Sunday, February 17, 2013

Dispelling a few myths surrounding the origin of this classic dessert from Odisha.



MYTH #1 K. C. Das of Kolkata invented the rasgulla.


FACT: Rasgullas were invented in the holy city of Puri back in the 13th century. The Hindu female deity Lakshmi is served rasagollas on the last day of the annual Rath Jatra festival at Puri. This is a 700+ year old tradition called NILADRI BIJAY.


FACT: K. C. Das borrowed the dish. But he failed to replicate the complex preparation process in Kolkata, and landed up with a much simpler rasgullas that can be prepared at home. 





MYTH #2 Cheese-making was taboo all over India during ancient times.


FACT: The word cheese is derived from Latin Caseus that comes from Sanskrit Kaasi indicating that chhena was made in India in ancient times. 


FACT: Milk curdling from whey was done way back in 12th century India (See P. Arundhati's book," The Royal Life in Manasollasa,", Sundeep Prakashan, 1994.)

FACT: Perhaps lime juice was never used to curdle milk (taboo or not), traditionally milk was always being curdled with whey. 

(Just imagine a huge country with 50% of the world's cattle discarding so much spoilt milk every day due to warm weather. What a waste it would have been!)



MYTH #3 Bengalis learned the art of cheese-making from the Portuguese.


FACT: All Indian dishes that have genuine Portuguese origins also have names that are derived from Portuguese. Examples: 'Bibenca' (Bibenca), 'Vindaloo' (Vin de Alho), Kaju (Caju), Batata (Batata). But the Indian word for cheese, 'chhena' is not a Portuguese word (the Portuguese word for 'cheese' is Queijo). 


FACT: At most, Bengalis got the idea of curdling milk with lime juice instead of whey. However that is irrelevant to the history of the rasgulla, which is made from whey-curdled milk.


(In fact that Bengalis learned cheese-making from the Portuguese is a lie propagated by a section of Bengalis who want to portray Bengalis as the sole creators of all Indian chhena-based sweets. A certain parochial Bengali cook-book writer Chitrita Banerjee, with no training in historical research methods, claimed to have done some non-peer reviewed and highly questionable 'research' into this matter - apparently by comparing Goan and Bengali surnames - go figure! Chitrita Banerjee's books, which freely use Bengali words are meant strictly for Bengalis.)




MYTH #4 The Oriya Kheermohan is different from the Bengali rasgulla.

FACT: All over Bengal outside Kolkata, rasgullas are prepared in the same way as they are in Orissa (bigger, browner, tastier). Here, the dish is still called 'rasgulla', not kheermohan'.


(Thalassa Mikra, are you there?)

58 comments:

  1. This is the saddest piece of writing ever seen on the Indian gastronomic and cultural front.

    just changing the name from roshogolla to rasagulla won't make it Intellectual property of Oriyas.

    Rashogolla, like the most sweets in India will always and forever be a Bengali thing. Remember that Bengali households still are known for their amazing food culture and this fact is known world-wide :)

    tanSEN was bengali my dear friend, so were a lot of other people! want to see the entire list as it stands today? so was subash chandra bose and sri aurobindo :)

    and i can name a million others and i am proud to say our greateness can be exerted beyond our national borders.
    we are the fifth largest speakers!

    here are two lists to shut your mouth

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bengali_people

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Bengalis

    these guys are not just making India proud but half the world knows about these guys dude :)
    c'mon

    we bengalis have won pretty much every award in the world stage
    you name it we have it and we are damn proud of what we have :)
    its the only country in the world which took rebellion because it couldn't speak its mother tongue and it won! and won so hard that the UN had to adopt that day as the international language day, which celebrates languages from all over the world.

    did you know that the FAMOUS SEARS TOWER is architectured by another bengali?

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  2. You've a blog titled on (or against) Bengalis! You guys really need to stop obsessing over Bengalis. We have stopped employing Oriya cooks long ago. Take your roshogolla/rasgulla/kheer mohan if that's the highest indicator of your culture. Ask Lord Jagannath of Puri to get it patented and then display it to the tourists. Hopefully that'll help you overcome all that cultural inferiority. Peace.

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  3. Actually the blog's title is based on the children's film How The Grinch Stole Christmas. So why don't you take your plagiarising culture (or lack thereof) and shove it!

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  4. " You guys really need to stop obsessing over Bengalis."

