Thursday, December 30, 2021

The Tenth Riddle – A Book Review

 



BOOK: THE TENTH RIDDLE

AUTHOR: SAPAN SAXENA

PUBLISHER: LOCKSLEY HALL PUBLISHING

The Tenth Riddle by Sapan Saxena is a superb blend of crime, mystery and mythology. Three friends from different walks of life, Shakti, a local politician, Ishaan, a famous author and Showmik, Deputy Direction of IB, are drawn into solving the mystery of the death of the princess of Goner, Avni, on the very night of her coronation.  The case is old, but is brought to their notice by a woman named Naina Shukla from the NWC. There is a mysterious prophecy made up of ten riddles and the friends unravel the riddles one by one. The aesthetically designed cover is an added attraction, inviting one to buy the book. Once we delve into the book, we cannot put it down.

The author has beautifully woven ancient mythological tales with present day crime against women, which includes female foeticide, and has brought out a beautifully written novel. The characters are all well defined, and the language is simple and easy to follow while holding the attention of the reader throughout. I loved the way the different legendary tales of the Goddess are narrated through the voice of Ishaan, and the choice of the different names of the Goddess as Chapter titles is intriguing.

I would rate this book a perfect ten, and recommend it to readers of crime thrillers, as well as mythology. 

The link to buy: THE TENTH RIDDLE https://www.amazon.in/dp/8195405517/ref=cm_sw_r_apan_glt_fabc_BEBFTN26CHY097X7YKGZ 

#TheTenthRiddle #Book #BookReview #SapanSaxena #crimethriller #mythology



Saturday, October 16, 2021

Book Review of Dare Dream Travel

 



Dare Dream Travel is a collection of personal accounts of some daring woman travelers who have undertaken solo travel just to satiate their zeal and passion for travelling without additional responsibilities. The book has been compiled by Shefali Arora and is published by Book Street Publications. It is wonderful to note that these women from various walks of life are supported adequately by their family members in their quest for the adventure and satisfaction of solo travel. Whether it is road travel, trekking, jungle safaris, or travelling as a disabled person, each story has something exciting for the reader. Some of the experiences are hair-raising like the Manas National Park in Assam where two women who step down from the jeep to take photographs are charged at by an elephant or the paranormal haunting feeling in the middle of the Wayanad forest area. Another incident which caught my attention was the inhuman treatment of a woman traveler on a wheelchair by a fellow traveler.  The book is fast paced and provides tips from the experts. I enjoyed reading this amazing collection of solo woman travel experiences.

My rating for this book is 5/5.   

#BookReview #Travel #SoloWomen #DareDreamTravel  #ShefaliArora #BookStreetPublications

Friday, October 8, 2021

Book Review of Shree Vishnu Mahaa Puraan

 


Shree Vishnu Mahaa Puraan by Seema G. Saxena is one of the most well researched books that I have read in recent times. It is a translation from the Sanskrit version but with a difference. The language is simple enough for anyone to read, and for people interested in Hindu mythology, it is a blessing. The entire narrative has been divided into six sections and it makes for interesting reading. The author’s grip over both the languages, Sanskrit and English, is there to be seen as we progress from chapter to chapter. Starting from the creation of the universe with twenty four elements, the narrative travels through the formation of the Bhaarat Varsh, the Sun and Moon dynasties, and ends with a peek into life and people during Kaliyug and then the detailing of the process of dissolution of the universe. There are some well known stories with content that is not commonly written about. Being a devotee of Sri Krishna, the Section five held an additional attraction for me. The book has been brought out in hard cover by Locksley Hall Publishing  and the cover design is evocative.  I loved the book and would recommend it to anyone who has a genuine interest in reading our ancient Hindu scriptures and understanding them.

My rating for this book is a perfect 5/5

The link

https://www.amazon.in/SHREE-VISHNU-MAHAA-PURAAN-SAXENA/dp/8195306519/


#BookReview #Shree_Vishnu_Mahaa_Puraan #LockleyHallPublishing #SeemaSaxena







My rating for this book is a perfect 5/5

Monday, October 4, 2021

Reopening of school for Std. 8th to 12th from today in Mumbai - Education

 

After a full year and a half of online lessons, students of the 8th to 12th are being allowed to attend physical school from today in Mumbai. The children are really excited to be in the midst of their friends once again, but some parents are still wary of this move. With the Government having insisted that parents have to give consent to their child attending physical school, the school authorities have put it forward to parents. In a survey by Ed Tech Firm, LEAD, reported by Midday recently, around 67% parents want their children to attend school, while the others want the online classes to continue for some more time.

The main area of concern seems to be physical distancing, complete vaccination of teaching staff, health facilities and Covid 19 preparedness of the school, along with the oncoming festive season. Many schools have therefore opted to open in November after the end of the festive season, which seems quite fine, as it gives them the time to ensure that the safety protocols are in place. However, lots of schools in the city have already made arrangements to welcome their students back to school from today.

A decision on opening of schools for smaller children is yet to be taken. Colleges too may open only after the festive season with vaccination being a pre requisite for attendance for students above 18 years of age.   

Do share your views.

