Vegan eating in India is structurally easier than in Western countries because Indian cuisine has rich vegetarian traditions, but switching from vegetarian (dairy + eggs) to fully vegan eliminates several common Indian foods – paneer, ghee, curd, milk, cheese. The challenge is replacing these with plant-based alternatives that maintain protein, calcium, and B12 adequacy. Indian cuisine has options; the trick is knowing which plant foods substitute for which animal-derived foods nutritionally.
This list catalogues 35+ vegan Indian foods organized by nutritional role – plant proteins, calcium sources, iron sources, B12-fortified options, and everyday eating. Each item shows nutrition contribution and Indian cooking context. Use this as comprehensive reference for sustainable vegan eating within Indian household cooking patterns. The goal is showing that vegan Indian eating can be nutritionally complete without forcing unfamiliar Western vegan foods (kale chips, tempeh, nutritional yeast).
Top 5 vegan Indian protein sources: Soya chunks (52g/100g dry), tofu (8g/100g), peanut butter (25g/100g), sprouts (14g/cup), legumes (12-15g/cup cooked). Vegan calcium: ragi, sesame seeds, fortified soy milk, almonds, leafy greens. Vegan B12: fortified plant milks, nutritional yeast (or supplement). Vegan iron: same list as iron-rich foods (mostly plant sources). Indian vegan eating is achievable; B12 supplementation is mandatory for long-term vegan adults.
Top 15 vegan Indian foods
Comprehensive vegan Indian food reference covering protein, calcium, iron, and B12 needs. Indian cooking provides many ready-to-use vegan options.
| Rank | Food | Serving | Key Nutrient |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Soya chunks | 100g dry | 52g protein |
| 2 | Tofu | 100g | 8g protein, 350mg calcium |
| 3 | Peanut butter | 2 tbsp | 8g protein, healthy fats |
| 4 | Sprouts (mixed) | 1 cup | 14g protein, 3.5mg iron |
| 5 | Sesame seeds | 50g | 7mg iron, 350mg calcium |
| 6 | Ragi (finger millet) | 100g cooked | 350mg calcium, 3.9mg iron |
| 7 | Mixed dal | 1 katori | 8g protein, 2.5mg iron |
| 8 | Chickpeas | 1 katori | 12g protein, 4.6mg iron |
| 9 | Almonds | 50g | 13g protein, 130mg calcium |
| 10 | Soy milk (fortified) | 1 glass | 7g protein, B12 + calcium |
| 11 | Spinach (cooked) | 1 cup | 6.4mg iron, calcium |
| 12 | Coconut milk | 1 cup | Healthy fats, low protein |
| 13 | Pumpkin seeds | 50g | 4mg iron, 7g protein |
| 14 | Bajra (pearl millet) | 100g cooked | 8mg iron, fibre |
| 15 | Nutritional yeast | 2 tbsp | B12, complete protein |
How to use this list
Vegan protein math: target 60-90g daily protein for general health, 100-130g for active/gym-going adults. Sample vegan day: breakfast oats with soy milk + peanut butter (12g) + 1 tbsp chia (4g) = 16g. Snack 30g almonds (8g) + 1 banana = 8g. Lunch 1 katori dal (8g) + 1 cup soya chunks curry (16g) + 1 cup brown rice (5g) + 1 cup vegetables (3g) = 32g. Snack 1 cup sprouts chaat (14g) + lemon = 14g. Dinner 100g tofu (8g) + 1 katori rajma (10g) + 2 multigrain rotis (8g) + sabzi (3g) = 29g. Total: 99g daily protein. Achievable.
Vegan calcium math: target 1000mg daily for adults, 1200mg for women over 50. Sample sources: 1 glass fortified soy milk (300mg) + 50g sesame seeds (350mg) + 50g almonds (130mg) + 100g tofu calcium-set (350mg) + 1 cup ragi (350mg) + 1 cup leafy greens (100mg) = 1580mg. Easily achievable through plant-only eating.
Vegan B12 is the single most important supplementation requirement. Plant foods (except some fortified products and nutritional yeast) contain effectively no B12. Long-term vegan adults must either supplement B12 (250-1000mcg weekly) or consistently consume fortified plant milks, fortified cereals, or nutritional yeast. Without supplementation, vegan adults develop B12 deficiency within 1-3 years – producing fatigue, nerve damage, and cognitive issues. This is non-negotiable for sustainable vegan eating.
Vegan iron and calcium are accessible through plant foods but absorbed less efficiently than animal sources. Pair iron-rich foods with vitamin C (lemon juice on dal, tomato in rajma curry, citrus with breakfast). Pair calcium-rich foods away from iron-rich foods (calcium blocks iron absorption). The timing and pairing matters more for vegans than for omnivores.
Vegan protein sources
Plant proteins for muscle and daily eating
Plant proteins provide complete amino acid profiles when combined (legumes + grains, soya alone is complete). Vegan adults targeting 60-100g daily protein from plants need 4-5 daily protein-rich servings – more than vegetarian eaters who get concentrated protein from paneer and dairy.
