Food Compare Tool
Food A
Food B
Select two foods above to view a side-by-side comparison
Related Tools
Food Compare Tool Guide
The Food Compare Tool lets you place two foods side by side and compare their calories, protein, carbohydrates, fat, and fibre β useful for making smarter substitutions without giving up familiar meals. Common comparisons include roti vs. paratha (roti has roughly half the calories due to no cooking fat), boiled rice vs. biryani (biryani is ~40β60% higher per 100g), and chicken breast vs. beef mince (chicken breast has significantly less fat at similar protein). Use the tool to identify which food gives more protein per calorie, which is more filling per gram, or which fits better into your calorie budget. Results are based on standard cooked portions β actual values depend on your home recipe, oil use, and serving size.
| Portion / Goal | Estimated range | Best use |
|---|---|---|
| Compare calories | Lower calorie option | Useful for fat loss |
| Compare protein | Higher protein option | Useful for muscle gain |
| Compare carbs/fat | Macro decision | Useful for meal planning |
Weight Loss Best Practices
For weight loss, the most important factor is total daily calories. You do not need to completely avoid your favourite foods, but portion control matters. If one meal is heavy, keep the next meal lighter with protein, salad, yogurt, lentils, vegetables or controlled roti/rice. Sweet drinks, extra oil, fried sides and large portions can increase calories quickly.
Muscle Gain and Active Lifestyle
For active users, the Food Compare tool is most useful for identifying which option gives more protein per calorie β for example, chicken tikka versus chicken karahi, or boiled egg versus fried egg. Use it to swap lower-protein choices for more protein-dense alternatives without significantly changing the rest of the meal. Comparing daal varieties (moong, chana, masoor) by protein per 100g helps users who rely on plant protein plan their intake more precisely.
Smart Comparison
Food comparison helps users make practical choices such as roti vs rice, biryani vs chicken rice, sweet lassi vs salted lassi, or paratha vs plain roti. Small swaps can reduce daily calories without removing favorite foods.
Related Calculators
Use these tools to plan your full meal and daily target more accurately:
FAQs
Why compare foods?
It helps you choose better options for weight loss, muscle gain or balanced eating.
What should I compare first?
Start with foods you eat often, like roti, rice, biryani, chai, paratha and snacks.
Is the food comparison based on 100g?
Yes. All values are shown per 100g so both foods are compared fairly. Your actual portion may be more or less than 100g, so also think about serving size.
Which food is better for weight loss?
Usually the option with fewer calories per 100g fits a weight loss plan more easily, but total daily calories and portion size matter more than any single food.
Which food is better for muscle gain?
Foods with more protein per 100g are generally more useful for muscle gain. Check the protein row and the Quick Verdict card to see which option provides more protein.
Are homemade recipes different?
Yes. Oil, ghee, sugar and portion size vary a lot between homes, so real values can be higher or lower than these standard estimates. Use the Recipe Builder for your own recipe.
Can I compare Pakistani and Indian foods?
Yes. The database includes many South Asian foods like roti, paratha, biryani, daal, karahi and lassi, so you can compare across cuisines in the same tool.
Should I compare calories or protein first?
If your goal is weight loss, look at calories first. If your goal is muscle gain, look at protein first. Fiber and fat help you judge how filling and heavy the food is.