Sunday, April 25, 2021

Chitra Pournami is a festival dedicated to the worship of Lord Chitragupta with recipe of Sarkarai Pongal

 Chitra Pournami is a unique festival celebrated across Tamil Nadu dedicated to the worship of Chitragupta. Chitra Pournami is celebrated on the full moon day of the month of April-May (Chitirai Masam in Tamil), believed to be his birthday.  This year it falls on 26th &27th April. The pournami  thithi  starts on 26th afternoon and ends on 27th morning.



Chitragupta is said to diligently record and maintain the account of the good and bad actions performed by every human being who is born on this earth. On the completion of a person’s life time, Chitragupta prepares the final report to be presented to Lord Yama. This forms the basis for the God of Death to decide the fate of that particular individual.
People celebrate this festival by taking bath in holy rivers to wash off their sins and offer special pujas and prayers at temples. Interestingly, some of the temples dedicated to worship of Chitragupta are the Chitragupta Temple on Nellukara Street, Kanchipuram, Chitragupta Mahadeva Devalayam in Hyderabad, Chitragupta temple at Kajuraho, and Chitragupta Maharaj Temple at Chitragupta Ghat on the banks of the Gandak river in Hajipur, Bihar.
In the temple at Kanchipuram, the main deity of Shri Chitragupta is depicted in a seated position with a palm leaf in his left hand and a pen in his right hand. The utsava murthy  of the Lord with his wife Karnika Ambal is beautiful.  Priests and devotees offer Sarkarai Pongal and other delicacies without salt as neivedyam for the Lord.
There is another legend associated with this festival pertaining to Lord Indra and his Guru, Brihaspathi. The story goes that they had an argument, after which the Dev Guru refrained from giving advice to Lord Indra.  Bereft of the wisdom and proper advice of his Guru, Lord Indra committed various sins. Later he realized his folly and sincerely repented for his mistakes. Out of sympathy and compassion the Dev Guru resumed his duties and advised Devraj Indra to undertake a pilgrimage on Earth. After a long journey, at a certain place, Devraj Indra sensed that he had been redeemed of his sins. He found a Shivalingam under a Kadamba tree and wanted to offer puja to the Lord in gratitude. He looked around and surprisingly, in a pond nearby, he found a golden lotus. He worshipped the Lord with the golden lotus. The place was the holy city of Madurai and the day was the auspicious Chitra Pournami day. Even today this divine event is commemorated with an Indra Puja on Chitra Pournami day at the Madurai Meenakshi temple.
Here is the Recipe of Sarkarai Pongal which is the main neivedhyam offered to Lord Chitragupta on Chitra Pournami day.
Sarkarai Pongal





Ingredients:
Raw Rice – 1 cup
Yellow Moong Dhal – 1/4 cup
Milk – 1/2 cup
Water - 2 cups
Jaggery – 2 cups (grated)
Cashews – 3 tablespoons
Raisins – 3 tablespoons
Powdered Cardamom – ½ teaspoon
Ghee – 3 tablespoons


Method:
Roast the moong dhal in a teaspoon of ghee till it slightly changes color. Remove on to a bowl and soak it along with raw rice in water for 10 minutes. Strain it to remove water.
Take a vessel and boil milk. Add  the soaked and strained rice and dhal to the milk and water and cook  till the rice is fully cooked. Mash it up with a spoon and keep aside. Alternatively you can cook the rice, dhal with milk and water with a teaspoon of ghee in a pressure cooker for 4 or 5 whistles. 
In a separate bowl add the jaggery to water and bring to a boil. Strain to remove impurities. Add this jaggery water to the milk, rice and dhal mixture. Stir well on a low flame till they are completely mixed.
Take a pan and pour the rest of the ghee in it. Fry Cashews and raisins in the ghee to a golden brown and add to the pongal mixture. Stir on low flame till they blend well. Add cardamom powder and mix.
Your Sakkarai Pongal offering is ready.

#ChitraPournami #Chitragupta #Kanchipuram #SarkaraiPongal #Recipe

Thursday, March 11, 2021

Nolumbu special - Recipe for Sweet Karadai and Salted Karadai

 

 

Karadayan Nombu falls on Sunday,14th March, this year and according to learned priests the time specified for tying the yellow thread is between 3.30 pm and 4.30 pm. Celebrated by the people of Tamil Nadu, married women perform puja and pray for the long life of their husbands and unmarried girls pray for getting blessed with a good husband. The puja is performed at a specified time, just when the Tamil month of Maasi ends and the month of Panguni begins.

 

Tradition

On this day the women get up early in the morning, take bath and decorate their house entrance and the puja room with kolams. They place leaves in front of the Goddess on which they offer betel leaves and areca nuts (Vethalai Pakku), yellow bananas, sweet Karadai and butter. Traditionally, the women fast until the specified time of the puja, wear nine yards sari, adorn their hair with flowers, tie the manjal charadu (yellow thread) and pray for the long life of their husbands.

 

 While tying the manjal charadu, the mantram chanted is

 

“Dhram gruhnami subhage sahardhraam

Dharami aham bharthu

Ayushya sidhartham supreedha bhava sarvadha”  

This means, “I am taking the thread, Oh Goddess, with affection,

And I am wearing it for the long life of my husband.

