GHEE WITH GLEE
For decades, the jar of
ghee on our kitchen shelves came with a huge dollop of guilt.
Now, it's making a comeback as a superfood
Now, it's making a comeback as a superfood
At her baby shower next
week, south Mumbai resident Sad hna Desai will be handing out trendy gift
hampers. But instead of the usual cake and-cookies combo or a wine and cheese
selection, her guests will get glass jars filled with desi cow ghee and a
bottle of ghee-based chyawanprash. A little note tucked inside will explain the
wholesome goodness of this traditional superfood.
Clarified butter remained
India's culinary star for centuries till it was sidelined in the 1980s by
vegetable oils because of its high saturated fat. The new oils were
aggressively marketed as superior and heart-healthy . Of late, research has
shown that saturated fats have no link to obesity, heart disease or early
death. In January 2015, the US dietary guidelines declared for the first time
that total dietary fat and cholesterol intake are not a concern for healthy
people. Now, on the back of some recent studies which main tain that it reduces
fat and lower cholesterol, ghee too is making a big comeback in India. It is
also making a splash abroad in alternative health circuits. Stout jars and tin
cans of ghee now stand tall alongside the sleek bottles of olive oil at Indian
specialty food stores like Modern Bazaar and Nature's Basket.American
supermarkets like Sprouts, Whole Foods and Trader Joe's have also started
stocking multiple types of `Indian ghee'. The latter offers ghee made by a
family in New Jersey and promotes it as “liquid gold“.
The sales of top Indian
ghee brands like Amul and Gowardhan have risen by nearly 30% over the last
year. Baba Ramdev's Patanjali Ayurved has reported a Rs 1,000-crore turnover
from its cow ghee which sells at Rs 450 per kg. Industry experts say the ghee
has never been so much in demand. “Our bodies need some fats to function and
ghee is the best of the lot,“ says macrobiotic nutritionist Shonali Sabherwal, who
suggests one or two teaspoons of ghee on dal or rice for maximum benefits
(instead of using it traditionally as a cooking medium).
Ahimsak, anyone?
The emphasis now is on ghee
made from cow's milk. Niche brands are selling organic ghee (from milk of cows
that are fed organic fodder) and `desi cow ghee' made from the milk of
hunch-backed Indian cow breeds. Commercial ghee makers, on the other hand, use
milk from buffaloes or hybridforeign breed cows. Lucknow-based Organic India,
which makes ghee from the milk of “stress-free“ cows, sells around 9,000 to
10,000 bottles a month. “When we launched the ghee four years back we were
barely selling 1,000 jars a month,“ says chief marketing officer Saurabh
Tiwari. The Holy Cow Foundation, a Delhi-based non-profit organization, sells
more than 100 jars a month at pop-up kiosks in popular malls like Select
Citywalk.
Though these niche ghee
brands sell at Rs 1,200 to Rs 2,000 per kg -some are even priced at Rs 6,000
per kg -there is no dearth of takers. “I like the fact that no cow has been
tortured or a calf starved for the ghee I use,“ says Manisha Gupta who uses
differ ent varieties for different foods -Holy Cow to pour raw and the less
expensive Pathmeda cream ghee for tadkas.
The owner of Modern Bazaar,
Kunal Ku mar, points out that people are now buying ghee for gifting too. “Last
Diwali, many peo ple asked us to o include organ ic ghee in gift hampers along
with exotic health foods like green olives and soy milk,“ he says. He sells
around 6,300 bot tles of ghee at his seven Delhi stores very month. Modern
Bazaar recently added a new `artisan ghee'. This ghee is made from
unpasteurised milk -so nutrients are not lost -of cows at a Hisar farm.
Videshis go for desi
Non-resident Indians and
foreign nationals too are ordering pure cow ghee from India these days. “We
ship at least two international orders every week,“ says Nishant Khadria who
set up the Mumbai-based Vedic Cow Products two years ago. While most of
Khadria's clients are NRIs from the US, Australia and the Middle East, some are
foreigners with no India connection.
Sangeeta Rege, a San
Francisco-based singer who orders 3.5 kg of ghee from Khadria every month,
claims that ghee has helped her slim down. “I lost 35 pounds in six months and
brought my blood sugar level in control by simply adding ghee to my diet and
going for walks,“ says the 51-year-old who is using it to bake cakes. The Bay
Area resident says some of her NRI and Americans friends spread ghee on their
toast, pour it on grilled chicken and make their pasta sauce with it. Given the
high shipping charges, Rege has to shell out Rs 9,050, roughly $140, for her
monthly stock of Indian ghee.
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Neha
Bhayana
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TOI1MAY16
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