After receiving a report of her LDL (low density lipoprotein or bad cholesterol) level rising and triglycerides being high, along with HDL (high density lipoprotein or good cholesterol) level being low, Ria, a 34-year-old corporate employee, consulted me. Her life was fast, and her food was mostly very quick, consisting mainly of refined carbs, sugary tea, occasional fried snacks and eating out during business trips. Although she was not overweight, her inflammatory markers and lipid imbalance were clear indicators of a metabolic drift.
Before she changed her diet, her total cholesterol was 236 mg/dL, LDL was at 154 mg/dL and HDL (good cholesterol) was at 38 mg/dL. Her triglycerides were at 212 mg/dL. Since the prescription of drugs was not something that had to be done right away, she decided to take the doctor’s advice for a diet-first approach, but with more structure.
Step 1: Resetting the plate
Instead of a restrictive plan, we prepared her meals to make the food suitable for her physiology. Her diet was rich in soluble fibres, antioxidants, omega-3 fats and varied proteins. We eliminated food that caused the problem, especially refined sugar, bakery products, processed snacks and deep-fried foods.
Her typical day started to look like this:
Morning: Start the day with warm water with soaked chia seeds and have a high-fibre breakfast comprising vegetable dalia, paneer besan chilla, or oats with nuts.
Lunch: A plate built on the “½ vegetables + ¼ protein + ¼ complex carb” rule, like bajra roti with methi sabzi, curd, and dal
Evening: Green tea with roasted chana or nuts instead of biscuits.
Dinner: Light and protein-based, such as grilled tofu, dal soup, vegetable khichdi, millet upma with seeds.
Small adjustments made a huge difference: Use of cold-pressed oils instead of others, adding garlic to daily cooking, adding flaxseed powder to chapati dough, and eating one pectin-rich fruit every day.
Step 2: Meal Timing
One of the factors in cholesterol management that is most often neglected, if not completely ignored, is the timing of our meals. Late dinners, long gaps between meals, and excessive consumption of carbohydrates in the second half of the day create fat-storage patterns.
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We aligned her meal clock with the circadian rhythm. The heavy foods were shifted to earlier in the day, and evenings became light and protein-driven. This avoided triglyceride spikes and improved HDL gradually.
Step 3: Activating the Body’s Inner Anti-Inflammatory System
Cholesterol doesn’t rise only because of excess fat; it rises because the body is inflamed.
Foods to cool the metabolic fire were added to address this:
● Turmeric with a pinch of black pepper
● Amla in mid-morning
● 4–5 almonds and walnuts soaked for omega-3s
● Green leafy vegetables thrice a week
● Yoghurt to support gut flora
How Cholesterol-Lowering Diets Actually Work
Follow-up reports after 10 weeks showed a significant shift. Her total cholesterol went down to 198 mg/dL, LDL to 118 mg/dL, triglycerides: 148 mg/dL while HDL rose to 46 mg/dL.
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Nothing extreme was done: no aggressive fasting, no fad dieting, no cutting entire food groups. It was simply strategic nutrition that worked with her physiology, not against it.
Cholesterol isn’t the villain; rather, it’s the imbalance. A properly devised diet lowers cholesterol by binding excess LDL through soluble fibre found in oats, lentils, fruits, and vegetables. It improves bile metabolism, forcing the liver to take cholesterol from the blood. It lowers inflammation of blood vessels, reducing plaque formation. It optimises fat burning with better protein distribution and controlled carbs.
Food, if properly applied with precision and regularity, can act like silent inner therapy. People unknowingly worsen their cholesterol by following popular yet flawed nutrition trends. Nothing like eliminating fats or living on salads, a cholesterol-lowering diet is all about intelligent eating.
(Simrat Kathuria is a clinical dietitian)