Mahua — India’s tequila, Nature’s Kalpavriksha
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...