    It's you folks who need to stop obsessing over us Odias - merely 15% of your population, but far greater cultural history than you can even dream of!

    Check out how this editorial by yet another Bengali chauvinist in Hindustan Times:
    http://www.hindustantimes.com/News-Feed/indrajithazra/Oof-Rashtropoti-Bhobon/Article1-894451.aspx

    "OOF RASHTROPOTI BHOBON!

    Indrajit Hazra, Hindustan Times (July 23, 2012)

    No one’s really noticed, but the Oriyas are really upset. Again. There was a chance that one of their own would finally become the president of India this time round. But no one from Orissa even made the grade as any political party’s presidential candidate. To add insult to injury, the 13th President is a Bengali and the outbreak of celebrations in the state next door has been keeping neighbours in Orissa awake at night.
    "


    Seriously, is having a Bengali in the "Rashtropoti Bhobon" that big a deal to you bigots? Is such a trivial thing such a big deal to you Bongs? Have you Bongs no shame?
    ?

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  5. Another reason why I do not read pedestrian newspapers like the Hindustan Times. But you certainly do. That article is the most pathetic example of journalism, if it can be termed 'journalism' at all. So what did you do about it? Had I been in your place I would have given a piece of my mind to the online editor of the paper and the writer too. But no, you decided to bark about it on your blog. Do you see how much you have belittled yourself by having a blog solely to spew venom on Bengalis? Why can't you, individually, rise above the pettiness? If you can't do it yourself, how can you accuse another community, collectively, of the same thing? And yes, Bengalis really don't care two hoots about the Rashtropoti. We have had greater men, and women from our community accomplishing much much greater heights and we also have our share of miseries to deal with.
    And did you say Bengalis are obsessing over Odiyas? Well, sorry to burst your bubble, but nobody is obsessing about Odiyas. Not Bengalis, not Biharis, and not even Odiyas I guess, because they are busy venting their frustration on Bengalis, like yourself. :)

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  6. Its rather amusing, the way you go on overdrive to defend your ilk. But obviously my analogy went above your head. If this blog is your basis for claiming that us Odias (note plural) are obsessed with you folks, then that published article in HT is proof positive that you Bongs are obsessed with us Odias - your personal views about HT notwithstanding. However, don't flatter yourself. The intention of this blog is not to 'spew venom' on anyone, but simply to put the record straight - that is, to reclaim what is rightfully ours. Too bad you Bpngs got in the way. If you don't like blogs such as this one, why don't you convince your ilk not to stoop so low and plagiarise cultural icons, big and small, from others?

    I also note how you spelled the word as 'Rashtropoti'. Although we too pronounce that particular word in a similar way, when writing a blog or when talking with someone who doesn't speak our language, we always use the region-neutral 'Rashtrapati' instead. It's just a matter of courtesy. The same can be said about pretty much every state in India .... all except one. Yep, you guessed it right! You just can't help it when parochialism is so deeply engrained in your DNA, can you? Even the Hindi writer Suryakant Tripathi 'Nirala' who spent his youthful years in Kolkata/Calcutta was highly critical of this particular trait of yours.

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  7. Amaresh Tripathy (Bulu)April 23, 2013 at 9:22 AM

    Dada, Bengalis and Odias hv so many things in common. Both of our languages & cultures r nerly the same. We eat the same food & both of us love our fish curry. Then why shud we argue over small things? My friend wrote this blog to help our Bengali brthren undrstand that odias 2 feel strongly abt our contributin just like u feel about urs. Dada - bengalis hv taken a lot of things belonging to odisha 4 example bengalis hv taken poet Jayadeva. Poet Jayadeva was born in Puri and is 100% Odia by blood. Chaitanya Mahaprabhu was also 100% odia but born in the other side of the border in Purulia bcoz his parents Madhukar Misra migrated from Jajpur district in Odisha.(Misra is common Odia brahmin surname bt not known in west Bengal).Netaji was born in Cuttack city in Odisha, but r Odias saying that Netaji is Odia?No. But we still r proud that at least a famous freedom fighter was born in Odia soil.So why r Bengalis saying that Chaitanya Mahaprabhu is Bengali? Plz understand our sentiment. When Bengalis said that Jayadeva was Bengali even the central govt., Archeological survey of India & also some american historians corrected you & said no, Jayadeva belongs to Odisha. Why? Becoz Jayadeva is a famous historical figure & even outsiders r interested in doing research on his name.But not the case 4 rassogulla because it is not considered a big issue outside of Odisha & west Bengal.Still then we hv a lot of respect for Bengali culture because it is so much like Odia culture. Also plz remember Bengali soil has produced so many freedom fighters for our motherland who fought for all Indians not only 4 bengal.So why r 2 brothers who belong to the same motherland r arguing over small things???? JAI HIND!!!

