Plan: Rujuta Diet

She resurrects forgotten gems like Nagli (finger millet) , Bajra (pearl millet) , Gond (edible gum) , and Coconut . If you are an Indian living on quinoa and avocado, her plan saves you money and reconnects you to local ecology.

It is a 5-star philosophy for mental health, but a 2-star plan for rapid physical transformation. Combine her rules (eat local, no screens, ghee) with a basic calorie deficit, and you will win. Follow her plan blindly without exercise and portion awareness, and you will simply become a "well-fed fat person."

Rujuta Diwekar is not a typical diet guru. Famous for being Kareena Kapoor’s trainer, she has spent two decades preaching a gospel that goes against almost every modern diet trend (Keto, Paleo, Intermittent Fasting). Instead of macros and calorie counting, her plan focuses on rujuta diet plan

If you are looking for a weight loss plan, no. There are faster, more efficient plans.

Her plan hinges on the idea that our grandmothers knew best. However, our grandmothers walked 10km a day, churned butter by hand, and slept on time. Her advice (e.g., "eat jaggery instead of sugar") is good, but jaggery is still sugar. Nostalgia does not change biochemistry. She resurrects forgotten gems like Nagli (finger millet)

She dismisses intermittent fasting, gluten-free diets, and high-protein diets entirely. For people with autoimmune issues (Hashimoto’s, Celiac), gluten is a real problem, not a fad. Her blanket statement that "All traditional wheat is good" ignores the fact that modern wheat is hybridized and sprayed with glyphosate.

You don't need to cook separate meals. Her plan fits into a joint family kitchen. The rule of "No screens while eating" and "Don't exercise immediately after waking up" is practical for long-term health. The Cons (Where it stumbles) 1. Vague & General For a Type-2 diabetic or someone with PCOS, "Eat a chapati" is not helpful. She rarely discusses portion sizes in grams or specific glycemic loads. While she argues that counting calories is stress, beginners often need some guardrails. Telling a sedentary office worker to eat the same as a farmer leads to stagnation. Combine her rules (eat local, no screens, ghee)

The Verdict: 3.8/5 – Excellent for mindset and sustainability, but lacking structure for rapid, measurable results.