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Maharashtrian or Marathi cuisine is the cuisine of the Marathi people from the Indian state of Maharashtra. It has distinctive attributes, while sharing much with other Indian cuisines. Traditionally, Maharashtrians have considered their food to be more austere than others. Maharashtrian cuisine includes mild and spicy dishes.
Misal pav (Marathi: मिसळपाव) is a dish from the Indian state of Maharashtra. It consists of misal (a spicy curry usually made from moth beans) and pav (a type of Indian bread roll). [1] [2] The final dish is topped with farsan or sev, onions, lemon and coriander (cilantro). [3]
Misal (Marathi: मिसळ , meaning "mixture") is a very popular spicy dish in the Western Indian state of Maharashtra. The dish is mostly eaten for breakfast or as a midday snack or sometimes as a one-dish meal, often as part of misal pav. It remains a favourite snack since it is easy to make with affordable ingredients and has a good ...
Alwan-e-Nemat is a book of 101 recipes from the kitchen of Mughal emperor Jahangir. [ 35 ] [ 36 ] It also dedicates a chapter to dining etiquette. The book describes the method for laying out Dastarkhan : a process that starts with spreading a leather mat spread over the ornate carpet to protect it, and then spreading a cloth over the mat ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects Wikidata item; ... Mahārāṣṭrīya dñyānakośa) is the first encyclopaedia in the Marathi language. ...
Moreshwar Ramachandra Walimbe (Devanagari: मोरेश्वर रामचंद्र वाळंबे or मो.रा. वाळंबे; 30 June 1912 – 21 March 1992) was an educator and a grammarian of the Marathi language. He wrote style guides and textbooks on the grammar of Marathi.
Setu Madhavrao was well versed in Marathi, English, Hindi, Sanskrit, Urdu and Persian, apart from Kannada, which was his mother tongue. As a linguist he discovered the sound system and Grammars of tribal languages like Kolami and Gondi. He was one who served the cause of Marathi against all odds in pre and post - Independent Hyderabad state. [3]
Till he went in fourth class he did not involved in poetry writing, in the fourth class he first time read the poems of Sridhar Mahipat. [1] When Balkavi was 14 years old he traveled Kashmir, Aagra and Mathura with poet R. Vaidya. Balkavi's first ever poem was published at Erandol's Dasha kal weekly magazine, title as Mulans upadesh.