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  8. I share no such delusions of Odia-Bong bonhommie. It is Odisha's misfortune to be sharing a common border as well as genealogy with such a plagiarising, overweening group: Amader this, amader that, everything amader! You mentioned only two examples that these guys have 'Amader'ed - Jayadev and Chaitanya, but there are many more instances. I don't prefer one group over another based on something as shallow as linguistic similarities, but our kindred, the Assamese most likely have had their fair share of bad experiences with the Bongs.

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  9. Bengali cocks have stolen the recipe ..very true!!

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  10. BENGALI PAROCHIALISM

    In order to understand Nirala's attitude toward Bengali, it is important to keep in mind that he spent most of his first thirty years in Bengal.
    ....
    Nirala himself comments quite bitterly on the Bengali chauvinism he experienced during his youth in an essay published in 1925-26:

    By contamination from Bengalis, the poison of regionalism ("prantiyata ka zahar") had spread all over my veins, but instead of rendering me unconscious in this intoxication, it started to alert me--every minute--to each and every trick of the Bengalis. That was the benefit I got from the Bengalis. I started to get comfortable at seeing through each element of their twisted rhetoric (pecida bat asani se suljha lene laga).

    The adult Nirala claims that his youth spent among arrogant Bengalis has "inoculated" him against or rendered him immune to Bengali chauvinism. He claims to have come to know the Bengali mindset quite intimately and as a result to see through its rhetoric. The bitterness, though, of his childhood experiences still reverberates in this passage.

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  11. Check the following article:

    "BENGALIS' BRAZEN DISPLAY OF LINGUISTIC CHAUVINISM"
    Deccan Herald, Saturday, June 26, 2004.


    It is an eye-opener on how hoards of despicable Bengali parochial savages went on a rampage, vandalising shops, offices, and pretty much everything in there beloved Kolkata, demanding that all English & Hindi signs be rescinded/replaced with Bengali only.

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  12. LIES, DAMN LIES & NOBIN DAS!

    According to the K. C. Das website itself, friends of this supposed culinary Einstein advised him to patent his famous creation, the rasgulla.

    According the website:
    "Contrary to the advice of his friends and admirers to take out patents, he taught the intricacies of Rossogolla-making to numerous sweetmeat makers."

    Except that there was no patent law in India those days! The first ever legislation to protect intellectual property law had just been introduced in India! It was Act VI of 1856 on Protection of Inventions. It granted "exclusive privileges" to the inventor. The legislation was designed only to safeguard British colonial interests. Not surprisingly, the first petition was filed by an Englishman - a certain civil engineer by the name of George Alfred DePenning for his invention, "An Efficient Punkah Pulling Machine". DePenning went on to file the second and fourth petitions in India.

    The first real patent law enacted in India was the Indian Patents and Designs Act 1911. However even this law was to safeguard British colonial interests and not meant to protect Indian inventors. This led to the Indian Patents Act of 1970: the first patent law designed to protect the likes of Indian inventors such as Nobin Das, which was over a century after the K. C. Das website's claim that Nobin Das was asked to patent the rasgulla.

    To claim that way back in 1858, Nobin Das & Co. thought about patenting the rasgulla proves that the entire story is a load of PURE, UNADULTERATED BULLCRAP!

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  13. Dear Misrababu: Namaskar! Kudos 4 your great effort but beshi criticism ta bhala haba nahin. I just think tht it might backfire (just my personal opinion no more). Kichhi agressiveness ta kam kari dele in my opinion it will get more attention. I mean just a little. Cheers! ;-)

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  14. There's nobody by that name here. I'm not the one copying that Mazumdar dude's rants either. Please go away!

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  15. Bengali clannishness is only too well known. Here is two unrelated blogs complaining about Bengali clannishness:

    h1conoclast.blogspot.com/2007/12/racist-friends.html

    jostamon.blogspot.com/2010/10/refined.html
    "There are clannish folks in India, and then there are seriously clannish folks. The Bengalis are seriously clannish."

