Posts

Mahua — India’s tequila, Nature’s Kalpavriksha

Image
The Mahua tree (Madhuca longifolia) is revered by many tribal and indigenous communities in India as a Kalpavriksha , the “wish‑fulfilling tree,” because nearly every part of it provides food, medicine, livelihood, and cultural value - Its flowers are eaten fresh, dried, used as sweeteners , fermented into liquor (also called "mahuli", "mahura","Ippa") - quite possibly the world's only flower-based spirit! Its seeds yield edible oil and illipe butter (used in chocolate and margarine) Its bark has medicinal properties Its leaves serve as fodder and support tassar silk production Back in the 19th century, British colonial authorities banned it to control tax revenue, labeling it a dangerous intoxicant. They even restricted the collection of the flowers themselves. The result? Production went underground, quality control went out the window, and unfortunately some genuinely unsafe batches gave the drink a bad name — a stigma that lingered long after India...

What Is Idli Podi? A Guide to South Indian Gunpowder

Image
Podi is a popular South Indian condiment (served alongside or on top of food). It is a magical dry powder that South Indians sprinkle, mix, or aggressively shove into their mouths when they decide that life needs more flavor. It is the region's answer to ketchup, except it has personality. Made by roasting lentils, chilies, and spices into a coarse, earthy, slightly dangerous-looking dust, podi is proof that South Indian grandmothers figured out umami long before it became a trend on cooking shows. It does not merely accompany food. It rescues it. Idli Podi , specifically, is the Beyoncé of the podi family.  Image: Open Food Facts Also known as gunpowder, Idli Podi is a dry, coarse spice powder traditionally made from roasted lentils (urad dal, chana dal), dried red chilies, sesame seeds, curry leaves, and spices.  Picture this: you are staring at a plate of pale, fluffy, innocent idlis. They look like they have never experienced conflict. They are basically edible clouds. ...

Alpino's High Protein Super Oats Chocolate Gets A Protein Glow-Up With More Soya

Image
Alpino's High Protein Super Oats Chocolate  seems to have gone through an interesting makeover between 2024 and 2026.  Front of pack advertising 22% Protein before reformulation in 2026 At first glance, the bold new "25% Protein" badge prominently displayed on the front of the pack suggests a major nutritional breakthrough.  But a closer look at the ingredient list tells a rather amusing story. Alpino High Protein Super Oats: Ingredient Comparison (2024 vs 2026)   Ingredient 2024 Formula 2026 Formula Change Rolled Oats 61% Rolled Oats 51.6% Rolled Jumbo Oats ⬇ Reduced by 9.4% Peanut Butter 22% Unsweetened Peanut Butter 22% Natural Peanut Butter No Change Soya Protein 9% Textured Soya Protein ...

La Opala Novo Coffee Cups: 100% Vegetarian with Green Dot

Image
La Opala novo collection coffee cups are officially 100% vegetarian  —it proudly sports a green dot on its packaging. Image source: Open Products Facts In India, that green dot is the sacred badge of honor usually reserved for packets of biscuits, instant noodles, or paneer that solemnly swear they contain zero animal products. But La Opala? They're taking it to the next level. Their opal glass crockery is bone-ash free , which means no sneaky animal bones were harmed (or melted down) in the making of your morning chai cup. It's like the company looked at the cutthroat world of dinnerware and thought, "You know what this industry needs? More ethics." While your average ceramic mug might be hiding some dark, bone-related secrets from its manufacturing past, La Opala's Novo collection struts around with a clear conscience. No animals were involved—just pure, innocent glass goodness. The packaging doesn't stop there. It cheerfully lists other credentials: microwa...

Understanding Allergens

Image
Allergies occur when your immune system mistakenly treats a harmless substance as a threat and overreacts. The substances responsible are called allergens. They can come from food, air, medicines, or everyday environments.  Common Types of Allergens Allergens fall into several categories: Food Allergens Meats & Seafood, Dairy, Nuts & Seeds, Vegetables etc Inhalant / Environmental Allergens — Dust mites, pollen, mold, pet dander, cockroach, etc. Drug Allergens — Common medicines like penicillin, aspirin, ibuprofen, and antibiotics. Insect / Other — Bee venom, latex, etc. Food Allergens: What You Need to Know Food allergies are quite common and can cause anything from mild itching to severe, life-threatening reactions like anaphylaxis. Allergy panel tests are available to confirm a diagnosis with costs ranging from Rs 300-15,000. Major Food Groups Tested Dairy & Eggs Milk, curd, cheese, yogurt, casein, egg (white and whole) are frequent triggers, es...