Jewels Set in Stone : Hindu Temple Recipes in Medieval Cōl ̄ a Epigraphy

Scholarship abounds on contemporary Hindu food offerings, yet there is scant literature treating the history of food in Hinduism beyond topics of food restrictions, purity, and food as medicine. A virtually unexplored archive is Hindu temple epigraphy from the time that was perhaps the theological height of embodied temple ritual practices, i.e., the Cōl ̄ a period (ninth-thirteenth centuries CE). The vast archive of South Indian temple inscriptions allows a surprising glimpse into lived Hinduism as it was enacted daily, monthly, and annually through food offerings cooked in temple kitchens and served to gods residing in those temples. Through analyzing thousands of Tamil ̄ inscriptions from the tenth through the fourteenth centuries CE, I have gleaned information concerning two distinct material cultural facets. (1) The practice of writing these rare but remarkable recipes which themselves are culinary textual artifacts has allowed us to access (2) Hindu food offerings of the past, also complex, sensory historical artifacts. In exploring these medieval religious recipes for the first time, I aim to show: the importance that food preparation held for temple devotees, the theological reality of feeding the actual bodies of the gods held in these temples, and the originality of the Cōl ̄ a inscriptional corpus in bringing about a novel culinary writing practice that would be adopted more extensively in the Vijayanagara period (fourteenth-seventeenth centuries CE). This study, a radical new attempt at using historical sources inscribed in stone, sheds new light on medieval Hindu devotees’ priorities of serving and feeding god. The examination of this under-explored archive can help us move our academic analysis of Hindu food offerings beyond the hitherto utilized lenses of economics, sociology, and anthropology. Further, it contributes to our understanding of medieval temple worship, early culinary studies, and the history of food in India.

How can one investigate the material culture of a religion's past when an object of that studynamely, food-is no longer accessible to us? Due to this predicament, scholarship abounds on Hindu food offerings in contemporary India and the South Asian diaspora, yet scant academic literature treats the history of Hindu food offerings.As a result, the study of food in early Hinduism rarely extends beyond topics of food restrictions, proscriptions, purification, and food as medicine.Few studies move the academic analysis of Hindu food beyond lenses of economics, sociology, and anthropology.Yet there exists an underutilized textual corpus for the history of Hindu food offerings in the virtually unexplored archive of temple epigraphy: specifically, the medieval Tamil ¯C ōl ¯a inscriptions.My focus for this study is the epigraphic accounts that detail what I consider to be recipes and an early form of culinary writing in Tamil ¯.The C ōl ¯a period (ninth-thirteenth centuries CE) was particularly significant for South Indian history as it was a period of relatively stable imperial expansion under a single dynasty whose leadership contributed to more centralized political organization and infrastructures such as irrigation systems that advanced agriculture and the overall prosperity of the state.The C ōl ¯a dynasty also contributed intensely to the patronage of arts and culture, including the building of a number of major temple sites and religious art.The prominence of inscriptions in temples and the strong patronage of religious sites during this time indicate that this period was a historical apex for embodied temple ritual practices.This was in part due, no doubt, to the C ōl ¯a period immediately following upon the rise of the bhakti (devotional) movement in South India (sixth-ninth centuries CE), with its fervor of visionary saint-poets, the Nāyan ¯ārs and Āl ¯vārs, the first bhaktas (worshippers) in India to express the intense dedication of their lives and minds to locally situated gods using their poetry.Their popular emotive verses directly contributed to the onset of practices like temple pilgrimage and visits to divinities at specific sites described in their poems (Dehejia 1988; Peterson 1989).Concurrent with the C ōl ¯a period was the crystallization of theological ideology in the writing of scholar-saints such as Rāmānuja, whose theology advocated the worship of icons as embodied worship.All of these reasons made the C ōl ¯a period a high point for temple culture and religious practices and an ideal milieu for examining temple food and religious culinary culture.In this way, the vast archive of South Indian inscriptions allows an intimate look at lived Hinduism as it was enacted daily, monthly, and annually through ritual food offerings cooked in temple kitchens, served to gods residing in those temples, and fed to priests, donors, festival attendees, and others. 1 Many questions spurred my research on temple cooking.Why do recipes only first come to be composed in the Tamil ¯language in medieval C ōl ¯a temple writing?What was remarkable about this historical context that led to the beginning of recipe writing in Tamil ¯? How did these dishes taste?How might medieval South Indian food taste?Is there any continuity between temple food prior to the C ōl ¯a period or following it?How vast is the divide between the medieval C ōl ¯a taste for divinity and how it tastes today, bearing in mind the fame of modern Tamil ¯temple prasād? 2 In order to begin to delve into these inquiries, my method has been to search through the published volumes of inscriptions compiled starting in the late nineteenth century, including the most recent publications that include findings of stone carvings from the past decade and that also revise earlier readings of rubbings and epigraphy still in situ. 3The intention of inscribing in stone at a temple-which was often the most public and visible setting in a village, city, or town-was to create a public record of some act, agreement, or gift, like a notarized document today (Karashima 1996).Such inscriptions might announce, for example, that a regional leader relieved a tax burden from a certain community under great strain or granted a tax remission whose resulting funds would sponsor a lamp to be burnt at intervals for a god.Donative inscriptions typically intended to publicize a gift of land or personal wealth to a temple or its assembly or to the village assembly.Inscriptions usually stipulated the resulting interest accruing from such an asset that had been invested in the temple 1 While priests' families never receive mention in the inscriptions, in the modern period, it is most common practice for the naivedya (food offering presented first to the deity) to go to priests and their families, and then to donors, and, depending on the temple, perhaps any remaining to visiting devotees.The C ōl ¯a inscriptions never indicate that donors receive any portion of the offerings in return as prasād, although this came to be practiced later in the Vijayanagara period (Breckenridge  1986, pp.37-38).
2 Prasād here of course indicates food offerings after they have been given to god, which are then consumed by worshippers.For orthography, I have opted to use what is most frequently recognized.Often this is the Sanskrit spelling, but at times, a name might be equally commonly known in Tamil ¯morphology.On occasion, a Hindi word might be the most recognizable, so I have used such spellings, as in prasād.If a food word is in common usage in English, I have opted not to write the Tamil spelling, which often obstructs understanding, as in the case of dosa/tōcai.
treasury or among the capai (Skt.sabhā, assembly) of leaders.Inscriptions also indicated what the annual interest was to be used for, whether to repair part of the temple, to feed religious mendicants or professionals (teachers, yogins, scholars of the Vedas), or, most importantly for this study, to feed gods in temple.
Excluding inscriptional content that concerned matters such as sales of property, local political agreements, government mandates, and so on (Karashima 2009, p. 27), most donative inscriptions provide for offerings such as keeping eternal lamps lit for gods or generic offerings funding the bathing and anointing of gods, including the decoration of the gods with scented pastes and flowers (Mchugh 2012).A significant number of donative inscriptions refer to gifts of food offerings in a general sense as naivedya, nivēdi, or amutu/amitu (food offering or "ambrosial offering"). 4These mentions of general food offerings number far greater than the inscriptions that specify gifts of distinct dishes, such as tayiramutu (yogurt offering),5 paruppamutu (dal offering), and similar dishes served to the deity daily, at various times per day.
Even fewer inscriptions-statistically rare, considering the tens of thousands of temple inscriptions in Tamil ¯6-actually detail recipes by ingredient and by amount in weight or volume.I have isolated eighteen recipes from the C ōl ¯a period material that I consider to be actual recipes for naivedya dishes.Accounting for additional inscriptions that time did not permit locating, there could easily be another twenty to a hundred recipes (or more) in the whole inscriptional corpus.There is certainly a larger number of recipes in the Tirupati inscriptions, which largely concern Vijayanagara period material (discussed below), by which time the epigraphic practice of recipe writing for gods' food was widely practiced, as I argue below.From the inscriptions under examination, I have selected case studies of offerings and festival foods that elucidate my points and begin to track a narrative of temple culinary history in line with Tamil ¯literary history and with later Tamil ¯devotional practice.Along with my detailed analysis of these inscription-recipes, I forward the following claims as my main arguments for epigraphical culinary writing.I argue first and foremost that these inscriptions do in fact contain recipes and that food preparation was a serious matter of importance for devotee donors of the medieval period (not only for kitchen staff, cooks, and priests).I also contend that these devotees fed the actual bodies of gods through their donative food offerings.Further-what is most significant for the historicization of culinary culture in India-I assert that C ōl ¯a inscriptions contained innovative forms of culinary writing that led to the development of a culinary writing practice in stone that would be adopted more extensively in the Vijayanagara period.
