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SupportWhen ‘Healthy’ Foods Turn Into Hidden Sugar and Protein Traps

Protein Needs Aren’t What You Think
One of the biggest misconceptions is that protein should match your current body weight. In reality, protein is calculated on your ideal body weight. For example, if your ideal weight is 60 kilograms, your daily requirement is around 60 grams of protein, not 100 grams. The recent NIN guidelines, updated after 10 years, recommend just 0.6 to 1 gram per kilogram for a normal person. Only athletes and bodybuilders need more. Yet many people push their intake up to 2 grams per kilogram in the hope of losing weight. This is not just unnecessary but also the wrong approach to nutrition.
Watch the clip here: Healthy Foods Into Traps
Why Cutting Fruits Isn’t Always Helpful
Even simple habits like chopping vegetables or fruits can affect nutrition. When you cut a tomato or a lemon, you lose almost half the vitamin C content immediately. That means even before cooking or juicing, some of the goodness is already gone. Being mindful of how food is handled can make a surprising difference in how much nutrition you actually get from your meals.
The Sugar Shock in Fruit Juices
Fruit juices often carry a “health halo,” but they can overload the body with sugar. Eating one or two oranges whole is reasonable, but making juice means squeezing four or five at once. That concentrated fructose floods your system much like drinking a sugary soda. Whether it’s packaged juice like Tropicana or Real, or even homemade juice without added sugar, the effect is the same: a fructose overload. In the end, your body doesn’t distinguish much between a glass of cola and a glass of fruit juice.
Why Whole Foods Matter More
This discussion makes one thing clear: nutrition isn’t just about what you eat, but how you eat it. Eating fruits whole, managing protein according to your body’s needs, and being aware of nutrient loss during preparation can prevent common mistakes. What seems like a healthy shortcut often ends up doing more harm than good.
Dietician Nidhi Nigam breaks down these myths and explains how small choices affect your long-term health. Catch the complete conversation on The Orange Club Podcast - All about nutrition for more insights.

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