    What's more, the website www.spellorg.com/clannish provides example sentences on the usage of the word 'clannish':
    Bengalis are remarkably clannish: they will toil and plot to advance the interests of anyone remotely connected with them by ties of blood.

    Hilarious!

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  16. for engineering ,medical,mba or even jobs they have to depend on odisha.

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  17. A very unpatriotic lot, highly clannish and with intense language chauvinism.

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  18. Roshogolla was invented in Odisha. Then the guy N.Das developed a similar kinda stuff there in Bengal, which is a bit different from its sister counterpart. I'm a Bengali, residing in Odisha. To be very frank, I'm not from West Bengal. From childhood, I lived in different cosmopolitan environments and consider myself much above these cultural or linguistic bounds. The thing which I wanted to say is Odisha is much much underdeveloped when compared to West Bengal or any other state in the country. There are people on roads anywhere and everywhere...just step outside Bhubaneswar/Cuttack (which are also much much behind the major cities of West Bengal), you will know about the state. This debate on roshogolla/rasgola would not help you/your state. Try doing something for your state, your country. Or else, the culture will soon become a part of history and will be slammed back in some stupid page of Wikipedia.

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    1. why you bongs come to odisha then if your cities are developed .your population is 10 to 12 crores .ou are talking about bulshit culture
      you people refugees forget odisha you people beaten up in assam ,megalaya,even mizoram .youy people are most shame less creatures
      in the world.

      Delete
  19. I'm from Odisha but I've spent most of my life outside eastern India, and a part significant part of it abroad. I consider myself head and shoulders above the parochial bickering going on here. That said, I've tasted rasgulla in both states. The Kolkata-style rasgulla at Ganguram's or KCDas at Bhubaneswar is the same as the ones found in Kolkata. As well marketed as they me, they are no match for the indigenous Odiya style rasgullas of BK Kar or Pahal.


    Also I totally disagree with you about the cities in Odisha abd W. Bengal. Siliguri is a shithole. Kharagpur is only marginally better. Kolkata, despite its size is also a dirty, filthy city. My best friend, a Gujarati guy, opined that it is a lot like Gandhinagar. In my - dare say unbiased, opinion Bhubaneswar is the cleanest, most livable city in eastern India.


    Outside the Bhubaneswar area, I've driven in coastal Odisha - Paradip, Baleshwar, etc. Coastal Odisha enjoys good infrastructure by Indian standards, and has nice, wide highways. There are great beaches, and amazing tourist attractions - both architectural and natural. Unfortunately, it is western Odisha which has been neglected, and which brings down the Odisha statistics quite a bit.

    The one thing I noticed in Kolkata is that people are not open to non-Bengali speakers. In fact I have had more than one bad experience by speaking/responding in Hindi (I'm fluent in Hindi.) Once I was accosted by a bunch of hoodlums who told me that in Kolkata, I must speak in Bengali only or go away. What a contrast from Bhubaneswar where Hindi is so widely accepted that it is practically the lingua franca for business.

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  20. these bongs are speaking about greatness your population is about 25 to 30 crores how many tv channels are there ?by the way how many newspaper are there as you compare with odia we have 20 channels having a population of 4 crores you shameless people dont want to develop
    british have done each and every thing for you still you people are not able to develop. look at other tamil, telugu ,kannada ,malaylam they are very much united but you shameless people doesnt have that culture .name one chief minister who have done anything for the state

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  21. u poor people! now shouting at us – Bengali’s for marketing Rasagolla better than you guys could have. shame on you. see royal bengal white tiger..your Nadan Kanan got the first one & probably has the maximum number, the tigers are available plenty in your forest but name given as Royal BENGAL tiger. You claim Subhas Chandra Bose as your own..he was born in Katak but he has to come out of Orrissa to became famous. tumi tommader badi te thalka..aaar rasgolla becha…

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  22. you are jealous because Kolkata is a thriving metropolis and you have nothing. Bhuboneshwr is like a small suburb of Kolkata.
    All famous people in the eastern India are Bangla speakers, can you digest that? Do you want a list?