In advancing scholarship on medieval Hindu food offerings and religio-culinary practices, we may better understand later developments in the widespread production and sales of prasād in Hindu temples as well as Hindu domestic food offerings in relation to early temple offerings.This research contributes greater knowledge on an ignored aspect of rasa (taste or savor, but with an extended meaning of the delight of the divine experience) in early bhakti (devotional worship).The study also contributes knowledge concerning the developments that led to modern Hindu temple worship and practice as we know them today.Finally, this work advances our understanding of early culinary studies and food history in (South) India.

The Recipe for Writing Recipes
Before detailing the intricacies of medieval temple recipes, I must first justify my claim that these carvings on temple walls are, in fact, recipes, since they appear in the midst of sometimes complex donative deeds that are public declarations and also, essentially, financial transactions.Let us keep in mind that pre-modern recipes are quite distinct from our late modern understanding of recipes, due to both structural and linguistic differences of form (Pennell and DiMeo 2013, p. 7).Even in Europe, medieval recipes typically lacked the specific directions for making and applying the recipes that we assume today to be the actual content of a recipe (Alonso-Almeida 2013, p. 68).What we understand as "recipe" derives from the European receptaria tradition of medieval monasteries that recorded alchemical and artisanal trade secrets for use in the monastery itself (Pennell and DiMeo 2013,  p. 9).In the Latin sense of "receipt" from recipere, what was received involved a giver and a recipient, meaning one person gave (wrote) the prescription or receipt for how to prepare something, and the receiver would follow the instructions given.Thus, in effect, the C ōl ¯a inscriptional recipes are doubly recipes, for they first involve the giving and receiving of the recipe as cooking method for a certain dish-the actual recipe or receipt-and secondly, because each inscription records a gift of land, gold coins, or similar that will have interest accrue from it as a gift from donor to (usually) temple recipient.This second sense is how the inscription actually functions, as "receipt" of the donation.So if anything, these C ōl ¯a recipes are even more "recipe" than what you find in Martha Stewart's cookbooks!When analyzing the recipe for its register, form, and so on, recall that genre is "a cultural construct" that "varies according to the speaking community" (Alonso-Almeida 2013, p. 70), so what appears familiar to us as a recipe will not necessarily appear so to others, and what definitely appeared to be a recipe in the eleventh century might not seem so to us today.In its most basic sense, a recipe's functional definition would be some text that "communicates information about the preparation of foodstuffs" (Pennell and DiMeo 2013, p. 6).In its substantive definition, no element is necessary in a pre-modern recipe except for ingredients listed, per Francisco Alonso-Almeida, perhaps the only historical linguistic recipe theorist (Alonso-Almeida 2013, p. 71).What we understand today as the "stages" (parts) of a recipe-name of dish, serving suggestions, preparation method, number of servings, virtues or applications-are in fact optional (Alonso-Almeida 2013, p. 70), although some stages will appear at times in pre-modern recipe writing, like names of dishes in the twelfth-century Mānasollāsa or the virtues or demerits of a dish in the Pākadarpan .a (undated).Whereas some recipe-writing is actually prescriptive in nature (informing on desired action or behavior, or how one should cook, ideally), the C ōl ¯a temple recipes are descriptive and detail actual practice-how food items were actually prepared on a daily basis-not an ideal representation of how they ought to be prepared.
The significance of these recipes, then, lies in the fact that the highly detailed nature of the inscriptional register meant that the important details of what mattered to the donor and temple recipient became inscribed in stone.The temple inscriptional register was able to be fully culinary in scope and effectively a culinary register of writing because of the importance of details.It mattered to the donors that one and a half cevit .u measure of cumin seeds and one uri measure of ghee actually made it in the daily offerings given to god in their name.Feeding god properly mattered, hence the proportions contained in dishes mattered.Thus we are able to find the first true recipes ever to be written in the Tamil ¯language on temple walls during the C ōl ¯a period.

The Inscription as Culinary Textual Artifact
The effort of carving writing into stone in a language that is among the longest in the world in terms of extension (for overall characters per semantic idea and word length) means that one realistically ought only to write what is truly necessary in an inscription.Of course, we see very long, publicly impressive inscriptions, of which the Tirumukk ūt .al inscriptions featured later in this article are a case in point.Nonetheless, the difficulty of writing in stone means that the content present in an inscription already indicates what the priority was for the donor and for the recipient.From this, the importance that food preparation held for temple devotees becomes evident, as donating devotees expressed their desires to have very specific foods prepared for their gods in temples.
We have such a fine archive of medieval recipes due to the precision of the inscriptional record, which placed high priority on the specificity of details to be put on public record.Inscriptions are replete with details such as how many measures it is from a certain tree near the river that a donated property ends, exactly how much paddy from each harvest of each crop will go to pay for fuel for the eternal lamp lit for a god, exactly how much interest a certain number of gold coins placed in the temple treasury's trust will accrue, and how many Brahmins can be fed lunch daily at a temple with X, Y, and Z lunch items from that interest.
These inscriptions are artifacts in and of themselves-textual artifacts of a culinary nature, with a physical, material presence and (semi-)permanence in stone.In part, I suspect, because of the extensive development of temple culture and temple worship in Tamil ¯akam (Tamil ¯-speaking-land) in the medieval period, we are fortunate to have more inscriptions in the Tamil ¯language than are available in any other language (or even in combinations of language families) across India. 7Tamil speakers simply took to heart a writing practice in stone to an extent not seen elsewhere.This serious inscriptional practice means that we have an extensive archive-rather, an extensive body of artifacts in stone.Further, these stone artifacts are culinary artifacts.Not only do pots, grinding stones, early stoves, and remnants of food in potshards constitute culinary artifacts but these temple walls (and sometimes side stones, head stones, and stepping stones) are culinary artifacts attesting to taste in the past.These inscriptional artifacts are our best attempt at assimilating the flavors, taste preferences, and culinary developments of the medieval period for non-cosmopolitan and relatively non-elite populations.They present a different sort of record, one that supplements the royal, elite, and literary descriptions of food and culinary culture found elsewhere in India at the time. 8 ōl ¯a imperial culture placed real centrality on temple life, evident in masterworks of temple construction and feverish virtuosic artistry in the creation of bronze m ūrtis (effigies or images) to be housed in temples and brought out for processions (Dehejia 1990), the graceful bronze gods that are perhaps the C ōl ¯a empire's most lasting claim to fame (Davis 1997, esp.Ch. 1, "Living Images,"  pp.15-50).Recall that the C ōl ¯a period coincides with the centuries of greatest fervor in terms of embodied religious devotional practice.The C ōl ¯a period followed fast upon the heyday of the Tamil saint-poets (ca.sixth-ninth centuries CE) who were the forerunners of the bhakti movement.They sang the glories of their gods that they worshipped with love and of their preferred temple sites of devotional worship.This period's emphasis on temples led to an incredibly extensive inscriptional practice, in which, at times, even donors' personalities and the priorities of certain communities show through.Such a prolific epigraphic practice allowed space for some originality in writing, which we see in the C ōl ¯a inscriptional corpus.During the C ōl ¯a period, the extensiveness of the inscriptional practices and the flowering of new temples and temple worship allowed the space for this originality in writing.This resulted in a novel writing practice that was culinary in scope, recording recipes, a culinary genre of its own within the inscriptional genre.9 Perhaps other temple visitors saw these donative inscriptions that included recipes-or perhaps they observed donors specifying their recipes to be inscribed by scribes-which led to the repetition of this culinary writing practice such that, by the time of the Vijayanagara period (fourteenth-seventeenth centuries CE), this practice of recipe writing 7 Karashima estimates 30,000 Tamil ¯inscriptions out of 80,000 inscriptions total for all of India (3/8, or almost half of all inscriptions in India!).There are 17,000 extant inscriptions in Kannada, 10,000 in Telugu, and 23,000 total for all of the other languages of India, including Sanskrit, Prakrits, and all north Indian languages (Karashima 1996, p. 2).

