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Indian vs Mexican food & cuisine

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India

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Mexico

In India, people consume about 1463 g of food per day, with produce taking the biggest share at 37%, and meats coming in last at 1%. In Mexico, the daily total is around 1808 g, with produce leading at 32% and fish and seafood at the bottom with 2%.

India

Mexico

The average Indian daily plate size is

The average Mexican daily plate size is

1463 g.
1808 g.
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Grains

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Fish and seafood

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Produce

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Eggs and dairy

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Meats

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Sugar, fats and nuts

Indian cuisine is fundamentally plant-based, though not for lack of options. Plants – grains, pulses, vegetables, roots – form the spiritual and practical foundation. Rice, wheat, millet. Dozens of lentil varieties. Cow’s milk, but not the cow itself. Even in regions where meat is common, it takes a backseat to the dal (dried split pulses), sabzi (cooked veggie dish), and roti (unleavened flatbread).

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Mexican cuisine is built on corn, beans, and chili peppers – ingredients that have sustained the region for millennia. Corn and beans remain central. Rice, pork, and cheese, introduced by the Spanish, are now staples, but the cuisine has always been about making the most of what’s local. Chilies bring not just spice but smoky, sweet, or fruity notes, while lime, tomatoes, and tomatillos add brightness. In essence, Mexican cuisine is about making the most of what’s available locally.

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Grains 506 G

WHEAT

174 G

RICE

282 G

CORN

19 G

BARLEY

3 G

RYE

0 G

OATS

0 G

MILLET

21 G

SORGHUM

7 G

OTHER CEREALS

0 G

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Grains 458 G

WHEAT

94 G

RICE

23 G

CORN

336 G

BARLEY

0 G

RYE

0 G

OATS

2 G

MILLET

0 G

SORGHUM

0 G

OTHER CEREALS

3 G

India uses a wide variety of grains as staples: rice, wheat, millet (bajra pearl millet, ragi finger millet), corn, barley, and regional grains like amaranth. Different regions became specialists – Bengal with rice, Punjab and other Northern regions with wheat, Karnataka with ragi, Rajasthan with bajra. However, rice absolutely dominates: as a practical base of most meals, flattened rice (poha) for breakfast, puffed rice (murmura) for snacks and street food, flour for dosas, idlis, and sweets.

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Corn, transformed through nixtamalization into masa, is the foundation of Mexican cuisine. From it come tortillas, tamales, tlacoyos, and gorditas. Even drinks use corn, like atole, a warm thick beverage, and tejuino, a fermented corn drink.

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Produce 541 G

PULSES

40 G

VEGETABLES

246 G

STARCHY ROOTS

82 G

FRUITS

173 G

SEA PLANTS

0 G

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Produce 576 G

PULSES

26 G

VEGETABLES

167 G

STARCHY ROOTS

48 G

FRUITS

316 G

SEA PLANTS

0 G

Indian cuisine is structured around what’s naturally available when. Due to India’s vast climatic zones, the variety is enormous – from tropical fruits and coconuts to temperate vegetables in the Himalayas. Produce choices are tied to Ayurvedic principles, for example bitter gourd (bitter melon) and fenugreek in summer to cool the body, yam and mustard greens in winter for warmth, only few cuisines make such conscious seasonal-medicinal use of produce.

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In Mexico, vegetables aren’t little sad sides on a plate alongside meat and grains; they’re chopped, diced, sliced, and pureed into beautiful sauces and garnishes that define the dish’s character.

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Meats 16 G

POULTRY

8 G

PORK

1 G

BEEF

4 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

2 G

OTHER MEAT

0 G

OFFALS

1 G

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Meats 215 G

POULTRY

102 G

PORK

53 G

BEEF

41 G

MUTTON AND GOAT

2 G

OTHER MEAT

2 G

OFFALS

15 G

In Hindu tradition, the cow is called gaumata – a motherly figure that nourishes humanity – so beef is avoided. Muslims skip pork, and many Indian communities practice full or partial vegetarianism. Meat eating is selective, not absent.

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In Mexican cooking, meat serves as a flavoring rather than the main focus of a dish, like in pozole, where small pieces of pork enhance the hominy-based soup, or in tamales, where meat filling complements corn masa. Even tacos are really about the balance between protein, salsa, and all their flavors.