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    Replies
    1. mr asshole baneerjee kolkata area is 185 square km and bhubaneswar is 135 square km .your bong chicks always want to sleep with other people because you bongs dont know how to satisfy.if you sent your wife then i will tell how to satisfy . what do you mean by list. i want give list of bengali prostitues .yes the city is very big full of pigs like you .let me tell you that the conversion was started by bong that is the reason. i have bong friends but they never argued with me and they are always friendly but some of bongs like you come with stupid comments without lack of knowledge. if you dont stop commenting about my state my people my culture then nobody can save you from me.

      Delete
  23. So they can teach you how to were tampon b!tch???????

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  24. BENGAL RULEZZZZZ FOREVER!!!!

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  25. Hi Rakesh,

    Please don't use such foul language. It does not look good on us Odias. That Bengali chap who never had the privilege of enjoying the backing of thousands of years of cultural heritage using crass language is one thing, one of us doing the same is quite another.

    Jai Hind!

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  26. Check Wiki, you will find Rasagulla is an Odiya dish. Even many of the other dishes famous as Bengoli food are originated from Odisha.

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  27. these bongs will never accept this my dear

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  28. >>Check Wiki, you will find Rasagulla is an Odiya dish.

    Not for long. The parochial Bongo idiots from BongoBongoLand outnumber us 10 to 1. Driven by pure parochial zeal, they edit away all contentious articles to make their beloved BongoBongoLand look as good as possible.

    The Wikipedia entry on Chaitanya recently contained the simple fact that following a dispute with the monarch of Jajpur in Odisha, Chaitanya's grandparents had emigrated from Odisha to Nadia in BongoBongoLand. Madhukar Mishra was the name of Chaitanya's grandfather, and Mishra while being a very common Odia brahmin surname, is not even used by Bongo idiots.

    The Wikipedia entry on Jayadev rightly mentioned that Jayadev was Odia by birth. This is a simple fact and even the central government issued postage stamps commemorating Jayadev's birthplace in Puri district. The Geological Survey has actually done some excavation work and then erected a museum in the village where Jayadev was born, Kenduli Sasan, in Puri district. The Bongo monkeys have whittled down this fact and currently, it gives the impression that Jayadev's birthplace is controversial (which is pure bullshit).

    The Rasgulla entry has been systematically edited by those same Bongo monkeys and statements pertaining to the Odia origin have been deleted, along with a large number of valid references, including those by foreigners on rasgulla's Odia origin.

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  29. Rasagolla is a odia dish but marketing is done by Bengalis. So credit goes to both. Today Rasagola is well known throughout India b'coz of Bengalis. In Odisha we have so many other very delicious sweets like "Chenna Pada". But we never did anything to market it. Have we? So we Odias should have to be united and try to market our dishes before someone else takes it and market it as their own...

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  30. Well, first of all, although K C Das plagiarised the recipe from Odisha, he was not the one who made it popular in Kolkata. Apparently a Marwari guy did it.

    Then, why attach the word 'Bengali' in front of the dish, and in fact everything? It's not the only cultural icon that they've usurped from their neighbouring states, like Odisha. They are driven by petty provincialism, period!

    Here is a sampler of the edits that some Bengali dude tried to make to the Wikipedia article on rasgulla:
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/Babumoshai50

    "But Bengali roshogolla is sweeter and tastier just like Bengali language and culture."
    en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rasgulla&diff=prev&oldid=368333161

    The same bigot inserted the following sentences in the entry on Indian Literature:
    "But the richest Indian literature is acknoledged to be Bengali literature because of the vast number of famous writers and poets."
    en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Indian_literature&diff=prev&oldid=368332780

    Here is the change that guy made to Wikipedia's entry on Eastern India:
    "All other eastern Indian languages like Oriya and Assamese look up to Bengali as the guide and a source of inspiration for their underdeveloped literature. "
    en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=East_India&diff=prev&oldid=368333640

    This is not a in isolation. Here's another example of a Bengali zealot editing wikipedia:
    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Contributions/Amarkolkata
    The rasgulla article:
    "Bengali sweets is considered as the most superior sweets all over India."
    en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Rasgulla&diff=prev&oldid=369109062

    Wikipedia entry on Bengali culture:
    "Because of the large number of poets and authors that Bengal has produced, Bengali language is respected all over India as a very sophisticated language."
    en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Culture_of_Bengal&diff=prev&oldid=369112451

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  31. In the i am declaring rasagulla..is originated frm odisha...ha ha ha

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  32. Fighting for culture is good but we should think where as a East India people how much developed we are?... Time to make odisha bihar West Bengal jharkhand developed and modern state... For that the region needs unity

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  33. Odisha, Jharkhand, Bihar and our brothers by geography and Assam our brother by language. But I love all of India and whichever part of India develops I feel proud that something happened to my motherland.