8
While some donations are made by royalty, chieftains, and powerful members of society, temple dancers and other temple works, laborers, and agricultural caste members fund many donative food offerings for god.9 We do not encounter anything like this culinary writing in the earlier epigraphic record, for example, during the immediately preceding Pallava period.I located zero recipes for the Pallava period, although I did search through Pallava inscriptions in my study.was adopted much more.Compared to the eighteen recipes I have found from the C ōl ¯a period after examining approximately 30-40% of the inscriptional corpus (perhaps 50-60% of the total Tamil ¯corpus), I readily encountered and translated over thirty recipes from the (succeeding) Vijayanagara Tirupati inscriptions while having examined less than 16% of that inscriptional corpus.10Further, I gave preference to examining the earlier portion of the Tirupati record in order to trace more continuity with the directly preceding C ōl ¯a record, and the earlier portion of the Tirupati material contains fewer recipes than the later portion of the corpus does.This might suggest a grand total of two hundred or more epigraphic recipes for the Vijayanagara period, although the number could easily be much higher.This is significantly higher than my estimate of potentially forty to one hundred total recipes for the C ōl ¯a period.

Naivedya as Artifact
Not only are inscribed recipes artifacts for our study but also the dishes prepared as offerings to gods-naivedya-although they are cultural artifacts that are harder for us to apprehend today.Following food historians Rachel Laudan and Massimo Montanari (Montanari 2006, pp. viii-ix), 11 I treat all food as human artifact, as substances that undergo culturally and historically determined modification, processing, and preparation by humans.Tamil ¯temple naivedya and festival foods are complex sensory artifacts of the past, communicating much about practice and beliefs, as evinced in my following case studies.The challenge of understanding food dishes as historical artifact-for example, a dish served at noon in a temple in the village of Tiruccentur ¯ai in 930 CE-is why recipes are so crucial for this study of what would otherwise be intangible cultural heritage of the sort that UNESCO has only recently been classifying: traditional, artisanal, and local techniques and know-how for making crafts and art forms (in other words, for the production of artifacts) (UNESCO 2018).Without the inscriptional recipe archive, we would only be able to glimpse at medieval Tamil ¯food through literary mentions of dish names with no other information.
When considering naivedya as artifact, it is important to reflect on how this temple practice might have come about, although the topic is much more complex than this simplified overview might suggest.Offering naivedya is one of the sixteen upacāras (acts) of a p ūjā (worship), 12 one that seems to have developed by the beginning of the common era at Hindu shrines.Earlier Vedic ritual included food offerings in the form of huta-an offering or oblation, like ghee, placed in the fire-not designated as naivedya.Vedic rituals such as the darśap ūrn .amāsa also included cooked offerings, like the baked purod .āśa which was divided and shared among the priests following its ritual function and the anvāhārya, an abundance of grain (often rice) that was cooked on the daks . in .a fire, sprinkled with ghee, and then offered to the priests in the southerly direction and divided into four parts (Kane 1942, pp.1068-69).The practice of naivedya seems to have been in place from at least the time of the Rāmāyan .a's composition, where we learn of the recommendation that naivedya should be what everyone's food was. 13Later dharmaśāstra (legal) commentators such as Medhātithi quote the Rāmāyan .a verse, so it was obviously in the literati's consciousness for a long time. 14P. V. Kane did link the practice of offering naivedya in temple to the earlier Vedic ritual invitations to the gods to consume the ap ūpa (appam, grain cake-like offering), yogurt, etc. (Kane 1962, p. 35), although I think a connection to the sacrificial offerings shared amongst god, priests, and patron might also be suggestive.Equally important might be the (originally Vedic) "welcoming the guest" ritual, perhaps embedded in the purpose of giving food to gods in temple.While an exhaustive, contextualized exploration of the precursors of naivedya and prasād is not possible here and would require a separate study, I would be at fault not to acknowledge the topic at all in discussing naivedya. 15odern-day priests offer more pragmatic explanations for the development of the naivedya and prasād tradition.Babu Shastri, one of the head priests of Kanchipuram Kāmāt .ciyamman ¯Temple, told me that he suspected that the naivedya tradition developed because devotees would come from far away, or at least travel a great length of time to come to a temple and see a deity.After waiting in line so long, a devotee is famished, thirsty, and hot, so the temples would give a bit of food, just a little bit to make one feel satiated.In his words, one can be more satisfied with the experience of that little bit because it is something (when you had nothing, is implied), and then later the devotee can get more refreshment and rest. 16This was, of course, his unprepared response when I had asked him to reflect on how the system of naivedya came about.This is in line with Carol Breckenridge's mode of thinking that the prasād system developed as a way of distributing foods to many in order to confer prestige to the donor and that later, sales of prasād items that were less perishable and would travel well began at large temple sites for pilgrims who had traveled a long way (Breckenridge 1986).This explanation-visitors' refreshment after long travel-makes better sense to me for interpreting how the annadāna system (the giving of meals) became more prominent.There is often annadāna service in place in temples where the naivedya is kept exclusively for priests and priests' families' use and is not shared with devotees (for free or for sale).I would also link this function of refreshment for travelers to the pre-modern development of the chattri (chattram [Skt.] or choultry [Eng.])system of room and board, often at temples, 17 although we already see a few inscriptions that designate funds for food (not naivedya) to refresh and satiate pilgrims and travelers in the C ōl ¯a period in inscriptions. 18o doubt the development of the full extension of naivedya and prasād service at temples is complex, multi-cause, and cannot be explained solely by the need to refresh pilgrims and traveling devotees.

