This yearning to return to whole foods is also visible in kitchen cupboards. In Delhi, health foodie fiends Anu and Kapil's snack bar is stuffed with roasted bajra pops, pomegranate juice, whole-wheat crackers, apple crisps and soya candy. "I eat figs, I glow," says Anu. While in the Priya-Shanavas household in Bangalore, Priya says: "In our kitchen, the first thing you see is a large fruit bowl filled with green apples, pomegranates, oranges. Bananas are for our kids." And Mira Nath, as she stops in at Mumbai's Bake Haven Store for party provisions—baked masala puris, whole-wheat puffs, soya chaklis and low-fat cheese—asks: "Who'll eat an oily snack after seeing a tissue soaked with its icky residue?"
"Nutrient density-based intake is the key," says Delhi-based health counsellor and nutritionist Ishi Khosla, whose clients range from a six times overweight 10-month baby to a 70-year-old seeking nourishing foods."Our energy requirements have drastically reduced over the last decades," she explains. Earlier we needed 3,000 calories a day, today 1,500-2,000 suffice. Proteins, carbohydrates and fats are macronutrients. But Khosla recommends micronutrients: vitamins, minerals and anti-oxidants, found in traditional dals, dahi, vegetables, fruits and nuts. The new diet design is "squeezing in the maximum amount of nutrients using the minimum number of calories".