Ingredient DNA
Kodo Millet — Kodon
Paspalum scrobiculatum · Family: Poaceae · Genus: Paspalum
Origin
Africa / South Asia — ancient cultivation
Category
Millet / Ancient Grain
Form
Small round or oval grains
Gluten-free
Yes
Protein
~11g per 100g dry
Fibre
High — higher than rice and wheat

What Does Kodo Millet Taste Like?

Flavour Profile — Kodo Millet
Earthiness
★★★☆☆
Nuttiness
★★★☆☆
Mildness
★★★☆☆
Warmth
★★☆☆☆
Complexity
★★☆☆☆
Aroma Strength
★★☆☆☆
Kingdom
Plantae
Family
Poaceae
Genus
Paspalum
Species
Paspalum scrobiculatum
Hindi Name
Kodo / Kodon
Sanskrit Name
English Name
Kodo Millet
Arabic Name

Kodo Millet in Every Indian Language

LanguageNamePronunciation
EnglishKodo Millet
HindiKodo / Kodon
Tamilவரகு — Varagu
Teluguకోదో — Kodo
Malayalamകൂവരകൂ — Koovaraku
Kannadaಹಾರಕ — Haraka
GujaratiKodo / Kodon
MarathiKodo / Kodon
PunjabiKodo / Kodon

What Is Kodo Millet?

Kodo millet — kodon in Hindi, varagu in Tamil — is one of India's most drought-resistant millets, particularly important in the tribal agricultural regions of Chhattisgarh and Madhya Pradesh. Small, brown, oval grains with a slightly bitter flavour when poorly processed — properly milled kodo has a mild, earthy character.

What Indian Cooking Loses Without Kodo Millet
  • Kodo is a primary food grain in Chhattisgarh tribal communities — one of the few crops that sustains life in their difficult agricultural conditions
  • Kodo has one of the lowest glycemic indices of all millets — valuable for diabetic communities
  • The grain's polyphenol content gives it significant antioxidant properties
  • Increasing urban interest in millet health benefits has brought kodo into premium health food markets

Kodo Millet Through History

Historical Record
Tribal Staple of Central India

Kodo millet has been cultivated in India for at least 3,000 years, primarily by tribal communities in Madhya Pradesh and Chhattisgarh. It was the primary food crop of indigenous communities in these regions, providing nutrition in conditions where other crops failed.

Explore Indian Food History →

The Science of Kodo Millet

🔬Cooking Science
Low Glycemic Index — The Health Case for Kodo
Kodo millet has one of the lowest glycemic indices of any common grain — approximately 48. Its high content of slow-releasing complex carbohydrates and dietary fibre means blood glucose rises very slowly after eating kodo millet. For diabetic populations and those managing blood sugar, kodo is among the most beneficial grain choices available.

How to Store Kodo Millet

Storage Reference
Whole grain
12–18 months
Flour
3–4 months
Key note
Store in airtight container away from moisture

How to Buy Good Kodo Millet

What to Look For — and What to Avoid
✓ Look For
  • Uniform clean grains
  • No musty smell
  • From reputable organic suppliers
  • Consistent grain size
✗ Avoid
  • Musty or stale smell
  • Discoloured grains
  • Excessive debris
  • Mixed grain sizes

How to Use Kodo Millet Correctly

Using Kodo Millet in the Kitchen
Technique, quantity, and what to avoid
  • Rinse before cooking
  • Cook ratio: 1 cup millet to 2.5 cups water
  • Bring to boil, reduce heat, cook 20–25 minutes
  • Rest covered 5 minutes before serving
  • Use as replacement for rice or in traditional preparations
  • Toast dry in pan first for nuttier flavour

What Kodo Millet Pairs Well With

Dishes That Use Kodo Millet

Where Kodo Millet Matters Most

Regional Importance
★★★★★
Rajasthan / Gujarat / Maharashtra
Traditional staple
★★★★☆
South India
Growing adoption
★★★★★
Rural India
Centuries-old staple
★★★☆☆
Urban India
Health food trend
★★★★☆
Tribal communities
Foundational food
Where Kodo Millet Fits in Indian Cooking
Rajasthani CuisineEssential
Gujarati CuisineCommon
South Indian CuisineCommon
Jain CookingCommon
Sattvic CookingEssential
Gluten-Free CookingEssential

Kodo Millet vs Rice vs Wheat

Kodo Millet vs Rice vs Wheat
FeatureKodo MilletWhite RiceWheat
Glycemic IndexLow (50–70)High (73)Medium (68)
FibreHighLowMedium
GlutenNoneNoneYes
Protein~11g/100g~7g/100g~13g/100g
MicronutrientsHigher overallLowerModerate

Nutrition and Key Compounds

Kodo Millet — Honest Nutritional Picture
Culinary quantities — aromatic and flavour contribution, not macro nutrition
Kodo millet (dry): ~9g protein, 65g carbohydrate, 9g fibre per 100g. Very high polyphenols and antioxidants. Very low GI (~48). High in B vitamins.

Substitutes for Kodo Millet

What Works and What Does Not
Good substitute
Other millets
Most millets can substitute each other with minor adjustments.
Good substitute
Quinoa (outside India)
Similar protein profile and cooking method.
Practical Insight
From the Kitchen
Kodo Millet is best introduced gradually — swap rice for millet in 25% of meals first, increasing over weeks. The nutty flavour and slightly different texture take adjustment. Toast the grain dry in a pan for 2–3 minutes before cooking for the most flavourful result.