Food Offerings Case Studies
I must preface my analysis of the historical recipes for specific important dishes by clarifying that the quintessential offering in Tamil temples past and present was and continues to be plain boiled rice made from aged raw rice.In temples today this is usually called śuddhānnam, pure (in the sense of unmixed, plain) white rice, but which temple cooks informally call vel .l .ai cātam (white rice). 19This was and continues to be treated as the main offering given to god in temples, hence the other name it frequently goes by: mahānaivedya, the main (great or important) offering.Even today in most temples across Tamil Nadu, śuddhānnam is typically offered three times a day to the gods (once in the morning, once at midday or early afternoon, and once in the evening).It also constitutes most of the food material of the bali offerings that are left daily at the peripheries of temple structures.Interestingly, in the modern era, the great offering is never returned to devotees as prasād, neither free nor sold at stands.The medieval inscriptions record donations intended to fund the naivedya of boiled rice in countless instances, surely numbering in the hundreds, if not more.The ubiquity of śuddhānnam as the naivedya par excellence stems from the fact that white (not whole grain) rice is the most important and most highly-valued food in South India, 20 even if and when no other food is given. 21For the C ōl ¯a-period inscriptions, the standard amount of white rice offered per day is typically four nāl ¯is in measure, over six kilograms of rice before cooking, except when six nāl ¯is are offered per day, with two nāl ¯is offered at each of the three sandhis (the three "meeting points" of the day, roughly, at sunrise, midday, and sunset). 22So commonplace was it to offer four nāl ¯is of white rice per day in temple that some inscriptions record donors funding provisions of four nāl ¯is for oblations to be offered to gods without even specifying that it is four nāl ¯is of rice that is to be offered!A tenth-century inscription written during Rājarāja C ōl ¯a's reign records a donor granting the supervision of land he had purchased to the village assembly, the proceeds and profits of which are meant to be assigned to providing four nāl ¯is (of rice, implied) daily for the midday oblations for Tiruvā[y]mol ¯itēvar, presumably the sainted Vais .n .ava poet Nammāl ¯vār enshrined as deity in the village temple. 23To cite another-somewhat later-example 24 of the boiled rice offering being the main and only offering given at temples, the produce from land assigned to a Perumāl .(=Vis .n .u) temple was designated in order to make the holy offerings of four nāl ¯is of rice given to the god first thing in the morning ("cir ¯ukālaisandhikku [literally, at the early morning sandhi]. . .n ¯ān ¯āl ¯i arici [illegible text] amutu ceytarul .ukaikku") for as long as the sun and moon [exist]. 25To make clear the importance of such a gift, the entire nineteen-line inscription details the land perimeters and method of proceeding for providing the rice offering.It exceptionally details that the better half of the remains of the offerings was to be given to Śrīvais .n .ava travelers who had not yet received such an offering (meaning first-time visitors to the temple), 26 and is a very rare instance of a C ōl ¯a period inscription specifying that the leftovers of the naivedya were designated for devotees passing through, not simply for god.While this is an isolated incidence in the C ōl ¯a inscriptional record, it became more common practice in the later post-C ōl ¯a record.With these and other examples, it is easy to see the significance and consideration of rice alone as enough sustenance for a temple deity.In what follows, I outline other remarkable naivedyas and 20 For a lengthy discussion of the high prestige and value placed on processed white rice, and especially so in the medieval period, see (Smith 2006). 21Even today, when no other offering can be given due to lack of funds, etc., white rice is offered in temples across Tamil Nadu.To cite an even earlier example, inscription #8 from (Vijayaraghavacharya and Sastry 1998) Vol. 1, p. 14 (in Tamil ¯), section on the early Pallava and C ōl ¯a inscriptions.Inscription appears on the north wall of the first prākāra of the Tirumala temple (the main Ve ṅkat .eśvara temple in Tirupati).Queen Sāmavai Kāt .avan-Perundevi, who was the queen of Śattivit .a ṅkan ( Śaktivit .a ṅkan), arranged for daily propitiation (nimandam) with four nāl ¯is of rice (tiruvamutu) to be cooked as the daily offering.This dates to the fourteenth year of Koppātra-Mahēndra Panmar I (a descendant of the Pallavas), hence, a minor ruler with limited local power at the time of Parāntaka II's rule, ca.957-970. 25Lines 9-10, inscription #35, (Archaeological Survey of India 1986) Vol. 3, pp.79-82.Inscription pertains to the eighth year of Irājarājac ōl ¯a's II's reign, hence ca.1140 CE.This is one of the Man .ima ṅgalam inscriptions in a Rajagola Perumal temple, and, unusually for these inscriptions, starts with a long panegyric (meykkīrtti/praśāsti). 26See earlier footnoted discussion of ap ūrvi and (Orr 2004, p. 452).
temple foods that have become prominent in the Tamil ¯diet, still appear offered to deities today in Tamil Nadu in domestic and temple worship, and/or have appeared in pre-modern Tamil ¯literature.

P ōn ¯akam: The First "Po ṅkal;" Later, the Main Midday Offering
The plain rice offering of śuddhānnam was and is the norm, but that does not mean it is the only thing fed to god(s).Another particularly important offering widespread across South Indian temple practice is something that was called pōn ¯akam in the C ōl ¯a period, but which is more familiarly known today as pongal (po ṅkal, in the savory version either as khara pongal or as ven .po ṅkal).Pongal is popular today as the festival day food for an eponymous harvest festival held early in the calendar year, marking the commencement of the sun's travel northward in the heavens.During the festival, Tamilians take their cooking pots to the town center or main square (or near a temple of their choice or simply in front of their own home), and boil a pot of milk rice until it overflows.It is the "boiling over," (po ṅkal = lit., a "boiling" in a nominal form) significant of prosperous abundance, that is supposed to be the source for the name of the dish and holiday itself.But any regular temple-goer will have observed that pongal, usually ven .po ṅkal,27 is actually a typical temple prasād, perhaps the most prevalent temple dish served to the public (and to gods in private, behind the screen, after bathing/abhis .ekam and clothes changing).This pongal is a ghee, pepper, and cumin seed laden dish of rice and dal, often served today with ghee-fried cashew nuts, curry leaves, and suffused with aroma from asafetida water.
It is this dish that appears early in the inscriptional record and throughout it as pon ¯akam (lit., "the boiled food [offering]), also known as tirupon ¯akam (the holy offering) or ven .pon ¯akam (white cooked offering/white pongal).I suggest that by the C ōl ¯a period, the term pon ¯akam was used to refer to the cooked offering, which would be every offering given to god for private consumption, with only raw offerings like fruit, fresh coconut water, and yogurt being offered to god before the devotees' gaze.The usage of this term varies, so generally it meant the cooked offering, and in C ōl ¯a times, it meant the dish with rice, dal, cumin, pepper, and ghee that is so beloved of Tamil temple-goers.It also appeared in other juxtapositions, for example, pālpon ¯akam (a cooked milk offering), paruppuppon ¯akam (cooked dal offering), 28 or the tenth-century occurrence of payar ¯uppon ¯akam (lit., whole bean cooked offering, meaning an offering of cooked [in this case] dal).In this rare instance, the unsplit bean to be used to make the dal is toor, with a resulting one uri measure of toor dal along with two nāl ¯is and one uri of rice used daily in this cooked dish offered once a day in the early morning. 29This inscription is remarkable because the customary dal used in pon ¯akam is typically green gram (moong) dal.A later Vijayanagara period recipe for vel .l .ai tirupon ¯akam records a more standard recipe for (moong dal) pon ¯akam as might be familiar to temple devotees today (ven .po ṅkal).Note that the amounts indicated for this sixteenth-century recipe are vastly greater than was commonplace in the earlier C ōl ¯a period.This is partly because this offering was donated and supplied by the Queen of Acy ūtarāya, hence a very wealthy personage at the height of her king's and the whole empire's power, and secondly, because these were offerings for what had become the largest pilgrimage site in South India at this time, the Tirumalai temple at Tirupati, in present-day Andhra Pradesh.Her extensive profuse offerings were given daily immediately following her husband's (the king's) offerings and also after Kr .s .n .arāya's offerings were presented, in a long line of copious offerings for the god, priests, and devotees.
Recipe for twenty large platters of the Queen's ven .po ṅkal/vel .l .ai tirupōn ¯akam: 30 "1 vat .t .i of rice of the Tirumalai Temple measure (malaikuniyanin ¯r ¯ānkālāl, i.e., using the kāl/measure of the [temple of the] one standing lower than the hill, i.e., the Tirumalai measure). . . 2 nāl ¯i and 1 uri of ghee. . . 2 nāl ¯i and 1 uri of green gram. . . 2 nāl ¯i and 1 uri of black pepper. . ." The Queen's recipe for vel .l .ai pōn ¯akam, while lavish in volume, actually seems to be lacking some of the ingredients we usually understand to make up ve ṅpo ṅkal (cumin seeds, asafetida), although is still recognizable as po ṅkal due to the abundant presence of ghee and peppercorns, equal in volume to the green gram!But there is a C ōl ¯a-period dish called appakkāykar ¯iyamutu that I argue has been mistakenly attributed to be a fruit dish by Eugene Hultzsch.As you see, the recipe below for appakkāykar ¯iyamutu to be offered in the Big Temple at Thanjavur contains everything we expect to find in ven .po ṅkal (except for the addition of sugar, which appears in most medieval temple recipes, as I discuss in a later section).Despite correctly transcribing the inscription and translating the entirety of its contents, Hultzsch did not realize that what was detailed as appakkāykar ¯iyamutu is in reality pongal.To his credit, all quantities of ingredients in this inscription are grouped by ingredient, not by dish, meaning that one has to separate which ingredients belong together in the same dish when they are actually recorded by ingredient over numerous lines of text. 31Here is the eleventh-century recipe as I have parsed it out and reassembled it: "1 ur ¯akku and 1 ār ¯ākku of aged rice (pal ¯avarici)... 1 ur ¯akku and 1 ār ¯ākku of (green gram?) dal (pon ¯akapparuppu)... 3/4 cevit .u of black pepper... 1 1/2 cevit .u of mustard seed... 3/18 of a cevit .u of cumin seed... 1 1/2 kācu sugar (carkkarai) (= less than a half palam; under 2 oz. or so)... 3/4 cevit .u ghee... salt (the inscription only mentions the total amount of salt to be used for all kar ¯is [vegetable or accompanying dishes] and for the yogurt for this set of offerings and does not detail the exact amount 30 Vat .t . i is a round basket, pot, or bowl, presumably a very large one.While the vat .t .i appears in Tolkāppiyam, El ¯ut.170 as a measure like a nāl ¯i or pat .i (which are supposedly identical in volume, something like 1.5 kg each) per the (University of Madras 1936, p. 3470), this is not possible in the Vijayanagara period, for the recipe could never have more ghee than rice, or more pepper than rice!I presume the literal "basket" is something like a sack of rice today might be in size.Perhaps this is similar to modern plate measure used in some temples today, which holds approximately one kg. of cooked rice. 31To get a sense of how the inscription reads (and it goes on for pages), for the black pepper requirements for this set of offerings, the inscription reads: "one and a half cevit .u of pepper [is required] for the vegetable curry, three quarters of a cevit .u of pepper for the appakkāy.., three quarters of a cevit .u of pepper for the tamarind curry, three quarters of a cevit .u of pepper for the soured curry with tamarind, and three cevit .u of pepper for the pepper powder."Similarly, the inscription records the quantities of mustard seed, tamarind, cumin, and so on.In other words, someone interpreting this inscription needs to single out ingredients from total requirements listed for a number of different dishes, and independently compile which ingredients and how much of each is required for each dish.This organizational structure makes sense from the point of view of the temple pan .t .āra (storehouse-treasury) which would hand out a certain amount of black pepper, cumin, and so on at the value of a certain amount of paddy (nel) to be used each day in the temple kitchen for preparing the specific offerings.So it is quite understandable that Hultzsch did not reassemble the recipes interwoven inside the inscription.Inscription #26, (Archaeological Survey of India 1986) Vol. 2, Parts 1 & 2, pp.126-30.Inscription in the Thanjavur big temple, from the twenty-ninth year of Irājarājac ōl ¯a's reign, ca.1013, near the final year of his reign.
