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What are prebiotic foods and 6 superfoods from India that are great prebiotics

etimes.in | Last updated on - Sep 4, 2025, 13:00 IST
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What are prebiotic foods and 6 superfoods from India that are great prebiotics

Gut health might sound like a modern buzzword, but the idea is old: a settled stomach keeps the whole body steady. Your gut hosts trillions of bacteria that digest food, shape immunity, and even nudge mood. Those microbes need food of their own. That is what prebiotics provide. They are plant fibers that the body does not break down, so they travel to the large intestine and feed the good bacteria that keep everything moving. Indian kitchens are already stacked with excellent prebiotic foods. You do not need imported mixes or fancy packets. The best options are the everyday ingredients you cook with anyway. From punchy bulbs to ancient grains and sturdy legumes, these six choices quietly build a stronger microbiome while fitting easily into routine meals.

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What is a prebiotic and how is it different from a probiotic?

Prebiotics and probiotics work together but aren’t the same. Prebiotics are special plant fibers your body can’t digest; instead, they feed the good bacteria in your gut, helping them grow stronger. You’ll find them in foods like garlic, onions, bananas, and whole grains. Probiotics, on the other hand, are live “good” bacteria found in fermented foods like curd, kefir, and pickles. Simply put, prebiotics are the food, while probiotics are the friendly microbes that keep your gut healthy.

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Onions: Pungent, everyday protectors

Onions carry inulin, a soluble fiber that fuels friendly bacteria, and sulfur compounds that calm irritation in the gut. Raw onion in chaats has the strongest effect, yet gentle cooking still leaves useful fiber behind. Work sliced onion into kachumber, fold pink pickled rings next to kebabs, or slow cook them into dals and sabzis to keep your gut flora well fed without changing how you eat.

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Garlic: Tiny cloves, serious power

Garlic mirrors onion’s strengths with inulin and fructooligosaccharides (FOS) that help good microbes multiply and curb the harmful kind. It supports immunity while it steadies digestion. Pound a clove into green chutney, roast whole bulbs until sweet and spreadable, or temper sliced garlic in ghee or oil before you add tomatoes and spices. However you use it, your microbes get a steady meal.

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Bananas: Comfort food with quiet muscle

Slightly underripe bananas are rich in resistant starch, a fiber that slips past digestion and feeds bacteria in the colon. They are soothing when appetite is off and they pair with both sweet and savoury food. Slice banana over warm oats, whizz it into a yogurt smoothie, or eat a firm fruit mid morning with a pinch of chaat masala to keep your system calm and regular.

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Millets: Ancient grains, modern heroes

Ragi, jowar, and bajra bring resistant starch, fiber, and polyphenols that encourage a diverse microbiome while releasing energy slowly. They are simple swaps for refined grains that rush through the system. Try fluffy millet upma, stir ragi flour into dosa batter, or cook bajra khichdi with moong and ginger. Millets give meals heft and keep bile acids and bowel movement in good rhythm.

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Jackfruit: More than a seasonal treat

Raw jackfruit has notable resistant starch and a pleasing bite, so it works like a vegetable while acting as a prebiotic. It helps tame blood sugar spikes and keeps you full. Simmer chunks in a homestyle curry, shred for a pepper fry to tuck into rotis, or boil the seeds and toss them with lemon and chilli. The texture is hearty, the after effect light.

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Chickpeas: Legumes that go the extra mile

Chickpeas, whether kabuli or desi, supply galactooligosaccharides that feed good bacteria and raise diversity in the gut. They also bring protein and minerals, so you stay satisfied without heaviness. Stir boiled chana into bhel and salads, simmer chana masala with ginger and jeera, or roast them in the oven until crisp for a snack that helps your microbes and your hunger in one go.

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Copyright © Jun 10, 2026, 11.14PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service