    But when one state exhibits too much parochialism like a certain well-populated neighbour of ours (hint: 'everything amader', brutally distorting history to feed that same parochial need, then I cannot sit back, relax and condone such action!

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  34. The fight between the Odiyas & Bengalis will never end. . . till they exist. So guys better stop fighting for these issues. . We have many things to think other than this !! India comes first. . Look at the perennial & potential threat that we Indians have from China & Pakistan !! If this is not enough, don't you guys know the communal riots between Hindus & Muslims going on in India. . that u guys hav again started this regionalism issue ??? Don't u guys know who u are ?? Don't u knw dat Odiyas are believed to be sober, kind & love to maintain a low-profile and less-hyped life than a Bengali who is just the opposite of what we are. . Stop feeding a dog & it will stop barking guys !! So please stop spoiling ur culture for it's way too precious & needs no comparison with any other language. . JAI JAGANNATHA

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  35. The whole problem is that *Bengalis are not patriotic*. I live in Canada. We have two groups of Indians in our city, Bengalis and everyone else. In May when we arranged for a picnic party to celebrate Buddha Jayanti, the Bengalis and Bangladeshis went away with their Bangladeshi friends and celebrated Tagore's birthday instead.

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    Replies
    1. (we celebrated Buddha jayanti next saturday as sunday is not possible due to next day being a working day (monday) which is normal in Canada. This is same day as Tagore birthday apparently)

      Delete
  36. Hey Bongs, claiming the Rasagolla as your own is like the British claiming the Kohinoor as their own.

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  37. Hey Bongs, claiming the Rasagolla as your own is like the British claiming the Kohinoor as their own.

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  38. Hello reader, claiming the Rasagolla was invented in Westbengal (not in Odisha) like mathematics / algebra invented in Arabs (not in India).

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  39. INDIAN PATRIOT FROM BHUBANESWAROctober 17, 2015 at 10:14 PM

    FIRST JAYADEVA THEN RASAGOLLA THEN MUCH MORE TO COME.
    UNCIVILISED BONGO CHIMPANZEES FROM BONGO BONGO LAND WILL NEVER DARE TO PLAGIARISE THE HERITAGE OF ODISHA AGAIN.

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  40. My reply to Vir Sanghvi's article "Who invented the rasgulla and Mysore pak?" (Hindustan Times).

    You asked: “If the Odiyas were great rasgulla-wallahs for centuries then why did the rest of India never hear about their great invention?”

    First of all, one wonders whether your intended purpose behind using the word “great” twice is that question was sarcasm, or condescension towards the Odia people. Perhaps a combination of both.

    In any case, allow me answer your question.

    First of all, a dish, no matter how appealing it may have been, would have been impossible to popularize from the Bhubaneswar-Puri area, which were very small towns those days. On the other hand, large population centre like Kolkata is the ideal setting for it.

    Next, one needs a certain degree of salesmanship to popularize a new product. The Puri temple chefs never acquired this skill as there motivations were religious rather than commercial. On the other hand, K. C. Das, a confectioner, would have been particularly adept at it. The popularity of the pizza is a case to point. It was invented by the Italians, but popularized by the Americans.

    Lastly, regional dishes began gaining nationwide popularity only within the last 100 years or so. There were neither any commercial food outlets nor restaurants until (as far as I know) the British opened the Great Eastern Hotel in Kolkata in the 1840s. Until then, Indians were exposed only to their own regional cooking. The ubiquitous Dosa was unheard in Punjab, and the lip-smacking Shrikhand in Kolkata or Bhubaneswar.

    It is not at all surprising why this Odia dish remained unknown outside coastal Odisha.


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  41. A comment that I left in the Vir Sanghvi site:

    Who cares where it was invented? For one, out of pure intellectual curiosity, I certainly do. The people of Odisha (who make up only a fraction of the Bengali population) view it as a cultural icon, certainly do. From their reaction to Odisha's claim, Bengalis clearly do. Finally, you too cared about its origin a decade ago in that TV show. It's only now when it is evident that you were wrong, have you started claiming that nobody cares!

