Posts

Label Spotting: Parag Moong Punjabi Papad Lists Ingredients in Six Languages

Image
Some food packets quietly list ingredients and move on with their lives. Others arrive with the energy of a multilingual UN conference. Enter the delightfully overqualified label on  Parag Moong Punjabi Papad At first glance, it is a standard papad packet: moong dal, black pepper, cumin, asafoetida, edible oil. Familiar territory. Source:  Open Food Facts Then you turn the packet over. And discover the ingredients listed in six languages! The label marches confidently through: English Hindi Spanish French German Arabic Somewhere between the English and German sections, you begin wondering whether the papad itself has a passport. The ingredient list also contains one of the most unintentionally dramatic phrases ever printed on a snack packet: Plant Based Sodium Bicarbonate (Saaji) Not “baking soda.” Not even “raising agent.” No. This papad chose scientific prestige. “Plant Based Sodium Bicarbonate” sounds like something presented at a sustainability conference by a startup foun...

Barley vs Oats

Image
Before oats became the poster child of healthy eating in India, there was barley. Or more specifically, barley water. For many Indians who grew up in the 1980s and 90s, barley water was not a wellness trend but a household remedy. It appeared during hot summers, fevers, upset stomachs, and doctor-advised “light diets.” Known locally as jau, it has been part of Indian food traditions for centuries, especially in Rajasthan, Punjab, Haryana, and parts of the Himalayan region. Long before oats became the face of “healthy breakfast food,” barley was already being used in rotis, porridges, sattu-like drinks, soups, and even temple offerings. Yet somewhere along the way, it lost the spotlight to shinier imported grains and aggressively marketed breakfast cereals. Nutrition Comparison: Natureland Organics Barley Dalia vs Quaker Rolled Oats Nutrient (per 100g) Energy 406 kcal 407 kcal ...

Pomiferous: A Giant Orchard in Your Browser

Image
If you’ve ever wondered just how many apple varieties exist in the world, Pomiferous.com has the delightful answer: over 7,000 of them. Billed as the world’s most extensive apples (pommes) database, Pomiferous is a lovingly researched online treasure trove dedicated entirely to Malus domestica and its countless cousins. Whether you’re a backyard grower, cider maker, chef, or just someone who geeks out over fruit history, the site offers easy navigation by name, pollination group, harvest period, and use (dessert, culinary, cider, juice, and more). Each entry packs in details like origin stories, flavor profiles, growing traits, and fun facts. It’s clean, straightforward, and refreshingly free of pop-ups or paywalls. In a world of shrinking attention spans, Pomiferous stands out as a generous, well-organized celebration of one of humanity’s favorite fruits. 🍎

NYAM

Image
NYAM is a UK food health scanner app created by Tyrone Tapper that gives a personalised health score for packaged foods based on nutrition, processing, additives, and pesticide risk. It is designed to help users make quicker, more informed food choices without relying on marketing claims. Main features Personalised health scores for food products using Open Food Facts as the foundational data source Side-by-side comparison of any two products. Additive Risk Database Barcode scanning with offline support. Receipt and basket analysis for full-shop review. AI-powered product and shop reviews. Pricing The site lists a free tier and a Premium plan at £1.99 per month or £13.99 per year, with a 30-day free trial and no card required for the trial. Premium adds more AI imports, more shop analyses, more healthier alternatives, and more AI explanations.

Sattu vs. Besan: The Tale of Two Flours

Image
Both Sattu and Besan  originate from Bengal gram (chana or chickpeas) but the fundamental difference between them lies in the processing of the grain before it is ground into flour, which completely changes their flavor, digestibility, and usage. Nutritional Profile of Bengal Gram (Raw, per 100g) Nutrient Amount (per 100 g) Energy 364 kcal Protein 20.5 g Carbohydrates 60.0 g Dietary Fiber 13.0 g Total Fat 6.0 g Calcium 157 mg Iron 4.0 mg Magnesium 160 mg Folate (B9) 250 mcg Vitamin B6 0.5 mg The roasting process used for sattu gives it a longer shelf life and a distinct aroma that raw besan lacks. This roasting also neutralizes certain "anti-nutrients" (like phytic acid) found in raw legumes. So, while both come from gram, sattu = roasted flour and besan = raw flour. They’re cousins, not twins. Feature Sattu Besan Source Roasted Bengal gram (sometimes mixed with barley or other...