The internet has two answers to this question, and they contradict each other completely. One camp says eat every 2–3 hours to keep metabolism active, prevent blood sugar crashes, and stay satiated throughout the day. The
How to Choose Snacks Based on Your Daily Routine Most snacking advice treats everyone the same. Eat this, avoid that, snack twice a day, keep portions small. It is clean and simple — and almost entirely
There is a reason the word "homemade" carries weight. Not just nostalgia — though that is real — but something more specific and more nutritionally grounded. When a grandmother made chakli in her kitchen, or a
Most people trying to lose belly fat fall into a frustrating cycle:They either snack too often on the wrong foods… or avoid snacks completely and end up overeating later. Neither works. Because fat loss—especially around the
Most people blame stress, a busy schedule, or lack of discipline when they feel tired, low on energy, or unable to sleep properly. But what if the real issue isn’t your routine—it’s what you’re eating every
You are in a supermarket, comparing two packets of biscuits. One says "No Preservatives" in bold green letters on the front. It feels like the responsible choice. It goes into the cart. But here is what
For someone managing diabetes or pre-diabetes, snacking can feel like navigating a minefield. Everything seems to spike blood sugar. Everything comes with a warning. The advice — avoid sugar, avoid carbs, avoid this, avoid that —
Walk through any modern Indian supermarket and the fortification claims are everywhere. "Iron-fortified atta." "Vitamin D added milk." "B12-enriched breakfast cereal." "Omega-3 fortified biscuits." "Calcium-added bread." Products that have been nutritionally stripped by industrial processing, then
There is a moment most people recognise. It is 3pm, or 10pm, or the quiet half-hour after lunch. A craving arrives — specific, insistent, and entirely focused on something sweet. You are not particularly hungry. You
The dominant narrative around weight loss in India — and globally — goes something like this: eat less, move more, endure hunger, repeat. The hunger is not a side effect to be managed. It is the







