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Lacto-Vegetarian Diet: Dairy Yes, Eggs No

Lacto-vegetarianism is the oldest documented vegetarian tradition, central to Hindu and Jain dietary practice for over 3,000 years. The diet includes dairy and all plant foods but excludes eggs, meat, fish, and seafood. This page covers the religious and ethical reasoning, the nutrient profile, the practical egg-substitution kit, and a sample week-long meal plan rooted in South Asian cuisine.

The short answer. Lacto-vegetarian = plants + dairy. Includes milk, yogurt, cheese, butter, ghee. Excludes eggs, meat, fish, and seafood. Common in Hindu and Jain traditions for ethical reasons. Nutritionally similar to lacto-ovo vegetarian except lower in choline (eggs are the densest natural source) and modestly lower in vitamin D where eggs contribute. B12, calcium, protein all easily met from dairy plus plant foods.

The religious and philosophical reasoning

The Sanskrit principle of ahimsa, non-harm to living beings, appears across Hindu, Jain, and Buddhist texts from at least the 6th century BCE. Hindu dietary practice varies enormously by region, caste, and family tradition, but lacto-vegetarianism is widely practised, particularly in the Brahmin and Vaishya communities of North and Western India, and in much of South India. The Bhagavad Gita and the Manusmriti both contain passages that have been interpreted as endorsing lacto-vegetarian practice, though the texts themselves are not strictly prescriptive on every food category.

Jain dietary practice extends ahimsa further. Jains avoid all animal flesh, eggs (considered close to potential life), and most root vegetables (because harvesting kills the plant entire rather than taking from it). Strict Jains also avoid fermented foods, honey, and foods that contain visible insects. The Shvetambara and Digambara branches of Jainism differ in some specifics. The combination of lacto-vegetarian eating with root-vegetable avoidance and fermentation restrictions is the most restrictive of the religious dietary traditions documented in the modern world.

Outside the religious context, some Western lacto-vegetarians adopt the diet on welfare grounds, viewing modern industrial egg production (including the killing of male chicks at hatcheries) as ethically incompatible with their position while accepting that smallholder dairy production may be defensible. This is a coherent position even if it does not match a strict utilitarian or rights-based ethics. The point of the diet is internal consistency with the practitioner's framework, not external validation.

Nutrient implications: where dairy helps and where eggs would

NutrientLacto-only deliveryWhat eggs would addAction needed
ProteinExcellent (dairy + legumes + grains)6 g per egg, completeNone; surplus
B12Good (dairy 1.1 mcg per cup)0.6 mcg per eggNone for most
Vitamin DModest (UK dairy not fortified)1 to 2 mcg per eggSupplement 10 mcg/day winter
CholineModest (38 mg per cup milk)147 mg per egg (large gap)Eat soy, broccoli, quinoa daily
CalciumExcellent (dairy is the leader)TraceNone
Iodine (UK)Good (dairy is primary UK source)~25 mcg per eggNone for most UK lacto-vegetarians
IronPlant-based only (no heme)0.9 mg per eggPair with vitamin C, see iron page
SeleniumModest from dairy15 mcg per eggBrazil nuts (1-2 daily)
Omega-3 DHANone from dairy50 mg per egg (more from omega-3 eggs)Algae oil supplement

The two practically important gaps from excluding eggs are choline and DHA. The choline gap is meaningful and should be addressed deliberately (see the choline page). The DHA gap is the same as for vegans and is best addressed with algae oil. Everything else is comfortably handled by dairy plus plants.

Egg substitutes that actually work

For baking binding (cakes, muffins, brownies): 1 tbsp ground flaxseed plus 3 tbsp water, mixed and left 5 minutes to gel, replaces one egg. Chia egg works similarly. Mashed banana (1/4 cup per egg) adds binding plus sweetness; works for banana bread, muffins, pancakes. Unsweetened apple sauce (1/4 cup per egg) adds binding plus moisture. Silken tofu (1/4 cup per egg, blended) works for dense bakes like brownies.