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Fish and seafood 22 G

FISH

21 G

SEAFOOD

1 G

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Fish and seafood 38 G

FISH

28 G

SEAFOOD

10 G

India’s extensive coastline of over 7,500 kilometers provides an incredible variety of seafood. In many world cuisines, natural seafood flavor is preserved with minimal intervention. Indian seafood is never ‘neutral’ but boldly spiced and sauced. In Kerala, Goa, West Bengal, and the Northeast, fish and seafood are staples of curries, fried fish, prawn masalas, and crab dishes. Popular seafood options are kingfish (surmai), pomfret, hilsa, mackerel, prawns, crab, and calamari.

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Fish and seafood are more regional than national when compared to corn, beans, and chilies. Along Mexico’s coastlines – the Pacific, Gulf of Mexico, and Caribbean – fish and shellfish are central, with such iconic dishes as ceviche (lime-marinated raw fish), pescado a la talla (grilled, chili-rubbed fish), shrimp tacos and aguachile, veracruz-style fish (snapper with tomato, olives, and capers).

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Eggs and dairy 224 G

EGGS

11 G

MILK AND DAIRY

204 G

ANIMAL FATS

9 G

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Eggs and dairy 354 G

EGGS

56 G

MILK AND DAIRY

292 G

ANIMAL FATS

6 G

In Hindu tradition, milking a cow is a natural, mutually beneficial relationship. The act of giving milk is seen as the cow’s service to humanity, and Indian cuisine is very dairy-forward. Dairy appears in multiple forms: milk, ghee, dahi yogurt, paneer fresh cheese, and reduced milk desserts. In a hot climate where dairy spoils quickly, India developed methods to ferment, preserve, or clarify milk.  This contrasts with tropical or subtropical cuisines elsewhere, which largely avoided milk due to spoilage.

Mexicans do seem to like their eggs. An average per capita egg consumption of 345 eggs per year – almost every Mexican eats an egg a day, or over 21 kilos of eggs consumed yearly!  Within the 50 years since the industrialization of poultry farming began, egg consumption in Mexico has grown around six times. Eggs are a convenient protein source and economically more accessible than meat. Purposeful marketing campaigns promoted eggs as highly nutritious, and they are well-fitted into the majority of Mexican dishes.

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SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 154 G

NUTS

5 G

SWEETENERS

58 G

SUGAR CROPS

37 G

VEG OILS

24 G

OILCROPS

30 G

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SUGARS, FATS AND NUTS 167 G

NUTS

4 G

SWEETENERS

120 G

SUGAR CROPS

1 G

VEG OILS

36 G

OILCROPS

6 G

Nuts have a somewhat unexpected role in Indian cooking – they are thickeners, not just garnishes. Ground cashews, almonds, or poppy seeds thicken shahi korma, pasanda, rogan josh. In some regions, they replace cream or flour, giving luxurious body and sweetness. Ayurveda recommends soaking almonds overnight for their benefits to strength, memory, and vitality.

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Mexican desserts are often less intensely sweet than American or European ones. Many sweet items are eaten as snacks (merienda) throughout the day rather than after meals.

