Yesterday was Vijaya Dashami. This day is celebrated in
different ways in different parts of the country. In South India, on Vijaya
Dashami, young kids, in the age group of 2 ½ to 3 years are made to hold a
piece of turmeric in their hands, which acts like their pencil or pen and are
made to write on a plate that is spread with rice, holding their father’s
hand. And only after performing this ritual, children are put in schools.
In Northern parts of India, people celebrate this day, as
the victory of good over evil. Huge effigies of the ten headed demon king
Ravana, his sons Meghnath and Indrajit and brother Khumbhakaran are burnt. People flock in large numbers to see the display of fireworks. There are plays depicting the Ramayana on all nine days, which is called Ramlila.
In West Bengal, this day culminates the stay of Goddess
Parvathi in her maternal home and she is sent back to her heavenly abode with
her four children Lakshmy, Ganapathy, Sarswathi and Karthik. People bid
farewell to the Goddess, by immersing her in the Ganges or any other water
body.
Vijaya Dashami, for me, is synonymous with Vidhyaarambham.
As a child I never used to like this day, since we were asked to compulsorily sit
down and study. I and my brother dreaded it all the more, because the previous
day, i.e the ninth day also called Saraswathi Pooja, we would keep all our
books in the Pooja and forget about them for the day. That was the day we used
to wait for eagerly. This was the only day in the year when elders would ask us
not to study and we were free to play or to do whatever we liked.
And now it’s my daughter’s time. She was so excited about
keeping all her books in the Pooja. She brought each and every book of hers,
even story books and kept them. But next day, she kept postponing the act of
removing the books and having to study from them.
This year's Navarathri was a memorable one, even though we did not keep golu in our house. We went and saw Durga Pooja Pandals with our neighbors. We were able to see the spectacular burning of the effigy of Ravana for the first time. We all were really thrilled, since this was something which we know happens but had never seen it live. My children't day was made and so was mine.
Now let’s get to today’s recipe – Kalkand Saadam. I prepared
this as neivedhyam on one of the nine days. I prepared this for the first time
and we all like it very much. It was something different from the regular
Sakkara Pongal or Vella Payasam.
What you’ll need
1.
Rice – ½ cup
2.
Milk – ½ cup
3.
Kalkandu or rock Candy – 1 cup
4.
Green Cardamom – 3 to 4
5.
Cashewnuts – a few
6.
Raisins – a few
7.
Ghee/Clarified Butter – 1 tbsp
Method
Wash the rice well and drain. Now add ½ cup milk and 1 cup
of water to the rice and pressure cook it for 3 whistles or till rice is cooked
well.
Powder the Kalkandu/ Rock Candy in a mixie and keep aside.
Fry the Cashews and raisins in ghee.
Once the pressure is released, mash the rice well, add the
kalkandu powder, cashews and raisins fried in ghee and the cardamoms. Mix
everything well.
Linking this to CWS Rice hosted by Revathi, originally started
by Priya and also to Anyone can cook.
I love this very Kaveri. Even I made them on the third day I guess but could not click due to the morning madness. Lovely presentation.
ReplyDeleteLooks yum..nice pic
ReplyDeleteNice clicks...saadam looks delicious..
ReplyDeleteDelicious sweet,nice presentation
ReplyDeletelooks delicious:)
ReplyDeleteLove this delicious rice..looks yumm
ReplyDeleteSuper delicious kalkandu saadam, makes me drool..
ReplyDeleteI love this and yours look simply fantastic.
ReplyDeleteLooks divine,super yum
ReplyDeleteThis kalakand sadam is new to me,lovely recipe..looks delicious!!
ReplyDeleteDelicious sweet rice :) Im loving it :)
ReplyDeleteSuch a heart filling prasadam-Kakandu Saadam.I loved the simplicity in presentation.The divine feel of Vijayadasami Kaveri.Wish you all the bests!
ReplyDeleteyour post reminded me of my childhood days, i too used to feel sad about studying after the pooja..:)
ReplyDeletethe kalkandu sadam is a new recipe to me, never tried before, looks great and nice clicks dear..
wow gr8 presentatn...and first time heard of this recipe
ReplyDeleteNice recipe...New to me...Will try it soon...
ReplyDeletewow, that is new, never used rock sugar in cooking like this before.
ReplyDeleteYummy sweet & pics are beautiful.
ReplyDeleteVery delicious rice. During this Tamil month(Purattasi) Amma makes this on saturdays. Love it and nice writeup.
ReplyDeleteCheers,
Uma
Hi,Kalkandu Rice luks divinely Good dear.Luv the recipe too.
ReplyDeleteLovely sweet rice, thank you for linking with Any One Can Cook :)
ReplyDeleteYummy sweet rice.. it has become my favourite over the past year ..:) Thanks for sending it for the event dear..:) Beautiful presentation..:)
ReplyDeleteReva
lovely post kaveri- u truly echoed my sentiment as to how vijayadasami was dreaded and how saraswati puja used to be the most fav day of the year---- nice; the kalakandu sadam looks delish!
ReplyDeleteNice one Kaveri..Looks delicious & divine :)
ReplyDeletePrathima Rao
Prats Corner
Luv the kalkandu sadam recipe ,my fav...
ReplyDeleteDivine and delicious.
ReplyDeleteLooks wonderful and delicious !!
ReplyDeleteOngoing Event - CC-What's For Friday Dinner??
arey wah! every child's dream rice :) and my childhood fav :)
ReplyDeletelooks pretty yummy :)
wow delicious and yummy recipe,my fav too...luks so tempting...
ReplyDeleteYummy and delicious with awesome clicks ...
ReplyDeletei like your pictures and would like to invite you to share them on tastingspot.com
ReplyDeleteLooks delicious!
ReplyDelete