You can eat this ‘rakhi’ and it is yum

You can eat this ‘rakhi’ and it is yum

FPJ BureauUpdated: Friday, May 31, 2019, 10:56 PM IST
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Indian women shop for 'rakhi' on the eve of the Hindu festival 'Raksha Bandhan' in Bangalore on August 28, 2015. The 'Raksha Bandhan' ritual is observed on the full moon in the Hindu month of Shravan, on which sisters tie the sacred 'Rakhi' string on their brothers' right wrists, and pray they have a long life. Rakhis are ideally made of silk with gold and silver threads, beautifully crafted embroidered sequins, and studded with semi-precious stones. AFP PHOTO/Manjunath KIRAN |

The edible rakhis made of milk, cream, sugar are selling like hot-cakes in UP  

Lucknow  : Having your cake and eating it too is passe!  This Raksha Bhandhan brace up for a new adage – tie the rakhi and eat it  too!

For in Lucknow, over a dozen local bakeries and confectioners have come up with an innovative idea of baked and edible rakhis. This has seemingly clicked with the gen-next which is buying  the eatable rakhis in large numbers.

Coming in various shapes, hues and  flavours these rakhi’s are made of condensed milk, cream, sugar and  edible colours.

The lace for tying is made of  chocolate frozen on silk thread, making it the only ingredient which cannot be eaten.

They come in many flavours – from dark chocolate to pineapple  and strawberry and they are priced between Rs.20 and Rs.80 a piece.

Rahul Maheshwari, a bakery owner at Munshi Puliya, said the “idea is  selling like hot cakes” and elaborated how innovation at every raksha bandhan was becoming a necessity.

“The market is flooded with so  many varieties and there is also the ‘Chinese invasion’, so we come up  with something new everytime” Maheshwari told IANS.

The edible rakhis are becoming very popular with young boys and girls  who prefer to have fun this festival along with some “pet pooja” too,  said a shopkeeper in Chowk with a smile, adding that while edible  rakhi’s have been experimented with by families at some places, their  commercial production was a first. The other rakhi’s that are making an impact on the market are the ‘Namo’  (named after prime minister Narendra Modi and the ‘Bajrangi Bhaijaan’  rakhi’s. The latter are named after the blockbuster Salman Khan starrer where the actor is shown as the saviour of a young from Pakistan.

“We also want our brothers to be real heros  and hence we are picking up the Bajrangi Bhaijaan rakhis” chuckled  Priya Jain, a 16-year-old from Mahanagar.

So why dont you try out this unique rakhi this Rakshabandhan.

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