to be used for each variety of offering)" This will sound like temple pongal to many, but Hultzch was thrown off by the appakkāy in the dish's name.He supposed it to be the fruit (sic., vegetable) of some plant called appam (!), which apparently also goes by the name put .t . uttiruppi (!), and he resorted to a dictionary that defines put .t . uppal ¯am as an edible fruit (Archaeological Survey of India 1986) Vol. 2 Parts 1 & 2, p. 129, footnote 5. Since this recipe in fact calls for no fruit at all (one would imagine that the fruit would make the list of ingredients for the dish), I propose that the dish has a special name related to the holiday on which this temple offering was meant to be offered: the festival on the Kārttikai day of the month of Kārttikai.As it turns out, the first day of the Kārtikkai festival just happens to be called "Appakartikai" by many Tamilians and I believe that the name for this version of pongal might simply be some garbled variant of Appakartikai, as appakkāykar ¯i actually contains all of the same phonemes if one drops one "t" from "Kartikkai," flipping "Kār(t)i-kkai" to make "Kāykar ¯i."Even if my attribution is not correct, the recipe definitely describes pongal.The Tamil Lexicon has duly followed Hultzch's reading in defining appakkāykkar ¯iyamitu as a "kind of curry preparation," while technically I think this is a misnomer, since this recipe for amitu (offering) falls under the category of pōn ¯akam, not among the kar ¯is.Finally, the ubiquity of pon ¯akams-dishes of pongal-as temple offerings throughout the C ōl ¯a period eventually led to the term pon ¯akam being used in a later period (Vijayanagara) to describe the full (often midday) offering, typically a large spread of items similar to the thali plate of today.By the Vijayanagara period (fourteenth-seventeenth centuries, 1336-1646 CE), the term pon ¯akam largely does not mean "pongal" any more in the sense of the dish with cumin, pepper, ghee, dal, and rice, but instead has come to designate what is formally called the full ala ṅkāra naivedya (including white rice, yogurt, dal, vegetable curries, sometimes a tamarind curry, [today often served with rasam], and so on).Tiruppon ¯akam appears with this semantic value numerous times in the Vijayanagara period inscriptions from Tirupati, and definitely by the fourteenth century, as seen for example in the tirupon ¯akam to be offered twice daily at Tirupati according to one fourteenth-century inscription, including offerings of rice, yogurt, vegetables, and so on. 32Another inscription dating to roughly seventy years later describes that the tirupon ¯akam to be offered at the sandhi (presumably the midday sandhi, since only one is to be given daily) must include one marakkāl of rice, one āl ¯ākku of ghee, one āl ¯ākku of bean(= pa[ya]r ¯r ¯amutu, presumably green gram, which seems to have been the norm), yogurt, vegetables, salt, pepper 33 -all the makings of a basic ala ṅkāra naivedya.Once again, the term pon ¯akam has returned to its earliest meaning of "holy cooked offering," for in fact the whole midday/luncheon offering consists of cooked foods (except for the yogurt, by some classification systems).

Kan . n . āmutu
Another offering from the C ōl ¯a period that continues to go by virtually the same name in the present day is kan .n .āmutu (alternate spelling kan .n .amamutu, pronounced "kan .n .'m'du") or, as it was more commonly called at the time, kan .n .āmat .ai, "sugar cooked rice" or "sweet rice." 34The oldest recipe for kan .n .āmutu that I have located-dated ca.1126 CE-appears inscribed on the west wall of the so-called "malai" stone platform at the Arul .āl .a Perumāl .temple in Kanchipuram.While kan .n .āmutu as it is known today as an offering for Lord Vis .n .u (or Kr .s .n .a) does not usually contain banana or any fruit, this was apparently commonplace in the pre-modern era, as some inscriptions from the Vijayanagara period confirm that kan .n .āmutus would at times have fruit added. 36ne Vijayanagara inscription at Tirupati 37 includes two different variants on the classic tirukkan .āmat .ai with fruit: one recipe is to be offered to G ōvinda daily in the month of Mārkāl ¯i and another is to be offered to G ōvinda once a (lunar) month on the M ūla asterism.Each recipe for tirukkan .āmat .ai calls for four fruits to be added (pal ¯a amutu nālum), 38 but, fittingly, the sweet rice offering to be served daily to Vis .n .u in Mār ¯kāl ¯i month, traditionally conceived to be the coldest (winter) month of the year (usually falling mid-December to mid-January) includes a warming addition of ginger (iñci amutum) in unspecified quantity, resulting in a sweet and fruity ginger rice "pudding." 39While these fruity kan .n .āmutus surprise us today, the classic ingredients always include rice, ghee, and sugar (the less refined, muscovado type is indicated by Tamil ¯car ¯karai).This fruitless version became the normative kan .n .āmutu, as in the Queen's recipe for tirukkan .āmat .ai to be offered to Lord Ve ṅkat .eśvara at Tirupati, 40 in two other classic recipes for Ve ṅkat .eśvara and G ōvinda dating to the fifteenth century, and in preparations up to the present day. 41While most offerings discussed here can be given interchangeably to manifestations of Śiva, Vis .n .u, goddesses, and others, kan .āmat .ai is exclusively a Vais .n .ava offering and is only given to forms of Vis .n .u, to my knowledge.

Srirangam Appam
A discussion of temple offerings cannot ignore the most significant Tamil ¯temple pilgrimage site of the present day and the largest Vais .n .ava temple complex in India: Srirangam, or, as it is otherwise 35  known, Śrī Ara ṅkanātarsvāmi temple.Although time did not permit my examination of all epigraphs located at Srirangam, I found a recipe for festival appam.Appam is still served daily to Vis .n .u at this temple in the early evening service at 6:45 pm, along with offerings of vat .ai, tē ṅkul ¯al (the extra large fried mul ¯ukku for which Srirangam is best known today), appam, and "Srirangam," a rice dish cooked in milk.Srirangam temple also prepares special celvar appam (jaggery rice appam fried in ghee) for festival days.This celvar appam resembles the two-inch ball-shaped pan .n .iyāram, in case one had in mind the large dome-shaped, pan-sized appam better known in the far southern tip of the peninsula.
