07 Jul 2019 | Views : 397   |
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'Back To Roots' in association with Chef Vaibhav Bhargava presents and celebrates the National Fruit Mango with a contest.
'My Favourite Mango Dish': Paramparik and Traditional.
Only one dish to be prepared from home and plated at the venue.
It can be any one dish but only traditional and Indian.
Each Contestant gets an opportunity to showcase/sell/promote their own personal products/brand, infront of the Jury and guests.
The best Jury will judge your dish.
Some demos and great learning experience.
You walk away with great prizes and all the contestants win hampers and receive mementos.
Register here:
chef vaibhav bhargav ke sahayog se 'Back to Roots' ne ek pratiyogita ke saath raashtreey phal aam ko prastut kar utsav mana rahe hain.
'Meri pasandida dish Aam' pratiyogita': parampaarik aur paaramparik. keval ek pakavaan ghar se taiyaar kiya jaana chaahie aur kaaryakram sthal par Prastut karna hoga.
Koi bhi ek vyanjan ho sakata hai lekin keval paaramparik aur bhaaratiya.
Pratyek pratiyogi ko jury aur mehamaanon ke saamane apane banaye utpaadon / brand ka pradarshan / bikri / prachaar karane ka avasar bhi milega
Dher saara gyan aur khubsurat nirnatak gad key saath hi sundar networking event.
The Story of Mango
History yields some very interesting facts about this celebrated fruit. The mango has been known to Indians since very early times. Scientific fossil evidence indicates that the mango made its first appearance even earlier 25 to 30 million years ago in Northeast India, Myanmar and Bangladesh, from where it travelled down to southern India.
The earliest name given to the mango was Amra-Phal. It is also referred to in early Vedic literature as Rasala and Sahakara, and is written about in the Brihadaranyaka Upanishad and the Puranas, which condemn the felling of mango trees. On reaching South India, the name translated to Aam-Kaay in Tamil, which gradually became Maamkaay due to differences in pronunciation. The Malayali people further changed this to Maanga. The Portuguese were fascinated by the fruit on their arrival in Kerala and introduced it to the world as Mango.
Legend has it that the Buddha was presented with a mango grove so he could rest under the shady trees
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