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Herbs

CURRY LEAVES

FENUGREEK LEAVES

HOLY BASIL

LEMONGRASS

BAY LEAVES

CILANTRO

MINT

CULANTRO

EPAZOTE

HIBISCUS

MEXICAN PEPPERLEAF

OREGANO

PAPALO

THYME

India
Common
Mexico

CURRY LEAVES

FENUGREEK LEAVES

HOLY BASIL

LEMONGRASS

BAY LEAVES

CILANTRO

MINT

CULANTRO

EPAZOTE

HIBISCUS

MEXICAN PEPPERLEAF

OREGANO

PAPALO

THYME

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Spices

AJWAIN SEEDS

ASAFOEDITA

BLACK CARDAMOM

BLACK CUMIN

BLACK MUSTARD SEEDS

FENNEL SEED

GINGER

GREEN CARDAMOM

KOKUM

MACE

MANGO POWDER

MUSTARD SEEDS

NIGELA SEED

SAFFRON

TURMERIC DRY

BLACK PEPPER

CINNAMON

CLOVES

CORIANDER

CUMIN

DRY CHILI

ALLSPICE

ANNATTO/ACHIOTE

CACAO

India
Common
Mexico

AJWAIN SEEDS

ASAFOEDITA

BLACK CARDAMOM

BLACK CUMIN

BLACK MUSTARD SEEDS

FENNEL SEED

GINGER

GREEN CARDAMOM

KOKUM

MACE

MANGO POWDER

MUSTARD SEEDS

NIGELA SEED

SAFFRON

TURMERIC DRY

BLACK PEPPER

CINNAMON

CLOVES

CORIANDER

CUMIN

DRY CHILI

ALLSPICE

ANNATTO/ACHIOTE

CACAO

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Aromatics

GINGER

LEMON

PANDANUS LEAVES

TURMERIC

CHILI PEPPERS

GARLIC

LIME

ONION

BELL PEPPERS

ORANGE

TOMATO

India
Common
Mexico

GINGER

LEMON

PANDANUS LEAVES

TURMERIC

CHILI PEPPERS

GARLIC

LIME

ONION

BELL PEPPERS

ORANGE

TOMATO

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Condiments

CLARIFIED BUTTER

JAGGERY

MUSTARD OIL

YOGURT

TAMARIND

ACHIOTE PASTE

AGAVE SYRUP

CANE VINEGAR

FRUIT VINEGAR

HONEY

India
Common
Mexico

CLARIFIED BUTTER

JAGGERY

MUSTARD OIL

YOGURT

TAMARIND

ACHIOTE PASTE

AGAVE SYRUP

CANE VINEGAR

FRUIT VINEGAR

HONEY

India

SEASONINGS

Indian cuisine has a sophisticated flavor-building logic, built on 4,000 years of philosophy.  Spices serve as medicine, art, and spiritual practice together. Indian seasonings dance between bold and subtle, hot and cooling, earthy and tangy, always striving for balance, saatvik. Ayurveda recognizes six fundamental tastes that must be balanced in every meal: sweet (madhura), sour (amla), salty (lavana), pungent (katu), bitter (tikta), and astringent (kashaya). This balance is achieved with thali, a concept where one meal consists of multiple small dishes designed to complement each other’s flavors.

The combination of bitter, astringent, and pungent tastes – alongside sweet, sour, and salty – is a key reason why Indian food stands out globally and tastes so distinct.

Unlike Western cuisine’s complementary approach, Indian cooking deliberately contrasts flavors through spice combinations that create harmony through opposition. Take, for example, mango pickle, aam ka achaar. This pickle combines the intense sourness and astringency of raw mango with fiery chili powder, pungent mustard oil, and salt. The flavors oppose and intensify each other, yet after time spent melding, they balance and complement in the finished pickle.

Indian seasoning works in layers to introduce taste at every stage of the dish. You don’t just throw in cumin and call it a day. First to go is the tadka tempering, flavouring the oil with mustard seeds, cardamom pods, or fennel seeds. This technique creates a ‘continuous presence’ of multiple flavors throughout the cooking process. Later, mid-cooking spice additions develop complexity. Finishing touches provide brightness to dishes. You might add turmeric early to cook off its bitterness, but garam masala goes in last – aromatic and unboiled. Each step builds a scaffolding of flavor that lingers on the tongue in waves.

Masala simply means a spice mixture, which by no means is simple.  It’s an umbrella for any combination of spices that can either be wet or dry. No two kitchens have the same masala. Even salt is added at a specific stage to bind flavor. Garam Masala literally means ‘warm spice blend’.  This blend creates what’s called a ‘warming’ effect – not heat like chili peppers, but a sense of internal warmth. Core components of garam masala are cinnamon, green/black cardamom, cloves, nutmeg, black pepper, and cumin. Many recipes also include bay leaves, mace, coriander, star anise, and fennel seeds. Again, the variations are endless.

Masala dabba is a popular spice storage container used in local kitchens. It has a number of small cups, often seven, placed inside a round or square box, filled with:

ASAFOEDITA. Provides umami depth – its pungent raw smell transforms into musky complexity when heated in oil.
TURMERIC POWDER. Golden color, anti-inflammatory benefits, peppery-woody taste.
CUMIN SEEDS.  Nutty, earthy warmth, essential for tempering and ground spice blends.
BLACK MUSTARD SEEDS. Characteristic popping sound and nutty flavor.
CHILI POWDER. Color and mild heat.
CORIANDER. Citrusy, earthy notes.
GARAM MASALA completes the essential seven.

Beyond the masala dabba, whole spices provide complexity impossible to achieve with ground varieties. Green cardamom offers sweet, eucalyptus notes, black cardamom’s fire-drying creates intense smokiness; cinnamon bark, cloves, and black peppercorns form the foundation of most garam masala blends.