Appam's historical significance overshadows its daily service at Srirangam and the apparent continuity of the dish being prepared during the C ōl ¯a period and also in the modern period.Appam appears in the Vedas, the Mahābhārata, the Law Book of Manu, India's earliest work on grammar predating the common era (Pān .ini's s ūtras, as well as its later commentaries), and numerous other works under its Sanskrit name ap ūpam. 42Its repeated appearance in the Vedas and Mahābhārata means that it was well known throughout the literary and textual history of India.Its proscription in Manu-one is not to make and eat ap ūpa just any day of the week for no reason at all-means that ap ūpa has appeared over the centuries in every legalistic text or commentary following Manu that is worth its salt.It may be that already by the twelfth century CE (but probably much earlier) ap ūpam seems to have been reserved in particular as a religious food.In the royal Mānasollāsa's lengthy outlining of recipes for cakes, pancakes, breads, and everything in between, ap ūpa does not appear as a food to be served to the king, his family, and retinue, but does appear in the list of offerings to be prepared for deities (devatās). 43So it is no wonder that we find appam among the eleventh-century offerings and religious festival foods provided at the Srirangam temple (and in other inscriptions of the period).There might have been a shift in usage at some point in time to an exclusively religious appellation for appam/ap ūpam, for earlier works refer to ap ūpa-makers that seem to be more of the nature of street-food/market-food makers. 44Finally, the pendulum may have shifted equally in the other direction up to the modern day, when appam is again quotidian fare and can be procured on many a street corner in Tamil Nadu and is not reserved exclusively for religious purposes.
The Srirangam record is an inscription that dates to Kulottu ṅka C ōl ¯a I's reign, in his eighteenth regnal year (ca.1087 CE).Per Kāli ṅkarāyar's donation, for both the chariot festival in Appikai month and on the Pa ṅkuni festival day, holy water is to be given as prasād and a hundred holy appam amutus are to be provided annually (on both days).Again, the recipe for appam will strike our modern-day sensibility with a shocking contrast of pungent black pepper and cumin with sweet unrefined sugar and banana.The pairing of pepper and sugar appears again and again in medieval temple naivedya; although it is a poor comparison, one might liken it to German Christmas cookies (think peppery sweets and ginger sweets) or perhaps to sugary masala chai.(Prakash 1961, p. 19). 43(Someśvara III 1961), vāst ūpaśamana section, 3rd vim .śati, Part 2, p. 9, v. 92.The Mānasollāsa is so thorough in its inclusion of sweets, breads, and cake recipes that it would be strange for appam to be on the king's menu for dining, yet not be included among his recipes, when it is mentioned elsewhere in the text, especially because other dishes to be given to the devatās do appear detailed in the recipe section. 44From commentaries on Pān .ini, per (Monier-Williams 1899, p. 143). 45 This inscription is especially informative in that it stipulates funds (derived from interest from the coin endowment) to be given as pay to workers making the appam, specifying amounts "for those who look after the pounding of the paste/flour (māvu) for the appam amutu, for those who bring water, for those who fetch firewood, and for those who cook the appam amutu (c ūt .uvārkkum). . ." The verb c ūt .u indicates heating or cooking and is indeed still used to describe the frying of things like dosa and pan .n .iyāram today, but sadly does not communicate if the appam are fried as they are today, steeped in hot ghee or oil using the shallow frying technique in pan .n .iyāram pans, or if they might have been closer to the dosa type, resembling griddle frying, with less oil or ghee.

Recipe for
Another eleventh-century Vais .n .ava C ōl ¯a recipe for appam appears in the earlier mentioned lengthy Tirumukk ūt .al inscription.Here, the inscription commands that the appa amutu be offered to Kr .s .n .a at this shrine on his Jayanti as .t . amī (birthday), with the cakes prepared in the proportion of one kur ¯un .i and two nāl ¯i of rice, one nāl ¯i of dal, one uri of ghee, twenty palams of unrefined sugar, one āl ¯ākku of black pepper, two and a half cevit .u of cumin seed, one ul ¯akku of salt, and six ripe coconuts. 47In this variant recipe, coconut is again present (as it is today as an optional add-in), but the bananas of the Srirangam appam (popularly held today to add softness to the appam) are absent.Otherwise, the recipes' similarity is evident.
An earlier recipe for appam-the earliest I have encountered in the medieval epigraphs-records its date as the twenty-third year of Parakēcarivarman ¯'s rule (Parāntakan ¯I), ca.930 CE. 48This recipe is much simpler, and only requires three nāl ¯is of paddy's equivalent value in aged rice and value from land produce totaling the cost of one āl ¯ākku of ghee.Ground grain for the batter and ghee for frying is, after all, all one really needs to make basic dosa, pan .n .iyāram, or appam.But this inscription is certainly an early one, perhaps signaling an earlier simplicity in offering practices that rapidly became more elaborate and sumptuous in the early C ōl ¯a period.This offering was also intended for a Śaiva temple, for the god at Īśānama ṅkālam, which might also account for the offering's simplicity, since complex and rich offerings are more the mark of Vais .n .ava sites.What the recipe lacks in complexity, the inscription offers us in affectionate detail, as we learn that chieftain Bh ūti Parāntakan ¯made this donative offering to the god of Īśānama ṅkālam (probably a form of Śiva) on the occasion of the first feeding of his son, a big deal for a proud father!Two Vijayanagara-period Tirupati recipes for appam attest to the persistence of black pepper and unrefined sugar as mainstays in the ideal model for late pre-modern appam (two ingredients that incidentally also recur in recipes for atirasam and sweet dosa 49 ).The Vijayanagara-period recipes also 46 We can be sure that the coconut is ripe coconut meat from the Tamil ¯term used, te ṅkāy, and because the inscription provides funds to cover an additional ten young coconuts to be used at these festivals for fresh coconut water amutu.return to the greater simplicity of appams that we saw in the earliest inscriptional recipe from the tenth century.The recipe from 1393 CE calls for seven nāl ¯i of rice and one ul ¯akku of pepper, with the required amount of sugar listed to be shared between this appam offering and another offering for kan .n .am/kan .n .āmutu. 50The Queen's sweet appam (1534 CE) adds ghee into the mix, 51 presumably for frying, which seems to be lacking in the fourteenth-century recipe for appam, but is probably included in the mass volume of ghee required for all offerings listed in that inscription. 52verall, all of the inscriptional recipes for appam confirm that this sweet dish is a treat offered to gods especially at festival times, given on the occasion of birthdays, annual festivals, and special events like a baby's first solid food. 53The only instances I have found of appam being offered everyday are the late pre-modern sixteenth-century offering by the queen of Acy ūtarāya at the Tirupati temple-obviously a grand and extravagant offering for a magnificent temple site-and in the modern-day daily service of appam (not the festival celvar appam) given to Lord Ranganathar at Srirangam, another grand and magnificent deity at an out-of-the-ordinary temple site.The reservation of appam for special occasions and festivals reminds us of Manu's early warning (reiterated in the Mahābhārata and elsewhere) that one is not to eat appam for no reason at all.Over a millennium after Manu's dictum, C ōl ¯a inscriptions continue to communicate this ideal practice: appam is not for the everyday, but for those special moments in life.

Pul . i ṅkar
¯i vs. Pul .it .t .akkar ¯i: How Sour can South India Go? Something curious occurs with some other C ōl ¯a-period temple offerings typically included in what is understood today as the main service of ala ṅkāra naivedya (the full meal including white rice, dal, yogurt, vegetable dishes, and so on).South Indian cuisine famously features sour (green mango, tamarind, or lemon rice) and soured foods (yogurt so sour it makes one's teeth hurt, fermented soured batters for idli, dosa, and even atirasam/adirasam).Natural souring of foods was an inevitable process in the heat and humidity of South India when food sat out for even a short amount of time, but also (or, as a result), something that people sought out as a desirable flavor, perhaps because of its prevalence.Sour must be the definitive savor of the southern states, the taste preference that is obscured today by the modern era use of tomato (sour yet sweet) and by the wide availability of snacks with industrially produced sugar.In the past, refined sugar would have been more of a delicacy due to the laborious, energy-consuming complexity of sugar-refining and processing.
