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Blend sense with tradition this Diwali

If you fancy yourself as a good blend of modern sense and customary tradition, upcoming Diwali is the time and opportunity to experiment and demonstrate to neighbours and friends smart new ways of doing old things.

Regular sweets such as barfis, gulab-jamoons and multi-coloured khoya sweets are so predictable, calorie-dense and heavy, that most guests either shun them or reluctantly pick up the smallest piece on the plate when compelled. With diabetes, obesity and heart problems being as common as they are, most of these traditional delicacies do not go down well with those for whom they were intended, but find their way to homes of servants, drivers and junior office staff. 

Should you want your guests to eat, enjoy, take an extra-helping and remember what they had at your house, you need to make them appealing, healthy and different.

Manju never failed to surprise me over the years with her innovative preparations: mouth-watering and memorable, with that right mix of being delightful to the eyes and tongue, healthy and quite out of the ordinary. Here are some of the unique yet simple recipes she has shared.
Fruit “Cream”. Soak dried figs and dates in water for a while and puree them. Cut fruits of your choice and mix with the fig date puree to make a healthy sugar-free fruit cream.

Banana Shrikhand. Strain the water out of yogurt by putting it in a sieve for about an hour. Mix ground sugar and  ground cardamom to the thick yogurt. Add banana slices. Serve chilled.
Dry Healthy Mix. Cut slices of coconut, dates, figs and almonds. Mix them and serve as dessert.

Apple Sandesh. Mash paneer well.. add sugar, powdered cardamom and saffron, and mix well. Cut apple in small thin slices and stew with little sugar. In small bowls, put a thin layer of paneer, then of apple stew, then again paneer….Sprinkle sliced pistachios on top or decorate with dots of saffron paste.

Fig Yogurt.  Set yogurt in tiny glasses, but fill only half the glass. Soak figs and puree three-fourth. Cut the other one-fourth into tiny pieces. Mix the paste and pieces. Slowly cover the yogurt in glasses with the fig mix. Serve cold. As an alternative to figs, you can use any sweet fruit, like deseeded custard apple.

Apple Kheer. Grate apple and stew with sugar or sweetener. Thicken milk a little by boiling; add sugar, ground cardamom and saffron.  Chill the milk and stewed and stewed apple…mix and serve.

Adding and garnishing your preparation with natural sweeteners such as honey, dates, figs and raisins could add originality and make them stand out, apart from making them healthy. 

Further, Manju’s recipes contain less than half the calories that regular sweets contain, do not pose the dilemma “to take or not to take”, and do not cause the weight surge we go through at this time of the year.  Make this Deepawali different.
As published in HT City ( Hindustan Times) dated 27 October, 2013.

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