Pak love story: How Mysore Pak became South India's pioneer sweet : vimarsana.com

Pak love story: How Mysore Pak became South India's pioneer sweet


Express News Service
A sea of people had gathered around a hole-in-the-wall shop in Mysore's bustling Devaraja Market. Social distancing was obviously not their thing. A local vendor was selling hot pieces of the local favourite, Mysore Pak.
The sweets were handed out on pieces of newspaper. One bite, and we know why the noise here never dies down. The shop, Guru Sweets, is the oldest sweet shop in the city. It was once owned by the ancestors of Kakasura Madappa, who is credited with the invention of Mysore Pak in 1935.
The-golden-coloured, ghee-soaked sweet’s birth was quite accidental. One day, Nalvadi Krishnaraja Wodeyar, who was the king of Mysore between 1894-1940, was expecting special guests. He ordered the royal cook, Kakasura Madappa, to make something special.

Related Keywords

India , Vinay Parameswarappa , Bindu Gopal Rao , Nalvadi Krishnaraja Wodeyar , Kakasura Madappa , News Service , Bindu Gopal , Guru Sweets , Mysore Pak , Ashoka Road , Sayyaji Road , Guru Sweets Mysore Pak , Gully Travels , Geographical Indication , Devaraja Market , இந்தியா , பிந்து கோபால் ராவ் , செய்தி சேவை , பிந்து கோபால் , குரு இனிப்புகள் , மைஸாயர் பக் , அசோகா சாலை , குரு இனிப்புகள் மைஸாயர் பக் , கல்லி பயணிக்கிறது , புவியியல் அறிகுறி , தேவராஜ சந்தை ,

© 2024 Vimarsana