In the book Krsna the Supreme Personality of Godhead, Srila Prabhupada tells that when Lord Shri Krishna was a little boy enjoying a picnic lunch with His friends in Gokula Vrndavana, He took from His lunch box some fruit salad made of rice, yogurt, and pieces of fruit. I got an idea to try making this, and I call it "Yashoda Yummy" after His mother Yashoda who made that fruit salad for her little Krishna with motherly love and care. Yashoda Yummy is great on a hot day if you need something light and cool to fill the empty spot.
1/2 c rice cooked with:
2 c water
1/4 t salt
1 t ghee or unsalted butter
8 cups cut fruit (for the batch in the photo I used mangoes, bananas, grapes and pomegranate)
1/2 t ground cardamom
4 c yogurt (aka "curds")
3/4 c powdered jaggery, or granulated sugar
First, cook the rice, then leave it covered for a few minutes to allow it to "fluff." Remove the lid so the rice can cool a little while you prepare the other ingredients.
Cut up fruit to equal 8 cups after cutting. If using pomegranate, leave it separate.
Mix the jaggery or sugar into the yogurt until fully dissolved. Add the cardamom and stir in.
Now, mix everything together except the pomegranate. Because pomegranate, like pineapple, has a tendency to become bitter if combined with a warm milk product like yogurt, you should stir in the pomegranate last.
Now put some Yashoda Yummy in a special bowl, place a Tulasi leaf on top and offer to the Lord!
Serves 4-6 if using as a one-pot meal on a hot summer day. If serving only a spoonful to each person, this amount could serve 10 or more.
Yashoda Yummy |
2 c water
1/4 t salt
1 t ghee or unsalted butter
8 cups cut fruit (for the batch in the photo I used mangoes, bananas, grapes and pomegranate)
1/2 t ground cardamom
4 c yogurt (aka "curds")
3/4 c powdered jaggery, or granulated sugar
First, cook the rice, then leave it covered for a few minutes to allow it to "fluff." Remove the lid so the rice can cool a little while you prepare the other ingredients.
Cut up fruit to equal 8 cups after cutting. If using pomegranate, leave it separate.
Mix the jaggery or sugar into the yogurt until fully dissolved. Add the cardamom and stir in.
Now, mix everything together except the pomegranate. Because pomegranate, like pineapple, has a tendency to become bitter if combined with a warm milk product like yogurt, you should stir in the pomegranate last.
Now put some Yashoda Yummy in a special bowl, place a Tulasi leaf on top and offer to the Lord!
Serves 4-6 if using as a one-pot meal on a hot summer day. If serving only a spoonful to each person, this amount could serve 10 or more.
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