Calories in Cheese — Amul, Mozzarella, Cheddar & Slice

Cheese is the most calorie-dense dairy product most Indians consume. 100g of Amul processed cheese is 330 calories. A single Amul cheese slice (20g) is 66 calories. That slice on your sandwich or paratha adds the calorie equivalent of nearly one extra roti. Most people use 2-3 slices without thinking. That is 130-200 calories of cheese added to an already complete meal.

Cheese is one of those foods that’s perfectly fine occasionally but becomes a calorie problem when it’s a daily habit. The difference between ‘sometimes’ and ‘always’ can be thousands of calories per month. Here’s exactly what cheese costs your calorie budget.

330 calories
100g processed cheese
Protein: 20g · Carbs: 3g · Fat: 27g · Fibre: 0g
That’s roughly 4.6x a homemade roti (72 cal)

Full calorie breakdown

The calorie count for cheese varies significantly depending on size, stuffing, and preparation method. Here’s every variant you’ll encounter, from the lightest to the heaviest.

Variant Serving Calories Protein
1 Amul cheese slice 20g 62-68 4g
Amul processed cheese (100g) 100g 320-340 20g
Mozzarella (100g) 100g 270-290 22g
Cheddar (100g) 100g 390-410 25g
Cheese spread (1 tbsp) 15g 45-50 2g
Cream cheese (100g) 100g 340-350 6g
Paneer (100g, comparison) 100g 265 18g

The gap between Cheese spread (1 tbsp) (45 cal) and Cheddar (100g) (390 cal) is significant. Same food category, very different calorie cost. What you choose and how it’s prepared matters more than most people realise.

How cheese compares to roti

One cheese serving (330 calories) is equivalent to about 4.6 homemade rotis (72 cal each). That means a single serving replaces what would be 5 rotis on your plate. If you eat two servings, you’ve consumed the calorie equivalent of 10 rotis in one sitting.

This doesn’t make cheese ‘bad.’ It makes it calorie-dense, which means you need to account for it. If cheese is lunch, keep dinner lighter. If it’s a daily habit, the calories compound fast.

Cheese vs paneer

Cheese at 330 calories is significantly heavier than paneer at 265 calories. That’s a gap of 65+ calories per serving. Over a week of daily consumption, choosing cheese over paneer adds 455 extra calories, roughly 0.1 kg of potential weight change per month.

Cheese (330 cal/100g) vs paneer (265 cal/100g). Cheese is 25% heavier than paneer with similar protein. For Indian cooking, paneer is the lighter choice. Cheese should be a flavouring agent (20-30g), not a main ingredient (100g+).

Is cheese good for weight loss?

Cheese is fine occasionally but becomes a problem as a daily habit. At 330 calories per serving, having it once or twice a week fits most calorie budgets. Having it daily adds up to 2,310+ extra calories per week compared to a lower-calorie alternative like roti.

The calorie premium comes from extremely calorie-dense (330 cal/100g), easy to overuse because it melts invisibly into food, high fat (27g/100g). This is what separates ‘cheese as a treat’ from ‘cheese as a habit’ in terms of weight impact.

Strategy: enjoy cheese when you want it, but plan for it. If it’s lunch, keep dinner to just dal, salad, and curd. If it’s dinner, make lunch lighter. Balance across the day, not within each meal.

THE BOTTOM LINE
Cheese at 330 calories per serving is best enjoyed occasionally, not daily, if you are watching your weight. Track it, account for it, and it fits in any Indian diet plan.
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How cheese fits in your daily calories

Here’s what including cheese looks like at different calorie targets:

1200 cal/day (Aggressive weight loss): Workable. One serving uses 28% of your budget, leaving 870 calories for the rest of the day. Doable with planning.

1500 cal/day (Steady weight loss): Easy fit. Only 22% of your budget. Plenty of room for other meals and snacks.

2000 cal/day (Maintenance): Easy fit. Only 16% of your budget. Plenty of room for other meals and snacks.

Best time to eat cheese

Because cheese is relatively calorie-dense (330 cal), it works best as part of a main meal rather than a snack. Having it at lunch gives you the rest of the day to balance your remaining calories. Having it at dinner is fine too, as long as you keep the day’s total in check.

The worst time: late evening as an add-on to an already complete dinner. That is when cheese becomes pure surplus calories with nowhere to go except storage.

Who should (and shouldn’t) eat cheese regularly

Be careful if: You are on a strict calorie deficit. The issue with cheese is extremely calorie-dense (330 cal/100g), easy to overuse because it melts invisibly into food, high fat (27g/100g). This does not mean ‘never eat it.’ It means ‘account for it when you do.’

For most people eating a normal Indian diet, cheese is neither something to seek out nor something to avoid. It is a regular food that fits when you know the calorie count and plan accordingly.

How to reduce calories when eating cheese

1 slice = 66 calories. Count your slices. Most people add 2-3 slices (130-200 cal) without thinking. That is nearly a full roti’s worth of calories from cheese alone.

Use cheese as flavour, not filling. 20-30g of grated cheese on top of a dish adds flavour for 66-100 cal. 100g of cheese as a main ingredient adds 330 cal. Big difference in usage approach.

Cottage cheese (paneer) is lighter. For Indian cooking, paneer at 265 cal/100g is lighter than processed cheese at 330. Use paneer for curries, save cheese for occasional toppings.

Mozzarella is slightly lighter. Mozzarella: 280 cal/100g. Cheddar: 400. Processed (Amul): 330. If choosing, mozzarella has the lowest calorie count.

Quick math: If you eat cheese (330 cal) 3 times a week instead of roti (72 cal), that’s roughly 774 extra calories per week, or 3,096 per month. Enough to gain about 0.4 kg per month. Small choices, big compounding.

Frequently asked questions

How many calories in 1 cheese slice?
62-68 for one Amul processed cheese slice (20g).
How many calories in 100g cheese?
Processed: 330. Mozzarella: 280. Cheddar: 400. Varies significantly by type.
Is cheese good for weight loss?
Not in large quantities. Very calorie-dense. Use as a topping (20-30g) not a main ingredient. Paneer is a lighter alternative for Indian cooking.
How many calories in Amul cheese?
320-340 per 100g for Amul processed cheese. One of the most commonly used cheeses in India.
Which cheese has the least calories?
Mozzarella at 280 cal/100g. Cottage cheese (paneer) at 265. Cheddar is heaviest at 400.

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Nutritional values based on IFCT (Indian Food Composition Tables) and USDA databases. Values vary with ingredients, size, and preparation. Informational content, not medical or dietary advice.

📅 Published: April 16, 2026