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Mallika Basu shares a guide to the ingredients and recipes that make Diwali sparkle – from fragrant dals and street food-inspired chaats to sweets so decadent, they practically demand a celebration
Make these traditional Indian recipes to spread hope, love, and joy to friends and family for Diwali, the Hindu New Year, also known as the Festival of Lights.
Treats and snacks to celebrate the festival of lights, like samosas, pakoras, and gulab jamun.
Murukku, is a South Indian snack typically made with Rice and black gram (urad daal) flour during Diwali. It is also very popular in South Africa, introduced by the Indian diaspora. Maize flour is used instead of rice flour with the addition of salt and cumin as the basic dry ingredients. It is sold by street vendors and at neighborhood shops.
Grated coconut and rice flour are the two main ingredients. Anarsa: A pastry-like snack commonly associated with the Hindu festival of Diwali in Maharashtra and Makar Sankranti in Bihar, its ingredients include jaggery (unrefined cane sugar), rice, poppy seed, and ghee (clarified butter). Ariselu/Adhirasam/Arisa pitha
Indians are known for their unique taste and experimental behavior when it comes to food. Many Indian desserts are fried foods made with sugar, milk or condensed milk. Ingredients and preferred types of dessert vary by region. In the eastern part of India, for example, most are based on milk products.
Diwali, the festival lights, sees millions of people attend events across the world every autumn to celebrate the triumph of good over evil.. Celebrated by Hindus, Sikhs and Jains, Diwali is one ...
Soan papdi has no confirmed origin, but one hypothesis is that it originated in the western state of Maharashtra, India. [3] According to culinary anthropologist Kurush F Dalal, Soan papdi is a Persian dish, the word "soan" has a Persian origin and the name comes from the term sohan pashmaki. [4]