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  42. ये अब प्रमाणित हो ही गया है कि रसगुला हमारा था है और रहेगा
    मछली खानेवाले धिवरोँ कि बिरादरी ने फिर हार का स्वाद चखा

    जयदेव जी को अपना बता रहे थे तब भी तुम्हे मुँह कि खानी पड़ी थी
    पिछले 200वर्षोँ से हमेँ तोड़ने कि कोशिश कि ओड़िआ एक स्वतंत्र भाषा नोए
    आज ओड़िआ को एक क्लासिकल लागुँएज का दर्जा प्राप्त है
    और तुम
    ए गंगा सेइ मेघना गाते बँटगये

    मेरा घर तोड़ने चले थे
    और तेरा घर जल गया

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  43. Panel seal on rasgulla's Odisha origin
    Committee cites references from old texts to refute Bengal's claim

    (Thursday, 14 July 2016, The Telegraph)

    The committee formed to settle the issue of rasgulla's origin today confirmed that the sweet had its roots in Odisha.

    The state government had formed the committee to get the geographical indication (GI) tag for the sweet after Bengal staked its claim over the origin of the delicacy. The committee has submitted its report to the state government's department of science and technology.

    In its 100-page report to the state government, the committee has cited several references to stake claim to the origin of the sweet and prove the Bengal government's stand "wrong".

    The committee, which is headed by eminent Jagannath cult scholar Asit Mohanty, had submitted its interim report in September last year.

    In support of Odisha's claim, the committee has pointed to the sweet's reference in Dandi Ramayana, a version of the epic adapted by Balaram Das in the 16th century. Tracing the origin of the sweet, the report also claimed that the sweet was being offered to gods in mutts and temples for over 600 years.

    The committee has refuted Bengal's claim that rasgulla had reached Odisha under the influence of Shri Chaitanya. The neighbouring state had also claimed that chhena (cottage cheese), from which rasgulla is made, was invented in Bengal.

    The Mohanty committee in its report has also mentioned that selections from Odia literature published by Calcutta University in 1924 had references to the sweet's origin in Odisha. "After detailed research, we have gathered evidence that the sweet had a strong presence in the state. Now we will move forward and take the necessary steps to get the GI tag for the sweet," said science and technology minister Pradip Kumar Panigrahi.

    The state government had initiated the process to obtain GI tag for Pahala rasgulla in May. But the process got delayed after the Bengal government stepped in to stake its claim over the sweet's origin.

    The GI indication would confer legal protection to the Odisha rasgulla, along with preventing its unauthorised use. The first item from Odisha that received the GI tag was the Kotpad handloom fabric. At present, there are 14 items from the state on the list with patta chitra textile being the latest addition to it.

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    1. WINNERS: Patriotic Indians from Odisha
      LOSERS: Bongo Monkeys who plagiarise from neighbouring states ("Amader Bangla")

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    2. RESEARCH REVEALS RASAGOLLA'S AGE
      Iconic Sweet “Rasagolla” has a history of 500 years in Odisha, said Asit Mohanty, an acclaimed Literateur.


      Presenting an well researched 100 page document on Odisha’s Rasagolla to the Minister Science and Technology Pradeep Kumar Panigrahi here today, Mr.Mohanty quoted Dandi Ramayan.

      Dandi Ramayan was scripted by Balaram Das(1472-1550) in which mention of Rasagolla is there.

      So history of Rasagolla is of 500 years. So Odisha has the right to ask for the Intellectual Property Rights (IPR) to the ‘Rosogolla’, said Mr.Mohanty in his document.

      Providing clinching evidence on ‘Rasagolla’, Mr.Mohanty urged the State Government to demand for a Geographical Indication (GI) for the iconic sweet.

      Mr.Mohanty said there are multiple references to ‘Rosogolla’ in ancient literature and those are recorded evidences.

      West Bengal Government has been working on its claim for a GI registration for a year, say it was first produced by Nabin Chandra Dash around 1868.

      Across the border, Odia literateurs say the sweet is found in many works well before 1868.

      Marshalling ‘evidence’, Mr. Mohanty says a cottage cheese sweet is described by Balaram Das (1472-1550), Brajanath Badajena (1730-1800) and Abhimanyu Samantsinghar (1760-1806).

      “So, Nabin Chandra Dash could be considered the Columbus of ‘Rosogolla’ who discovered it in Odisha,” says Mr. Mohanty.