Sour and soured foods appear not only in temple inscriptions but also in a number of the earliest Tamil ¯descriptions of food and food preparation in the classical ca ṅkam (sangam) corpus, which I highlight here in order to assert the long duration of the importance of sour tastes in South India.Sour foods are among the most prevalent in the descriptive portions of the sangam corpus (here, largely from the Pattuppāt .t . u).The Malaipat .ukat .ām, a lyric landscape poem dating to ca. third-fourth century CE, contains various accounts of tasty meals served to the bard and musicians as they progress through different zones of the land.As one bard describes to another, when they visit village huts they will receive bamboo rice porridge (cooked grain) and a tasty tamarind mix with broad beans 50 Inscription #190, (Vijayaraghavacharya and Sastry 1998) Vol.1; pp.179-80, on the west wall of 1st prākāra of the Tirumalai temple.Dates to the reign of Harihararāya II, of the first Vijayanagara line.Both recipes together call for four nāl ¯is of unrefined sugar, divided between the appam and the kan .n .am.It is impossible to determine whether that would mean two nāl ¯is of sugar per offering, or more sugar for the kan .n .am and less for the appam. 51For one offering (pat .i) of appam: 2 marakkāl of rice, 3 nāl ¯i and 1 uri of ghee, 1 āl ¯ākku of pepper, and 100 palams of sugar (cakkarai).Inscription #29, (Vijayaraghavacharya and Sastry 1998) Vol. 4, p. 59-60.In the Tirumalai temple, on the western kumudapat .t . ai of the west wall in the first prākāra.The queen of King Acyutarāya made this donation. 52Inscription #190, (Vijayaraghavacharya and Sastry 1998) Vol. 1, pp. 179-80, lists 5 nāl ¯i, 3 ul ¯akku, and 1 āl ¯ākku of ghee as required overall for four different offerings. 53The 1393 CE Vijayanagara Tirupati inscription also specifies that the appam (along with other offerings) is to be served on the Vit .āyār ¯r ¯i days of each of the festivals, meaning it is a special offering and not commonplace.(Vijayaraghavacharya and Sastry 1998) Vol. 1, p. 180.
(hypothetically like a broad bean tamarind kul ¯ampu [=mix/sauce]). 54The semantic value of the term pul .i as tamarind and not simply something sour (or sourness itself) is as uncertain in Tamil ¯as amla is in Sanskrit (meaning something soured, like yogurt, or something sour, among which tamarind is possible).We can only assume that, then as now, the semantic range of the term encompasses the adjective "sour," "sourness," and "tamarind," and derive meaning contextually in each instance.In this passage we do not have another indication of yogurt or buttermilk, so I see no reason not to accept that the mixture for the sauce among these villagers is tamarind-based.
Another tamarind sauce appears on the menu in the Cir ¯upān .ār ¯r ¯uppat .ai, another song cycle contained in the Pattuppāt .t . u, where, reportedly, the women who have cooked will feed the bard and his companions sweet tamarind cooked grains and [meat] from wild cattle that is hot and ready. 55he dish sounds rather like tamarind rice (which can certainly be described as sweet), and the insertion of the adjective sweet (in ¯)56 before the word for tamarind, pul .i, almost confirms that the meaning indicated is tamarind, and not simply "sour," but again we have indication of the prevalence of tamarind in the South Indian/Tamil ¯diet.Further, in Akam 311 we have a reference to tamarind in what seem to be sweet tamarind steamed cakes. 57ourness in ca ṅkam dishes did not necessitate only tamarind as the source.We have plenty of references where other sour ingredients like yogurt convey the sourness (pul .i) mentioned directly in poems, as in Akam 394.In this song, small-headed-sheep's milk yogurt has thickened, ripened, and yellowed a bit, and is added to kodo millet cooked grain porridge along with winged termite young (īcal).However unappealing this dish might sound to western readers today, the dish is generally described in the poem as "delicious sour light cooked grains" (in ¯pul .i veñcōr ¯u, v.5), and termite young still make up some Tamil ¯communities' cuisine.From the section on "Ur ¯uveyir ¯ku ulai iya uruppu avir kurampai," Tamil ¯text from (Herbert, no date). 56It is possible that the adjective in ¯simply indicates "delicious, delightful, pleasant."I think "sweet" contributes to the idea of tamarind because the fruit is not only sour but also has some sweetness.Regardless of how to interpret in ¯, pul .i (in this reference and others) supports my argument of the prevalence of sour/tamarind dishes in early South Indian cuisine. 57This passage is less certain, but I am inclined to consider at .ai as describing the Tamil ¯food we know of the same name (small cakes, sometimes steamed).The mention of the hollow cane tubes (kul ¯āy)-probably bamboo because the tinai (landscape) is marutam-supports my idea, since steamed cakes like put .t . u have long been steamed in bamboo.I do not follow the commentators interpretation that the sweet tamarind "ending ears" (?!) means that the couple was so hungry that their ears were blocked and the food ended this ear blockage.I see no reason not to accept at .ai as the at .ai we know later from Tamil ¯cuisine, and the collocation of ear (cevi) is not too problematic, for I have references to deep fried "ear cakes" in the Mānasollāsa.These are cakes presumably cooked in shapes that resemble ears, "kat .akarn .ān," meaning either hollow ears, pan ears or crispy ears, v. 1396 and preceding; of the annabhoga section, vim .śati 3, adhyāya 13, p. 119 of Vol. 2 of (Someśvara III 1961).Further, cevvi refers to taste in the Nālat .iyar (a fifth-sixth century didactic text, dating that is not too remote from the akam poem), so it is not impossible to conceive that cevi at .ai might refer to a tasty at .ai/adai cake (University of Madras 1936, p. 1615).In any case, the collocation of "ear at .ai cake" inserted directly between "sweet tamarind" and "strong teak leaves" suggests that it describes what is being apportioned (pakukkum) on the teak leaves rather than the food's effect (of blocking some unmentioned hunger apparent somehow in the ears), which I might expect to find located before the sweet tamarind in the verse.The commentators seem to have been grasping at straws with "ear blocking."George Hart follows the commentary's interpretation (Hart 2015) ) pounded (for husking the shell, avaippu) grain (arici) of kodo millet (varuku) from that dry (pun ¯a) plot of land (=field, itai), (3). . ." Some communities in Tamil Nadu such as the Irula tribals still eat termite young, either trapped from the anthill mounds and grilled, or caught (in an urban context) and pan-fried with masala (Lenin 2018; Rajendran 2018).
This excursus into earlier sa ṅgam-era culinary practices of the Tamil ¯area-and its privileging of sourness-helps us better understand the presence of sour dishes in the C ōl ¯a record.In the C ōl ¯a temple offerings, we also find both yogurt and tamarind (sometimes together!)conveying a dish's sourness.In an inscription from Rājarājac ōl ¯a's reign (the most powerful of the C ōl ¯a emperors, ruling at the empire's height), 59 festival day offerings included fried vegetable offerings, pepper powder, (steam/boiled) vegetable offerings, a tamarind dish (pul .iyit .t . u ṅkar ¯i amutu), 60 and another sour dish (pul .i ṅkar ¯i amutu), in which the sourness is from both tamarind and yogurt. 61In this context, the pul .iyit .t . u ṅkar ¯i suggests a dish much like the saucy sour pul .i kul ¯ampu as Tamilians know it today, and the pul .i ṅkar ¯i is a bit more complex, perhaps something like a mōr kul ¯ampu (buttermilk saucy dish) or a prepared tamarind curd (yogurt) rice with both tamarind and banana (perhaps unripe) appearing where we find carrots and pomegranate fruit seeds today.
