6 Daily Indian Foods That Worsen PCOS Symptoms Through Insulin Spikes and Inflammation
Aishwarya Kapoor | Times Life Bureau | Jul 06, 2026, 07:02 IST
6 Daily Indian Foods That Worsen PCOS Symptoms Through Insulin Spikes and Inflammation
Image credit : Times Life Bureau
Most Indian women managing PCOS are eating the wrong foods at every meal without realising it. White rice, chai with sugar, maida rotis, these are daily staples, not obvious offenders. But each one drives insulin resistance and inflammation, the two mechanisms that make PCOS symptoms harder to control. Here are the six foods doing the most damage.
White Rice, Every Single Day
Insulin resistance is not a side effect of PCOS. It is one of its core drivers. When cells stop responding to insulin efficiently, the pancreas produces more of it. That excess insulin signals the ovaries to produce more androgens. Higher androgens mean more acne, more hair on the face, less on the scalp, and cycles that arrive late or not at all. White rice, eaten daily in large quantities, keeps that loop running.
Switching to brown rice or millets like foxtail or kodo cuts the glycaemic load significantly. The taste adjustment takes about two weeks. The hormonal adjustment takes longer, but it starts there.
Maida in Every Form
For women with PCOS, this matters because the condition already compromises the body's glucose regulation. The All India Institute of Medical Sciences has documented insulin resistance in 50 to 70 percent of Indian women with PCOS, a figure higher than global averages, likely because Indian dietary patterns lean heavily on refined carbohydrates. Maida accelerates what is already a compromised system.
Chai With Sugar, Multiple Times a Day
The milk in chai adds a secondary issue. Full-fat dairy contains insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1), a compound that stimulates androgen production in the ovaries. A study in the Journal of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics found that higher dairy intake was associated with increased androgen levels in women with PCOS. This does not mean cutting chai entirely. It means reconsidering the sugar, and possibly switching to plant-based milk for at least one or two cups.
Packaged Namkeen and Fried Snacks
These snacks are also almost always made with maida or cornflour, adding a refined carbohydrate layer on top of the inflammatory fat load. A small 50-gram packet of bhujia can contain upward of 250 calories with almost no fibre or protein to blunt the glucose response. They are eaten between meals, which means they spike insulin at precisely the moments when it had begun to settle.
Fruit Juice, Including the Fresh Kind
Fructose, specifically, is processed in the liver. In excess, it contributes to non-alcoholic fatty liver disease and worsens insulin sensitivity. Women with PCOS already have a higher baseline risk for both. Eating the whole fruit, one orange, not a glass of juice from four, keeps the fibre intact and slows the glucose curve considerably.
Mithai and Festival Sweets
The issue with mithai is not just the sugar. Most traditional sweets combine refined sugar with refined flour or semolina and ghee or hydrogenated fat. That combination, high sugar, high saturated or trans fat, low fibre, produces a prolonged insulin response that can last several hours. Research published in the European Journal of Endocrinology has linked high sugar and saturated fat intake directly to worsened androgen profiles in women with PCOS.
None of this means avoiding every celebration. It means understanding that for a body already managing impaired insulin signalling, the cumulative effect of frequent sweet consumption is not ceremonial, it is clinical.
The pattern across all six foods is the same: refined carbohydrates and inflammatory fats in combinations that keep insulin elevated throughout the day. PCOS does not worsen in a single meal. It worsens in the daily diet that nobody thinks to question because every item on the list is ordinary, familiar, and shared by everyone at the table.