Vegan dairy substitutes
Plant-based milk and dairy alternatives
Indian vegan adults need substitutes for milk, curd, paneer, ghee. Plant-based options exist but vary in nutrition. Choose fortified versions (B12, calcium added) for nutritional adequacy.
Vegan calcium and iron sources
Plant-based mineral nutrition
Without dairy, vegan calcium needs come from plants. Without animal iron, vegan iron comes from plants. Both need careful planning. The foods below are particularly mineral-dense.
Vegan healthy fats and B12 sources
Essential fat and B12 nutrition
Vegan adults need healthy fats from nuts, seeds, oils. B12 from fortified foods or supplementation – cannot be obtained from unfortified plant foods reliably.
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Common mistakes when using this list
Most adults make at least one of these mistakes when using calorie or nutrition lists. Each mistake undermines the value of the list itself.
Mistake 1: Going vegan without B12 supplementation. B12 deficiency develops within 1-3 years of pure vegan eating without fortified foods or supplementation. The deficiency causes fatigue, nerve damage, and cognitive issues – some changes are permanent if not caught early. B12 supplementation (1000mcg weekly) is mandatory, not optional. Cost: Rs 100-300 monthly.
Mistake 2: Replacing dairy with non-fortified plant milks. Standard almond milk has 1g protein and minimal calcium. Standard cashew milk has even less. Buy only fortified versions (calcium and B12 added) – particularly soy milk for protein content. Read labels carefully; many “natural” plant milks are nutritionally weak.
Mistake 3: Eating only “vegan junk food” thinking veganism = healthy. Many processed vegan foods (vegan butter, vegan cheese, vegan ice cream) are highly processed with refined oils and additives. The vegan label does not guarantee health. Whole-food plant-based eating (whole grains, legumes, vegetables, fruits, nuts) is the actual health framework.
Mistake 4: Switching to vegan eating overnight without nutrition planning. Sudden veganism without planning produces nutrient gaps within 4-12 weeks – protein, B12, calcium, omega-3 deficiencies. Plan the transition – identify protein sources, fortified foods, supplementation, meal templates – over 4-6 weeks before fully transitioning.
Mistake 5: Avoiding all soy due to misinformation about hormones. Moderate soy consumption (100-200g daily soy products) does not affect hormones in adult men or women. The hormone-disruption claims about soy are largely overstated. Soya chunks, tofu, and soy milk are structurally important plant proteins; avoiding them creates significant nutrient gaps for vegans.
Mistake 6: Eating raw kale and spinach for iron expecting good absorption. Raw greens contain oxalates that block iron absorption. Cook leafy greens to break down oxalates and improve bioavailability. Cooked greens deliver 3-5x more usable iron than raw.
Mistake 7: Ignoring omega-3 needs thinking flax seeds are sufficient. Plant omega-3 (ALA in flax, chia, walnuts) is converted to EPA/DHA at only 5-10% efficiency. Vegans may need higher total omega-3 intake than omnivores to reach adequate EPA/DHA. Some vegans benefit from algae-derived DHA supplements (Rs 1,000-2,000 monthly).
The bigger picture
Vegan Indian eating is sustainable and nutritionally complete with structured planning. The fundamentals: 4-5 daily plant protein sources (soya, tofu, legumes, sprouts, nuts), 3-4 calcium-rich foods (sesame, ragi, fortified soy milk, almonds, leafy greens), iron-rich foods with vitamin C pairing, fortified plant milks for B12, plus mandatory B12 supplementation. The infrastructure exists in Indian cuisine; the planning is the limiting factor.
Indian vegan eating cost-economics: monthly food cost Rs 8,000-14,000 depending on portions and city. Comparable to vegetarian eating cost. Soya chunks, dal, vegetables, fruits are budget-friendly. Specialty vegan products (fortified milks, tofu, nutritional yeast) add Rs 1,500-3,000 monthly. B12 supplements Rs 100-300. Total monthly: similar to dairy-included vegetarian eating.
The cultural integration of vegan Indian eating is gradually improving. Mumbai, Bangalore, Delhi, and other Tier 1 cities have growing vegan restaurant options, fortified products in supermarkets, and cooking classes. Tier 2-3 city availability is more limited – vegan adults outside major cities often rely on home cooking with mail-ordered specialty products. Cultural acceptance of vegan eating is higher in younger urban demographics; older generations and traditional families may find vegan eating unusual.
Use this list as long-term lifestyle reference. Veganism succeeds with consistent eating patterns over years; ad-hoc vegan attempts (vegan for a few weeks) typically face nutrient gaps. Adults considering veganism should plan the transition, identify their daily protein/calcium/iron sources, set up B12 supplementation, and integrate the eating pattern into family cooking. The nutritional adequacy is achievable; the lifestyle adjustment is the harder challenge.
Frequently asked questions
Lists work best when you know your personal numbers. Calculate your daily calorie and protein targets in 30 seconds, then use this list to hit them.
Nutritional values based on IFCT 2017 (Indian Food Composition Tables) and USDA FoodData Central. Values vary with ingredients, size, and preparation. Informational content, not medical or dietary advice. Read our methodology.