Dhals
and pulses are a very important source of protein in the Indian
and vegetarian diet. Proteins are important building blocks of the
human body. Every cell’s, cell wall is made up of protein
and therefore you cannot make a single new cell in your body without
protein.
Children
are growing, making new cells every minute they need plenty of protein
daily and in every meal. Adults have finished growing but we too
need protein as maintenance and repair of skin, muscle tissue, hair,
etc. is happening every day.
In the Indian
diet milk, curd and dhals and pulses are the main source of protein.
Children need about 40-50 gms protein daily on an average. Adults
require about 60-70 gm daily. This has to be distributed in every
meal to be properly absorbed and used.
Even if you
drink a whole liter of milk/curd a day, you get only 30 gm protein
from it. Half a cup of thick dhal or cooked channa, rajma, moong,
gives about 3-4 gm protein. We advice that this be introduced into
the diet both at lunch and dinner.
Besides this
we get about 10-15 gm protein a day from the small amounts present
in our cereals like bread, rice, chapathi, etc. Egg white and fish,
poultry and meats are the other non-veg sources. Vegetables and
fruits supply hardly any protein.
On an average
people drink 500 -700 ml milk a day. Many don’t eat non-veg
foods. So
the only food to work with which increases protein is dhals/pulses.
Making this a part of our regular menu and teaching children to
consume this in both lunch and dinner is therefore very important.
The common complaint is gas and discomfort. Please note we are only
recommending half a cup of cooked dhal or pulse. It can be increased
to ¾ c or 1 cup. We don’t recommend more than that
at a time as it is also high calorie.Unlimited consumtion of is
not advisable.
Pulses is the
name given to whole channa, rajma, moong, lobia , double beans,
haricot beans, etc. When the pulse is broken, the grain inside is
called dhal.
To avoid discomfort find one or two, dhals or pulses which suit
you and consume them in different preparations.
The best nutritive
value is obtained from the dhal or pulse when it is eaten in combination
with chapathi, roti, rice or bread and along with a glass of milk
or bowl of curd. Eg.idli sambar and a glass of milk, roti, dhal
and curd, rice kidhidi (dhal) and curd, etc.
Dhals
/pulses are also a very important source of B vitamin, iron, calcium
and zinc. They are also helpful in lowering blood cholesterol levels
and keeping blood sugar levels under control. When you eat pulses
the skin is fiber which helps in breaking cholesterol. When you
eat dhals/pulses along with rice or roti the blood sugar rise after
a meal is slowed down by the dhals presence in the intestine.
Dhal/pulses
must be cooked to make all the nutrients available. When eaten raw,
as sprouts in salad they give a lot of fiber and vit C but the protein
is not available. |