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Last reviewed: June 15, 2026

How to Use This Calorie Estimate

The figures above are a practical starting point based on a standard portion size. Your actual calorie intake from this food may differ depending on recipe, cooking method, amount of oil or ghee used, sauces, toppings, and the exact weight of your serving. Use these numbers as a helpful guide, not a fixed measurement.

Why Calories Can Vary

The same dish cooked at home, at a street stall, and at a restaurant will have meaningfully different calories. Home cooking typically uses less oil; restaurant portions are often larger; and added sauces, condiments, or garnishes contribute calories that are easy to overlook. Regional recipes within South Asian and Middle Eastern cuisines also vary significantly in fat and carbohydrate content.

Portion Tips

A kitchen scale gives the most reliable calorie estimate — weigh food before eating wherever possible. If a scale is not available, common visual guides help: cooked rice is roughly fist-sized per serving (150–200g), a piece of meat is roughly palm-sized (85–120g), and one roti or small flatbread is typically 40–60g. Tracking smaller, realistic portions consistently is more effective than estimating large amounts.

Goal Tips

For weight loss: A moderate portion of almost any food can fit within a calorie-controlled day — total daily calories matter more than avoiding a single item. Choosing a smaller portion, reducing added sauces, and pairing the food with vegetables where possible helps reduce total intake without eliminating what you enjoy.

For muscle gain: Prioritise hitting your daily protein target alongside your calorie goal. If this food is moderate or low in protein, pair it with a lean protein source such as grilled chicken, eggs, fish, daal, or low-fat yogurt. Spreading protein intake across meals supports muscle repair and growth more effectively than concentrating it in one sitting.

Accuracy Note

Calorie and macro values on CalorieMetrica are estimates based on standard food composition references and common serving sizes. They are a practical tool for everyday food awareness and portion tracking. For clinical nutrition, medical dietary management, or specific health conditions, consult a registered dietitian.