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India's Favourite Snacks May Soon Come With Health Warnings Like Cigarettes, Check Out Healthier Swaps!
Move over, cigarette packets with grotesque lung pictures, your humble chai biscuit, jalebi and samosas might soon come with their own silent health alerts.
In a groundbreaking move, the Ministry of Health and Family Welfare has ordered central government institutions, including AIIMS Nagpur, to install 'Oil and Sugar Boards'. These brightly-coloured posters will display the amount of hidden sugar and unhealthy fat in India's most-loved snacks: samosas, jalebis, laddoos, gulab jamuns, and the innocent-seeming biscuits that we dip into tea every day.

Experts are calling this the beginning of "food labelling becoming as serious as tobacco warnings." And with projections showing over 44.9 crore Indians could be overweight or obese by 2050, this change is both urgent and overdue.
But is it realistic to ask Indians to give up their snacks entirely? Not at all. What's needed is awareness, and smart alternatives that won't wreck your health or your mood.
Oil and Sugar Boards: Why India Is Getting Serious
While talking to TOI, Dr Amar Amale, president of the Nagpur chapter of the Cardiological Society of India said, "Sugar and trans fats are the new tobacco." And what you don't know about your plate can kill you. One gulab jamun contains nearly 5 teaspoons of sugar. A samosa is packed with deep-fried trans fats. Chai biscuits often sneak in both, making them a triple health threat when paired with inactivity.

AIIMS Nagpur, among other institutions, is preparing to display the sugar and oil content of snacks sold in cafeterias and public spaces. The hope? That knowledge will lead to conscious decisions, not impulsive cravings.
The rise of non-communicable diseases (NCDs) like diabetes, heart disease, and high blood pressure is tightly tied to what's now termed "invisible eating" - foods that appear small or harmless but cumulatively damage health.

Urban diets have shifted from traditional meals to quick fixes, often fried, processed, or sugar-laced. Childhood obesity is also on the rise. This is not about banning food. But if people knew what they were eating, they might think twice.
Healthier Swaps For India's Favourite Snacks
Swap samosas for baked kachoris or sprouted chaat: Baked snacks with lentil fillings or sprouted grains offer crunch and spice, without the heart-stopping fat.
Replace
jalebis
with
dry
fruits
dipped
in
dark
chocolate:
You
still
get
sweetness
and
texture,
but
without
the
sugar
crash.
Ditch
chai
biscuits
for
roasted
makhanas
or
millet
cookies:
Makhanas
are
light,
crunchy,
and
full
of
protein.
Millet
cookies
provide
fibre
and
are
naturally
sweetened.
Laddoo
cravings?
Try
oats
and
jaggery
balls:
These
homemade
energy
balls
satisfy
your
sweet
tooth
and
even
help
manage
hunger
pangs.
Instead
of
sugary
sodas,
sip
on
infused
water
or
buttermilk:
Hydration
with
flavour
minus
the
artificial
stuff?
Yes,
please.
When To Eat Matters As Much As What You Eat
Eating fried or sugary snacks late at night, on an empty stomach, or during emotional lows can spike blood sugar and lead to poor digestion. Experts advise:
- Never eat sweets as the first thing in the morning.
- Pair carbohydrates with protein to slow sugar absorption.
- Use spices like cinnamon and cardamom - they help regulate blood sugar naturally.
A Healthier Culture Starts With Small Signs
The government's initiative mirrors PM Modi's 'Fit India' movement and his recent call to cut oil use by 10%. While it may feel awkward at first to eat a samosa while a poster next to you screams "high cholesterol," the reality is that change begins with discomfort.
And it's high time we got uncomfortable. Because behind every snack craving is a future self, hoping you'll eat wisely.
Disclaimer: The information provided in this article is for general informational and educational purposes only and is not intended as a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always seek the advice of your physician or a qualified healthcare provider with any questions you may have regarding a medical condition.



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