      Around 1843, Rev. Amos Sutton, a Missionary, talks of ‘Rosokora,’ hinting at juicy ‘Rosogolla’ in syrup, in an English-Odia dictionary, the claim goes.

      Odisha is also citing Pundit Suryanarayan Dash’s Sahitya Akademi award-winning ‘Odia Sahitya ra Itihasa,’ which mentions ‘Dandi Ramayan’ and its pointers to Odia food including ‘Rosogolla’.

      The ancient Odia dictionary “Purnachandra Bhasakosha’ talks of a cheese sweet in jaggery syrup.

      Mr.Mohanty said there is mention of ‘Rasagolla” in Balmiki Ramayan, which has been quoted by Bijaya Chandra Majumdar in his “Typical Selection from Oriya Literature” published in 1924 by Calcutta University.

      Erstwhile King of Sonepur Maharajah Virmitradaya Singh Deo provided financial support for such a research and Sir Ashutosh Mukherjee has written Pre Face of the Book.

      Citing several other examples from literature, the Kendriya Sahitya Akademi Winner has urged the State Government to demand for GI, which is needed most.

      Minister Mr.Panigrahi was very happy to receive the document and said his department will examine it and will take up the issue, which will bring worldwide honor for the State.

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  44. West Bengal has decided to back down from its original claim that Nobin Das invented the rasgulla. It now states that it wants a GI tag for only the Banglar rasogolla and has clarified that it has no conflict with Odisha. This comes after the Odisha government compiled 130 pages of historical evidence that the sweet was being prepared in the kitchens of the Puri temple for at least 500 years. As it stands now: RASAGOLLA ORIGINATED IN ODISHA!

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  45. Very nice detail.Are you looking for the low cost rasgulla making company then you can directly visit our website. We provide the high quality machines to the client. For more details visit our blog post.

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    1. You can find the methods of making Spongy Rasagola from Salepur, Cuttack district famous as Bilakara Rasagola. The Rasagola can be made smaller in size for manufacturing by adding Maida as ingredient. But this is banned in many countries as maida is not good for health. So called K C Das Rasagola made spongy by adding maida. Same way other ingredients possible like Gelatin or semolina But Gilatin is made from bone. Then it should be termed as rasagola. Also by adding extra ingredient the original taste of Chhenna will be lost due to variation of content and ofcourse it will be cheaper and smaller. If you can apply for patent for Rasagola to manufacture this will be good. Odia will not have problem if you patent on the variation. But it will loose its original taste. You will find the best Rasagola where you find the pieces are broken and size does not appear fully round. You can find the hotel owners while entering into Puri place called Chandanpur. It will be really great if the Rasagola can become cheaper by automating the manufacture process. Surely we will visit the website to make not only Rasagola bit many other sweets by machines.

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  46. Rasagola Odisha ra...

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  47. Now the claim "Bangalar Rosogolah" is not a healthy food due to ingredients used to make it spongy also K C das has a patent for this. The problem is Odia Rasagollah is not made using Maida floor. Maida floor is banned in many contries. Maida is originated from south india as the name says. Maida is not used in the rasgola made in Puri or pahal. Some places in odisha even people use maida to make the ball so it remain harder and spongy. So "Bangalar Rosogollah" is not orginal Rasagola, But since K C Das has a patent in doing so, it should not be treated as Rosogola. Better people should call that K C Das Rasagola as "Bangalar Rsosogola". This is not GI of Rasagola. The GI is approved with the name as " Bangalar Rosogola". Another point is City Of Calcutta is established by Britishers. Since Rasagola was pre-existed before British Ruled India and Bengal was the first slave state and that time there was no K C Das Rosogola or Bangalar Rosogola. Odias have never thought of thinking to make claim as GI. Even rice was originated in Orissa - Odisha has never tried to claim GI status of Rice. So Now odisha must claim GI of its own sweet products originated in Orissa example - "Chenna Poda", "Rasagola", Khasta Gaza and labanglata and many other sweets and also food preparation styles in Odisha and Temples. I read the blog telling Bengali's stop eating the foods prepared by Odia cooks. It does not matter, they have already learn how to cook through constant mixing of culture.

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  48. Lol I just came here to see two groups of chauvinists hurling shit at each other like a pack of fighting dogs. Both my Oriya friends and I had a great time laughing at the sheer childishness of this blog and the comments. Please keep posting such entertaining stuff. Jai Hind.

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