Fermented Buttermilk Beaten with Ginger and Cumin (Refreshing Takra)
Yogurt (curd) beaten with water until frothy, seasoned with ginger, toasted cumin, and a pinch of salt. Fresh, slightly tangy, and digestive.
Yogurt (curd) beaten with water until frothy, seasoned with ginger, toasted cumin, and a pinch of salt. Fresh, slightly tangy, and digestive.
Drink, friend, for the heat of Magadha spares no one. We beat the curd with water until it foams like the foam of the Ganges, we grate ginger into it and throw in cumin passed over the embers. The sages say this drink lightens the belly and clears the mind — I who have renounced excess drink no other. A pinch of salt, and you are refreshed like a king under his canopy.
- •Curd (dahi) — one bowl (fermented base)
- •Fresh water — double the amount (dilution)
- •Fresh ginger — a little (aromatic)
- •Toasted cumin — a pinch (flavor)
- •Salt — a pinch (seasoning)
- •Coriander leaves — a few (freshness (optional))
Fermented Buttermilk Beaten with Ginger and Cumin (Refreshing Takra)
Yogurt (curd) beaten with water until frothy, seasoned with ginger, toasted cumin, and a pinch of salt. Fresh, slightly tangy, and digestive.
Why this dish? Beaten buttermilk (takra) is one of the oldest and most praised drinks in Indian treatises, reputed to aid digestion. At the Maurya court where dairy was consumed in abundance, and even more for a Chandragupta turned toward Jain sobriety, this fermented milk thinned with water was the quintessential daily drink.
Drink, friend, for the heat of Magadha spares no one. We beat the curd with water until it foams like the foam of the Ganges, we grate ginger into it and throw in cumin passed over the embers. The sages say this drink lightens the belly and clears the mind — I who have renounced excess drink no other. A pinch of salt, and you are refreshed like a king under his canopy.
Ingredients (period version)
- Curd (dahi) — one bowl (fermented base)
- Fresh water — double the amount (dilution)
- Fresh ginger — a little (aromatic)
- Toasted cumin — a pinch (flavor)
- Salt — a pinch (seasoning)
- Coriander leaves — a few (freshness (optional))
Ingredients
- Plain yogurt — 250 g (fermented base)
- Cold water — 400 ml (dilution)
- Fresh grated ginger — 1/2 tsp (aromatic)
- Ground toasted cumin — 1/2 tsp (flavor)
- Salt — 1 pinch (seasoning)
- Fresh chopped coriander — 1 tbsp (freshness)
Method
- Dry toast cumin seeds, then coarsely grind.
- Vigorously whisk yogurt with cold water until smooth and frothy (whisk or blend for a few seconds).
- Stir in grated ginger, cumin, and salt.
- Taste and adjust tanginess with more water if needed.
- Serve well chilled, garnished with coriander.
How it was made : Takra (buttermilk) is celebrated in ancient Indian medical and culinary texts as a digestive. Curd was beaten with a wooden churn in an earthen jar. No New World ingredients: ginger, cumin, and coriander are all ancient in India.
The contemporary twist : Iced version as a 'salted lassi' served in a frosty glass with a cucumber stick — the ancestor of lassi on a summer terrace.
Chandragupta Maurya · Charactorium