Nutritionally adequate diet or a balanced diet should be consumed through a wise choice of food items from a variety (diverse) of food groups.
A healthy meal (food) includes generous amounts of vegetables, adequate whole grains and pulses or beans, along with modest portions of nuts or seeds, complemented by a selection of fruits and plain fermented yogurt or curd. It is free of added sugars or contains very minimal amounts, and is seasoned with minimal oil/fats and salt for taste.
An ideal healthy snack consists of vegetable or fruit salads adorned with seeds or nuts, topped with yogurt. Additionally, roasted or boiled beans, lobia, chickpeas, and peanuts can serve as nutritious snack options.
A balanced diet provides required calories, proteins, vitamins, minerals and adequate fibre.
Food pyramid for balanced diet for 2000 Kcal
My Plate for the Day for 2000 Kcal
Nutritionally adequate diet should be consumed through a wise choice from a variety of foods.
Nutrients that we obtain through food have vital effects on physical growth and development, maintenance of normal body function, physical activity and health.
Nutritious food is, thus needed to sustain life and activity. Our diet must provide all essential nutrients in the required amounts.
Requirements of essential nutrients vary with age, gender, physiological status and physical activity. Dietary intakes that provide lower or higher than the body requirements can lead to under-nutrition or overweight/ obesity respectively. Eating too little food during certain significant periods of life such as infancy, childhood, adolescence, pregnancy and lactation and eating too much at any age can have harmful consequences.
Carbohydrates, fats and proteins are 'macronutrients,' which are needed in large amounts. Diets must provide adequate essential amino acids (EAA) and essential fatty acids (EFA) to achieve maximum growth potential among children. Vitamins, minerals and phytonutrients constitute the 'micronutrients' and are required in smaller amounts. Both macro and micronutrients are necessary for physiological and biochemical processes by which the human body acquires, assimilates and utilizes food to maintain health and activity.
Foods have been categorized into 10 groups to help people make choices from different food groups. Adequate quantities of foods from at least 5–7 food groups should be consumed on a daily basis. Other foods may be consumed at least two to three times a week. This method of ensuring diversity and variety within groups will meet adequacy of most nutrients such as essential amino acids (protein), essential fatty acids, vitamins, minerals, phytonutrients, fibre and bioactive substances. Spices like turmeric, cumin, ginger, garlic, cinnamon, pepper and cloves are rich in antioxidants and could be part of a balanced diet.
The quantities of foods needed to meet the nutrient requirements vary with age, gender, physiological status and physical activity. A balanced diet should provide not more than 45% calories (energy) from cereals and millets (Nutricereals: diversify staples with millets) and up to 15% calories from pulses, beans and meat. Rest of the calories should ideally come from nuts, vegetables, fruits and milk. In other words, this will ensure 50%–55% of total calories from carbohydrates, 10%–15% from proteins and 20%–30% from dietary fats.
Cereals and millets | Rice, wheat, millets and other cereals, etc. |
Pulses | Lentil, green gram, chickpea, rajma, cowpea, etc. |
Vegetables | Seasonal vegetables |
Nuts, oil seeds, oils and fats | Peanuts, walnuts, almonds, pistachio, hazel nuts, and other nuts, vegetable oils, etc. |
Green leafy vegetables (GLV) | Seasonal GLVs |
Fruits | Seasonal fruits |
Dairy | Milk, curd and butter milk |
Roots and tubers | Beetroot, radish, carrot, tapioca, sweet potato, etc. |
Flesh foods | Marine fish, poultry and lean cut meat |
Spices and herbs | Turmeric (haldi), ginger, mustard, pepper, cumin, corriander (dhania), etc. |
A balanced diet is one which provides all the nutrients in required amounts and proper proportions.
The 'My Plate for the Day' developed by the ICMR-National Institute of Nutrition provides a simple guidance to achieve a balanced diet sourcing energy from different food groups.The proportion of each of the food groups serve an important function. The plate recommends sourcing of macronutrients and micronutrients from a minimum of 10 food groups with vegetables, fruits, green leafy vegetables, tubers and roots forming essentially half the plate of the recommended foods per day. At least half of the recommended cereals should be whole grains such as millets, which are rich sources of micronutrients such as vitamins and minerals, and also provide antioxidants, phytonutrients, fibre and bioactive compounds and induce favourable changes in the gut microbiota (microbes). Millets can be consumed to the extent of 30%–40% of total recommended cereals in raw weight.
Nutrient requirements are the quantities of nutrients that healthy individuals must obtain from food to meet their physiological needs. The ICMR-NIN Nutrient Requirements- 2020 Report (Updated-2023), defines the nutrient requirements for Indians, based on concepts related to the distribution of nutrient requirements in normal individuals. The mean of nutrient requirements distribution is called the Estimated Average Requirement (EAR) and the 97.5th percentile of the requirement distribution is called the Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA). The EAR is used to assess the nutrient adequacy of individuals or population groups, and is also used for planning the dietary nutrient requirements for healthy individuals or population groups. However, while diet planning for individuals and populations is based on EAR, the RDA is intended for the purpose of supervised supplementation in deficient individuals. To prevent the risk of adverse side effects associated with excessive intake of nutrients, this report also provides Tolerable Upper Limit (TUL) for some important nutrients.