Always be pleased with me.”

 

The Tamil chant during the puja while offering the Karadai to the Goddess is

“Urugadha vennaiyum, oru adaiyum notrein,

Orukkalum en Kanavar ennai piriyadhirukka vendum”

Meaning “I offer this unmelted butter and adai. Please bless me to live with my husband forever.”

Generally the women break their fast by eating the prasad of sweet karadai with butter after they have performed the puja and offered it to the Goddess.

 

Recipe for Sweet Karadai also known as Nolumbu Adai

 


Ingredients

 

Dry roasted rice powder - 1 cup

Jaggery powdered -  1 cup

Water - 2 cups

Coconut slices - 1 tablespoon

Karamani (Black eyed peas/ lal chowli) - 1 or 2 tablespoons     

Cardomom - 1 pinch

Ghee - 1 teaspoon

 

Method of preparation

Wash and soak raw rice in water for 3 to 4 hours. Drain the water and spread the rice on a cloth for 15 minutes. Then grind it to a fine powder. Dry roast this powder till there is no moisture.

 

Cook the Karamani separately till soft and keep aside.

 

Take a pan and melt the jaggery in 2 cups of water. Filter to remove dirt or impurities. Add the fine small sliced coconut pieces, the Karamani and boil. When the jaggery water starts boiling, add a teaspoon of ghee. the cardomom powder and then the roasted rice powder while stirring continuously till the mixture leaves the sides of the pan. Off the burner and allow it to cool.

Roll the mixture into balls, flatten them and make holes in the middle as shown in the picture. Now steam the sweet karadais in an idli cooker for 15 minutes.

Your sweet Karadai is ready to serve with butter.

 

The recipe for Salted Karadai



 

Ingredients

Dry roasted rice powder

Salt to taste

Karamani - 1 or 2 tablespoons

Coconut slices

 

Seasoning

Oil - 1 tablespoon

Mustard - 1/2 teaspoon

Udad dal - 1/4 teaspoon

Curry leaves - a few

Green chilli - 1 or 2 finely chopped

Ginger - a small piece finely chopped.

Asefoetida - a pinch

 

Method of Preparation

 

Prepare the rice powder and cook the karamani in the same way as for the sweet Karadai

Heat the oil in a saucepan and add mustard. Let it sputter. Add udad dal, asefoetida, and chopped ginger and green chillies. Then add the curry leaves. Now add the coconut finely sliced and karamani. Add water and salt to taste. Bring it to a boil. When the water starts boiling, lower the flame and add the rice powder slowly and stir continuously till the mixture leaves the sides of the pan. Allow it to cool. Then like the sweet Karadai, divide it into balls, flatten them and carve a hole in the middle of each. Steam these salted adais in an idli cooker or steamer and your salted karadais are ready to serve.

 

For those who want to know more here is the story behind this festival.

 Legend 

The story goes that Maharaja Ashtapathi had a beautiful daughter named Savitri, whom he adored. He knew her to be very intelligent and wise and gave her the freedom of choosing her husband. Savitri, during one of her visits to the forest, came upon a young man who was carrying on his shoulder, his blind parents in two baskets slung on a pole. Savitri was impressed by his sense of duty and respect and decided to marry him. When she informed her father, Ashtapathi enquired about the young man with Narada Muni. Narada informed him that the young man was Satyavan, the son of a king who had been exiled from his own kingdom. Ashtapati was happy about the fact that his daughter had chosen a prince. But then Narada said that Satyavan would die young. He had only one year to live. The King was aghast. But Savitri was set on marrying Satyavan. The King had no option but to get them married. Savitri was well aware about her husband’s impending death. She undertook strict vrats and performed pujas with dedication. The fateful day dawned. While cutting wood, Satyavan fell dead as Yama, the Lord of Death had arrived. Savitri followed Yama. The God of Death was astonished and pleased by her perseverance. He offered her three boons, and said that she should not ask for her husband. Savitri, being intelligent, agreed. She first asked that her in laws should be reinstated in their kingdom with all glory and respect. Her second request was for a son for her father Ashtapathi. For the third boon she asked for sons for herself. Yama said “Granted” and then realized that he had been outwitted by her intelligence, as he had to leave Satyavan alive for Savitri to beget sons.  The time of Karadayan Nombu is believed to be the time when Savitri performed puja, offered the Karadai to Lord Yama and got her husband back from death. Thus the offering of the delicious Karadai, both sweet and salted, is unique to this festival.

 

#KaradayanNombu #festival #SweetKaradai #SaltedKaradai #recipe #TamilNadu #SavitriVrat, #Nolumbu #Savitri #Satyavan #legend

 

 

 

 

 

 

'ON THE KRISHNA TRAIL' - MY NEW BOOK IS NOW AVAILABLE ON Amazon.in

 

New Book Information



I am thrilled and excited to announce that my latest book 'ON THE KRISHNA TRAIL' has been released and is available to buy on www.Amazon.in . 


The book is represented by Suhail Mathur of The Book Bakers and is published by Locksley Hall Publishing.