Brahma’s menu
Naivedya doux (food presented then shared as prasāda)

Pāyasa — The Festive Rice Pudding (Kṣīra)

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A melting rice cooked for hours in milk, bound with ghee, sweetened with jaggery, and fragrant with cardamom. Creamy, comforting, golden — sweetness made offering.

Naivedya doux (food presented then shared as prasāda)

A melting rice cooked for hours in milk, bound with ghee, sweetened with jaggery, and fragrant with cardamom. Creamy, comforting, golden — sweetness made offering.

On the days when the world celebrates its own birth, the kṣīra is presented to me. Boil the milk long, my child, until it thickens and sings; throw in the rice and watch it like a sacred fire. Sweeten it with the hardened juice of the cane, perfume it with the seed of elā, and drown it all in a stream of clarified butter. When the spoon stands upright in the pot, only then may the feast begin.
Brahma
Ingredients
  • Rice (taṇḍula)a handful (base)
  • Milk (kṣīra)plenty (cooking liquid)
  • Jaggery / cane sugar (śarkarā)to taste (sweetness)
  • Gheea drizzle (aromatic binder)
  • Cardamom (elā)a few seeds (fragrance)
How it was made : Pāyasa (from payas, 'milk') appears in ancient texts as a dish of rejoicing and offering. It was sweetened with jaggery or honey, never modern refined sugar, and bound with ghee. Dried fruits (almonds, raisins) were added later with trade.
Sources : K.T. Achaya, A Historical Dictionary of Indian Food, Oxford University Press, 1998