-supported supplements for bridging this gap. What varies is how they behave in the context of Indian meal timing, vegetarian gut microbiomes, and heat. These guides cover protein quality scores (PDCAAS, DIAAS), what Indian brands actually deliver versus their labels, and how to stack supplements effectively without overspending.
Choosing a protein supplement in India requires navigating a market with significant quality variation. FSSAI regulations on protein content declaration are less strict than in the US or EU, and independent testing has flagged several Indian brands with 15–20% protein shortfalls versus their stated label values. Look for supplements with clear FSSAI registration, a published amino acid profile, and ideally third-party testing certification (NSF, Informed Sport, or Labdoor). Protein spiking — using cheap amino acids like taurine or glycine to inflate nitrogen scores — is less common now but still occurs in the lower price tier.
Indian meal patterns — typically three main meals with chai and snacks — create specific windows for protein utilisation. The most practical approach for vegetarians is distributing protein across all three meals rather than loading it into one supplement shake. Dal at lunch, paneer or curd at dinner, and a whey shake post-workout spreads amino acid delivery across the day. Post-workout timing matters but the anabolic window is wider than gym culture suggests — within 2 hours is sufficient. For adults over 55, anabolic resistance of ageing means higher per-meal protein targets (35–40g rather than 20–25g).
The most common mistakes in Indian protein supplementation are buying the cheapest option without checking quality, using protein shakes as meal replacements, and overlooking creatine monohydrate. Creatine lacks marketing glamour but is the most consistently replicated performance supplement in the scientific literature and is safe for healthy adults at 3–5g daily. For vegetarian athletes specifically, creatine supplementation is more impactful than for omnivores — vegetarian diets contain almost no dietary creatine, so muscle creatine stores start lower and the supplementation benefit is proportionally larger.
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