The recommended level of nutrients depends upon the 'bioavailability' of nutrients from a given diet. The term ‘bioavailability’ indicates what is absorbed and utilized by the body. The nutrient requirements are presented for physiological groups such as infants, pre- schoolers, children, adolescents, pregnant women, lactating mothers and adult men and women, taking into account of their physical activity. However, in practice, fluctuations in intake may occur depending on the food availability and demands of the body. But the average requirements need to be satisfied over a period of time.
The major sources of carbohydrates include cereals and millets. Other sources of carbohydrates are grains, pulses (lentils, beans and peas), nuts, milk, fruits and vegetables. All plant foods have carbohydrates.
Carbohydrates are either simple or complex, and are major sources of energy in all human diets. They provide energy of 4 Kcal/g. The simple carbohydrates, glucose and fructose are found in fruits, vegetables and honey. Sucrose and lactose are disaccharides; while lactose is found in milk, sucrose is the table sugar. Starches and fibre are the two forms of the complex carbohydrates, both are associated with most plant foods such as cereals, millets, pulses, vegetables and tubers. Fibre is the indigestible part of vegetables, fruits, whole grains, pulses, nuts and seeds. These (fibre) are cellulose in vegetables and whole grains, while gums and pectin are present in vegetables, fruits as well as cereals. Dietary fibre delays and retards absorption of carbohydrates and fats and increases the satiety value. Diets rich in fibre reduce glucose and lipids in blood, and improves insulin sensitivity. It also increases the bulk of the stools.
Proteins are primary structural and functional components of every living cell. About half the proteins in our body is in the form of muscle and the rest is in bone, cartilage and skin. Proteins are complex molecules composed of 20 different amino acids. Nine of these 20 amino acids are termed ‘essential’ and have to be obtained from proteins in the diet, since they are not synthesized in the human body. The remaining non-essential amino acids can be synthesized in the body to build proteins. Proteins perform a wide range of functions and also provide energy (4 Kcal/g). Protein requirements vary with age, physiological status and stress. More proteins are required by growing infants and children, adolescents, pregnant women and individuals during infections, illness and physical stress. Animal foods like milk, meat, fish and eggs and plant foods such as pulses are rich sources of proteins. Animal proteins are of high quality as they are bioavailable and provide all the essential amino acids in right proportions, while plant or vegetable proteins are not of the same quality because of their low content of some of the essential amino acids. However, a combination of cereals, millets and pulses provides most of the amino acids, which complement each other to provide good quality proteins and essential amino acids.
Dietary fats are derived from two sources viz. the invisible fat present in plant and animal foods, and the visible or added fats and oils (vegetable/cooking oils). Animal foods like fatty fish and plant foods such as nuts and oil seeds and certain beans are rich sources of fats. Grains and pulses are also sources of fats but have low quantities. Fats such as vegetable oils, butter and ghee constitute dietary visible fats. Fats are a concentrated source of energy providing 9 kcal/g, and are made up of fatty acids in different proportions. Fats serve as a vehicle for fat-soluble vitamins like vitamins A, D, E & K and carotenes, and promote their absorption. They are also sources of essential poly unsaturated fatty acids (PUFA). It is necessary to have adequate and good quality fats in the diet with sufficient PUFA in proper proportions for meeting the requirements of essential fatty acids and health (refer Guideline 7). However, it is important to limit intake of cooking oils (vegetable oils), saturated fat (butter, ghee) and avoid partially hydrogenated vegetable oils (vanaspathi).
Vitamins are nutrients required by the body in small amounts and must be present in the diet as these are not synthesized in the body. Vitamins are essential for numerous body processes and for maintenance of the structure of skin, bone, nerves, eye, brain, blood and mucous membrane. Vitamins are either water soluble or fat soluble. Vitamins A, D, E & K are fat soluble, while vitamin C and the B-complex vitamins such as thiamin (B1), riboflavin (B2), niacin, pyridoxine (B), folic acid (B9) and cyanocobalamin (B12) are water soluble. Pro-vitamin like beta- carotene is converted to vitamin A in the body. Fat soluble vitamins can be stored in the body while water soluble vitamins are not stored (except vitamin B12 & folate) and get easily excreted in urine. Vitamins B-complex and C are heat labile vitamins and are easily destroyed by heat, air or during drying, cooking and food processing.
Minerals are nutrients found in body fluids and tissues. The important 'macro' minerals are sodium, potassium, calcium, phosphorus, magnesium and sulphur, while iron, zinc, copper, selenium, molybdenum, fluorine, cobalt, chromium and iodine are micro minerals. These minerals are required for maintenance and integrity of skin, hair, nails, blood and soft tissues. They also govern nerve cell transmission, acid/base and fluid balance, enzyme and hormone activity as well as the blood-clotting processes.
Last Modified : 5/10/2024
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