
When the amul has been thrown into products with a high protein content, each with at least 10 grams of protein-ode Amul Protein Lassi after an amul with high protein cooo coffee-the consent of social media users who kindly used memes, jokes and outrageous products to show their support.
Netizens, enthusiastic about Kulfi and Protein from Amul, appreciated the brand for being affordable its high range. But they had some complaints about its availability.
“I couldn’t help but wonder … when Amul left from butter to biceps?” He asked the user and added that the Amul Protein Kulfi stared at her with “10 gm protein that captured me and said you could have a kulfi and ABS.”
Another user, blown by a high protein amul range, said that the brand is solving an Indian problem with a deficiency of proteins.
“Amul’s Protein Product Lineup is wild. Protein Kulfi. Protein Shake. Protein Lassi. Protein Pan.
“Amul once solves protein deficiency in India.” £50 for 20 g of protein is a crazy price, ”added another user, emphasizing the availability of his products.
“If Amul does for proteins what he did for butter, it could change the health story of India,” the user said ..
However, the user complained: “These high protein amul products are like conceptual cars. Everyone can see them on social media, but no one knows where to buy them.”
“Amul is on a mission, but it’s a mission to get all these protein products before they are in stock,” added another user.
Netizens also used AI generated images of all products that they wish to make the amul with protein.
In the middle of all the buzzing around the high protein amul series, several social media users decided to check if it was behind the hype. They were impressed on the basis of clinical results.
“We test laboratory amulian high proteins to verify their claims! And that was true!” He said the user and added that “the protein revolution is here!”
Indian deficiency of protein
India is struggling with a significant lack of protein because numerous surveys reveal the widespread nature of the problem. “Protein consumption in adult Indians’ diet: a general consumer survey (prodigy)” by IMRB’s market research found that 73% of urban Indian diet lacks enough protein and 9 out of 10 Indians do not meet the recommended protein intake.
Although the Indian Council for Medical Research (ICMR) advises a daily intake of 0.8 to 1 gram protein per kilogram of body weight, the national average is only 0.6 grams. This deficiency is powered by economic restrictions, carbohydrates rich in the public, low awareness of the public and mostly vegetarian food culture, which often lacks complete sources of protein.
(Tagstotranslate) India protein deficit