For leavening (where the egg provides lift): the flax and chia options provide modest lift only. For sponge cake or souffle replacement, aquafaba (the liquid from a tin of chickpeas) is the closest performer. 3 tbsp aquafaba whips to soft peaks like an egg white; 2 tbsp replaces one yolk in custards.

For scrambled or omelette replacement: firm tofu crumbled and seasoned with kala namak (Indian black salt, sulfur-rich, mimics egg flavour), nutritional yeast, and turmeric for colour. Commercial mung-bean liquid egg products (Just Egg, Crackd) scramble and bake similarly to real egg.

For coating (fried foods, breading): plant milk plus a teaspoon of cornflour creates a sticky wash that holds breadcrumbs. Aquafaba alone also works. The South Asian cuisine tradition of besan (gram flour) batter for fritters and pakoras predates the modern egg-substitute conversation and works beautifully for any breading application.

A sample lacto-vegetarian week

Drawing on both Western and South Asian traditions to show the breadth of the diet.

DayBreakfastLunchDinner
MondayPorridge with milk, almonds, berriesDal with chapati and raitaPaneer tikka with brown rice
TuesdayGreek yogurt with honey and walnutsChickpea salad with feta and tahini dressingVegetable lasagna with side salad
WednesdayTofu scramble with kala namak and toastAloo gobi (potato cauliflower curry) with riceCheese and spinach quesadilla with black beans
ThursdaySmoothie: milk, banana, peanut butter, spinachKhichdi (rice and lentil porridge) with yogurtTofu stir-fry with quinoa and broccoli
FridayYogurt parfait with granola and seedsHalloumi salad with chickpeas and pomegranatePalak paneer with naan and dal
SaturdayIdli with sambar and coconut chutneyLentil and feta stuffed peppersSaag aloo with rice and raita
SundayPancakes (flax egg) with maple syrup and berriesCheese and tomato sandwich on sourdoughPizza with mozzarella, vegetables, no meat

Snacks across the week: hummus and crudites, paneer cubes, masala chai with milk, peanut butter on apple slices, trail mix with cashews and pumpkin seeds. The week hits 1.0 to 1.2 g per kg of body weight protein, 700 to 1,000 mg calcium, 14 mg iron, and 2.5 mcg B12 in daily averages for a 70 kg adult, with appropriate vitamin D and B12 supplementation handled separately.

Practical day-to-day notes

Restaurants: most cuisines offer easy lacto-vegetarian options. Italian (pizza, pasta, risotto, caprese), Indian (entire menus available), Mexican (cheese-based, bean-based), Greek (halloumi, feta, fasolada bean soup), Middle Eastern (hummus, tabbouleh, fattoush, falafel). The harder cuisines without modification: Japanese (most dashi contains bonito flakes; ask for dashi-free options), Korean (kimchi often contains shrimp paste), Vietnamese (fish sauce in many dishes). Becoming familiar with which cuisines require modification reduces decision friction.

Label reading: in addition to obvious meat and fish ingredients, watch for gelatine (in sweets, yogurts, marshmallows, vitamin capsules), rennet in cheese (vegetarian rennet is now widely available; supermarket own-brand cheeses are usually vegetarian; check labels), L-cysteine in some bread (often derived from feathers or hair), and isinglass in some beers and wines (fish swim bladder; vegetarian options labelled as such). See the gelatine page for the detailed walkthrough.

Children and adolescents. Lacto-vegetarian diets are appropriate for all life stages per the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics 2016 position paper, with the standard nutrient attention paid to iron, zinc, B12, vitamin D, and choline. Indian dietary tradition has fed lacto-vegetarian children for generations without difficulty when the diet is varied. See kids and families page.

