Your brain is hungry long before you feel inspired—and the difference between a sharp morning and a foggy one is usually on your plate. This book shows how everyday choices create the conditions for deep concentration and reliable memory, translating hard science into a week you can actually live. Inside, you’ll learn the core levers of brain nutrition: stabilising blood sugar balance for focus, getting the right omega-3 for memory, staying ahead on hydration and cognition, and timing meals to your clock with meal timing circadian rhythm. It replaces vague advice with meal templates, shopping lists, and a workday nutrition plan you can test in days, not months. Expect practical answers to why you crash at 2 p.m., what to eat before study or a big meeting, and how to build low-effort, repeatable routines that keep attention steady. This is for students, knowledge workers, leaders, and parents who need thinking they can trust on demand. If you’ve tried cutting sugar, adding coffee, or skipping breakfast without consistent results, you’ll discover how foods for concentration and low GI breakfast ideas can make clarity predictable. With an emphasis on evidence and cultural flexibility, it helps you design a personal cognitive performance diet that fits your life—no fads, no guilt, just the inputs a busy brain needs. - Learn what to eat, when to eat, and why it works - Build meals that support deep work, study, and memory - Keep your energy even without complicated rules Eat for the brain you want—one clear, focused day at a time.
Eating for Focus
SKU: 9789374121665
$18.99 Regular Price
$15.83Sale Price
- Anand Krishnamurthy writes at the crossroads of food, mind, and daily work. Raised between spice-rich kitchens and exam-season study tables, he learned early that what we put on the plate shapes what we can hold in mind. His work blends close reading of nutrition and cognitive science with a humane respect for culture and habit—more masala dosa than miracle pill, more evidence than ideology. He believes clarity is a skill built in ordinary meals and ordinary weeks, and his pages favour simple protocols over heroic self-discipline. When he is not testing recipes for sharper mornings, he is talking to students, coders, teachers, and parents about small changes that let attention do its best work.


