SAUCES

In Indian cooking, curry refers to a dish with a sauce or gravy. Curry is not a curry because it contains a particular blend of spices known as curry powder. This spice blend is not even originally Indian – it originated with British soldiers attempting to recreate Indian dishes. Foundational sauces and chutneys of Indian cuisine are:

ONION-TOMATO MASALA – onion, tomato, ginger, garlic, spices – foundation for many Northern gravies.
COCONUT-BASED CURRY – coconut milk or paste with spices, South Indian, and coastal dishes.
YOGURT-BASED SAUCE – for marinades (e.g., tandoori), gravies, and as a side dish (raita), it adds tang, richness, and helps calm the heat in spicy dishes.
TAMARIND SAUCE – tamarind, jaggery (or sugar), spices, a tangy-sweet-sour chutney for street food snacks.
GREEN CHUTNEY –  cilantro, mint, green chili, lemon or lime, spices – fresh, spicy, herbaceous.
SPICED GHEE TARKA – hot, spiced ghee poured over dals and sabzis, infused with asafoetida, cumin, garlic, chili.

Mexico

SEASONINGS

The chile pepper is the cornerstone of Mexican seasoning – fresh, cooked, dried, smoked, ground with salt and lime. Mexicans use cilantro, cumin, cinnamon, peppercorn, cloves, garlic, and onion extensively.  Also, some native, often regional, ingredients:

  • Epazote, a strong and earthy herb for beans and quesadillas
  • Mexican oregano with more citrus and licorice notes than the regular;
  • Papalo, an exotic herb which tastes somewhere between arugula, cilantro, and rue;
  • Achiote/annatto, peppery spice, and reddish-brown coloring agent.

Some traditional spice blends include:

TAJIN – dehydrated lime, salt, dried ground chilies – used in fruits, vegetables, and snacks for a spicy and tangy kick. Used to sprinkle fruits, veggies, toppings for popcorn, nuts, chips, and aguas frescas.

MOLE SPICE BLEND – dried chilies, cinnamon, cloves, black pepper, cumin, allspice, cacao.

BARBACOA SEASONING – Used in traditional barbacoa, a mixture of guajillo chiles, cumin, cloves, black pepper, and bay leaves is common, sometimes blended with vinegar and other spices to marinate lamb or goat.

SAUCES

Mexican cooking embraces the concept of recado or seasoning pastes, where spices and chilies are ground together to create complex flavor bases.

MOLE SAUCES is a complex category of thick, rich sauces made of 20-30 ingredients and can take days to prepare properly. Key components are chiles, nuts or seeds like almonds, pumpkin seeds, peanuts, spices like cinnamon, cloves, cumin, anise, and something sweet, like chocolate, fruit, and sugar. The main ones are sweet and spicy, chocolaty mole poblano, complex and bitter mole negro, lighter and fresher green mole verde, herby, and tangy yellow mole amarillo. Moles are considered a Mexican dish in sauce form, commonly served over meats, with eggs or enchiladas.

GUACAMOLE – both a sauce and a dish made with mashed avocados, lime juice, cilantro, onions, tomatoes, and chilies.

ADOBO is a marinade-style sauce made with dried chiles, vinegar, garlic, paprika, tomatoes, onion, cumin, Mexican oregano, black pepper, cinnamon, and cloves. Adobada is Spanish is ‘marinated’, and it can refer to different types of meat as well as al pastor (spit roast) marinade.

SALSA ROJA is a classic red table sauce of red tomatoes and chiles, onion, and garlic that can be served raw, like pico de gallo, or roasted. Used in many dishes and as a table condiment, represents essential heat in Mexican cuisine.

SALSA VERDE – is a tomatillo, serrano or jalapeño, cilantro, onion, and lime juice sauce, fundamental to everyday cooking, used both raw and cooked for tacos, enchiladas, and as a table sauce.

PIPIÁN SAUCE – made from ground pumpkin seeds, tomatillos, and chilies such as poblano, serrano and jalapeño. Similar to mole, but lighter, served with carnitas, as an enchilada sauce, with roasted poultry.

ACHIOTE PASTE / RECADO ROJO – achiote/ annatto seeds, oregano, cumin, black pepper, garlic, cloves, cinnamon. Frequently used in Yucatan cuisine to marinate meats and fish, and flavor rice dishes.

Who EATs more per day?

Pick the heavier plate

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