Keep reading

Frequently asked questions about lacto-vegetarianism

What is the difference between lacto-vegetarian and lacto-ovo-vegetarian?
Lacto-vegetarians eat dairy (milk, cheese, yogurt, butter) but exclude eggs alongside meat, fish, and other animal flesh. Lacto-ovo-vegetarians eat both dairy and eggs. The term lacto-ovo describes the most common Western vegetarian diet; lacto-only is more common in South Asian dietary traditions, particularly Hindu and Jain communities, where eggs have historically been excluded for ethical and religious reasons. From a nutrition perspective the difference matters most for choline, where eggs are the densest natural source, and for vitamin D in countries where eggs are a meaningful contributor.
Why do Hindus and Jains often follow lacto-vegetarian diets?
Both Hindu and Jain traditions value ahimsa, non-harm, which extends to dietary practice. The principle of ahimsa is interpreted differently across communities, but a common position is that dairy is morally acceptable because milk is given by the cow without killing, while eggs are considered closer to potential life and are therefore excluded. Jain dietary practice extends further: many Jains also avoid root vegetables (potatoes, onions, garlic) because harvesting them kills the plant. The lacto-vegetarian diet is one of the oldest documented dietary practices, with continuous tradition going back over 3,000 years in South Asian texts.
Can a lacto-vegetarian get enough protein?
Easily. Dairy alone provides high-quality complete protein: a glass of milk supplies 8 g, a 30 g serving of cheddar supplies 7 g, and 170 g of Greek yogurt supplies 17 g. Combined with legumes, tofu, tempeh, lentils, chickpeas, beans, nuts, seeds, and whole grains, hitting 1.0 to 1.2 g per kg of body weight per day is straightforward. South Asian lacto-vegetarian cuisine traditionally combines dal (lentils) with chapati (wheat) and yogurt, which together provide all essential amino acids in good proportion.
What about B12 on a lacto-vegetarian diet?
Dairy is a reliable B12 source: 250 ml of milk supplies 1.1 mcg, plain yogurt 1.0 mcg per 170 g, and cheese around 0.3 to 0.5 mcg per 30 g serving. A lacto-vegetarian consuming dairy at most meals comfortably meets the 2.4 mcg per day adult RDA. The risk profile is similar to lacto-ovo vegetarians, lower than vegans. Older adults, those on long-term metformin or PPIs, and those eating very little dairy should test serum B12 periodically.
Is lacto-vegetarian healthier than lacto-ovo or vegan?
The cohort literature does not consistently separate lacto-only from lacto-ovo subgroups, so direct comparison is limited. The Adventist Health Study-2 found that all vegetarian subtypes had lower mortality than non-vegetarians, with vegans and pesco-vegetarians at the lower end. Within the vegetarian subgroups, the differences were modest and inconsistent. The honest answer is that the lacto vs lacto-ovo distinction is mostly a matter of cultural and ethical preference rather than measurable health outcomes; both are healthier than the standard Western omnivore diet in cohort data.
What egg substitutes work in cooking and baking?
For baking: flax egg (1 tbsp ground flax plus 3 tbsp water, leave 5 minutes) works in cakes and muffins where you want binding plus modest leavening. Chia egg works similarly. Mashed banana adds binding and sweetness. Apple sauce adds moisture and modest binding. For scrambled-egg replacement: tofu scramble with kala namak (black salt that mimics egg sulfur), or commercial products like Just Egg or Crackd. For meringue: aquafaba (the liquid from canned chickpeas) whips to peaks similar to egg whites. The replacement matrix is well-developed; lacto-vegetarian cuisine works around egg exclusion easily.

Sources cited. Melina V, Craig W, Levin S. Position of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics: vegetarian diets, J Acad Nutr Diet 2016; 116: 1970-1980; Vegetarian Society UK definition; BDA Vegetarian and Vegan diet fact sheet; Indian Council of Medical Research, Nutrient Requirements for Indians 2020 (lacto-vegetarian intake patterns); USDA FoodData Central for per-food nutrient values. All values as of May 2026.

Updated 2026-04-27