In the Tirumukk ūt .al inscription of Vīrarājendra, 62 one observes that pul .ittakar ¯i contains tamarind and that pul .i ṅkar ¯i, appearing in two separate instances in the inscription, always has some fermented dairy, whether yogurt or buttermilk.One pul .i ṅkar ¯i is offered on the Kārttikai day of Kārttikai month (along with the appakkāykar ¯i discussed earlier).This sour dish required one kur ¯un .i of yogurt. 63Later in the inscription, pul .i ṅkar ¯i is also included among dishes given to feed Śrīvais .n .avas on one annual festival occasion.For the pul .i ṅkar ¯i to feed one hundred Śrīvais .n .avas at the tīrtham at Tiruve ṅkat .amalai (presumably Tirupati, which is not too far from Tirumukk ūt .al), the donation covers one t ūn .i and one padakku of paddy in value to cover the cost of the buttermilk for the Śrīvais .n .avas' pul .i ṅkar ¯i.Although I do not intend to interpret the past using modern-day criteria, this pul .i ṅkar ¯i made with either buttermilk or yogurt sounds a great deal like mōr kul ¯ampu, in which either buttermilk or yogurt with some water are interchangeably used.Conversely, the Tirumukk ūt .al's pul .ittakar ¯i given to feed the same Śrīvais .n .avas requires tamarind and seems to be more akin with the great temple (Br .hadīśvara kōyil) at Thanjavur's pul .iyit .t .u ṅkar ¯i described one paragraph earlier. 64These descriptors are exactly the opposite of how we might expect the dishes today.I would more likely call a dish "soured" (pul .iya/pul .iyit .t . u) because of the addition of yogurt or buttermilk, whereas I would expect pul .i ṅkar ¯i (compound noun) to be "tamarind curry;" instead we observe exactly the opposite in these records!Regardless, the appearance of both dishes in tandem in more than one inscription using the same ingredients confirms the usage of the day.
Finally, confirming the ubiquitousness of tamarind and sour components as a main feature in the C ōl ¯a period Tamil ¯South, countless inscriptions note menus for temple feedings (similar to a modern annadāna, where donors regularly provide meals to temple visitors or regulars) that invariably include tamarind among the needed ingredients.One "shopping list" for the temple pan .t . āram (which is at the same time the temple storehouse, granary, and treasury, all in one) for feeding twenty Brahmins daily 59 Inscription #26, (Archaeological Survey of India 1986, pp.127-8) Vol. 2 Parts 1 & 2. From the twenty-ninth year of Rājarāja's reign (ca.1013, near the final year of his reign).Inscription is in the inner gopuram of the Thanjavur big temple, on the right side of the entrance.The offering was served for each of the thirteen festival days (the twelve monthly festivals of Tiruśataiyam on the Sanskrit Śatabhishaj naks .atra) and on the Kārttikai day of the Kārttikai festival. 60Pul .iyit .t . u ṅkar ¯i amitu recipe: 3/4 of a cevit .u of pepper, 3/20 and 3/18 of a cevit .u of cumin, 1 1/2 palams of tamarind, with paddy and salt generally required.This recipe calls for twice as much tamarind as the following recipe (pul .i ṅkar ¯i), which combines the tartness of tamarind with the sourness of yogurt. 1 palam (volume) = 4 kācu (weight), hence 1.5 palams = 6 kacu, contrasting with the following recipe's 3 kacu weight measure of tamarind. 61Pul .i ṅkar ¯i recipe: 3/4 cevit .u of pepper, 1 1/2 cevit .u of mustard seed, 3/18 cevit .u of cumin, 1 kācu of sugar, 3 kacu of tamarind, 1 nāl ¯i and 1 uri of yogurt, 3 cevit .u of horse gram (kol .l .u), and 3 plantains or bananas (val ¯aipal ¯am).This inscription refers to needing paddy and salt generally for the recipes.Since the salt is clearly intended to be added directly into the fried vegetable offering and other offerings, it is hard not to imagine that the paddy is not also meant to be applied directly in the recipes.This suggests that the dish might be like some fancy prepared tamarind "curd" (yogurt) rice (such dishes exist even today), or, it might simply be another kul ¯ampu/sauce to be served alongside the vegetables and the śuddhānnam (white rice) (Archaeological Survey of India 1986, Vol. 2 Parts 1 & 2, pp.127-28). 62The Tirumukk ūt .al inscription of Vīrarājendra, (Archaeological Survey of India 1939) Vol. 21, Ibid., p. 247.64 Lines 29-30 of the above inscription.in the Nat . arja temple of Cidambaram includes the daily tally of rice (uncooked), vegetables (kar ¯i), pepper (mil .aku), tamarind (pul .i), five fruits, salt, turmeric, ghee, yogurt, betel leaves, and areca nuts. 65Notably, the daily humble fare-not offered to god-includes only fruit for sweetness and not sugar, but is marked by the prominence of sourness in both tamarind and yogurt.
Throughout this section, the emphasis on sour and fermented foods reminds us of the prevalence of the sour taste in Tamil ¯and C ōl ¯a period food.This is often overshadowed in discussions of holy offerings due to the heightened presence of sweet desserts and special festival, value-added, sugary offerings to impress upon the public the munificence and prestige of the temple donor and his/her gift.Less remarkable offerings that did not make my final list of case studies routinely appear in inscriptions, like tayiramutu (yogurt offering) and pul .i ṅkar ¯iyamutu (sour curry or tamarind offering).The simplicity of these dishes meant that, more often than not, recipes for these offerings were not included in the inscription-writing practice of donative epigraphy.This might suggest that sour dishes were quotidian and commonplace in the diet of pre-modern Tamilians, and that the sweetness in sugary offerings really was something special and out of the ordinary, something that needs reminding of with the easy accessibility of sugary sweets today.

Akk āra At . icil
Another offering with significant literary mention is akkāra at .icil, with akkāra being a Tamilization of the Sanskrit word for less refined clumped sugar (Tam.cakkarai or car ¯karai, vernacular akkāra; Skt.śarkarā), and at .icil meaning "something cooked," from verb at .u (to cook, roast, fry, boil, melt).This medieval offering is closest to what is known today across South India as cakkarai po ṅkal, and is the sweet version of the pon ¯akam discussed above.This sweet offering is prominent in the temple inscriptional record, but it is equally prevalent in literary sources that precede the C ōl ¯a period references.Curiously enough, at this time I have not encountered a dish by this name (or similar) in the later Vijayanagara epigraphical record at Tirupati, 66 despite most of the inscriptions, liturgy, and temple practices at Tirupati being culturally Tamil ¯in nature.As to why the offering lost prominence by the Vijayanagara period, Carol Breckenridge's argument of the increased popularity of individual-sized, hand-held, and especially fried snacks as temple offerings in the Vijayanagara period might account for this change in trend.Akkāra at .icil is semi-liquid and does not travel well in the case of pilgrims returning home with portions of prasād to share with family and others. 67ertainly the most famous (and earliest) mention of this dish appears in a song composed by female saint Ān .t .āl .from her collection Nācciyār Tirumol ¯i (Sacred Words from the Goddess [i.e., from Ān .t .āl .; name for collection given later], ninth century CE), written in adoration of and love for Lord Vis .n .u. Ān .t .āl .sings: "For the lord of the sweet fragrant groves of Māliruñc ōlai I offered a hundred pots of butter and yet another hundred brimming with sweet rice [= akkāra at .icil] Will the beautiful lord who rides on Garud .a 65 Inscription #223, lines 29-30, (Archaeological Survey of India 1986, pp.28-31), Vol. 4. In Chidambaram at the Nat .arāja temple, outside the first prakāra on the north side.The dating of this inscription is unclear.For further information, this inscription corresponds to AR numbering 115 of 1888. 66At this time, my study of the Tirupati inscriptions is incomplete, so my data for this period is perhaps inconclusive in terms of making a firm statement. 67Breckenridge's criteria for latter-day Vijayanagara prasād include the lack of perishability, easily counted individual units for determining the scale of how impressive the offering was, its redistributive capacity, and more (Breckenridge 1986, p. 41).
not come to claim my offering?" 68 The following verse in the decad continues Ān .t .āl .'s desire to give delightful offerings to her god: "If only he will claim my offerings I would offer yet another hundred thousand pots.
If only the lord who abides in the groves of Tirumāliruñc ōlai fragrant with the breeze from the South would take me into his heart: I, who have always been his slave." 69gend has it-according to Ān .t .āl .'s commentators, which is popular knowledge among Śrīvais .n .avas-that Rāmānuja, in devotion to Ān .t .āl ., fulfilled her vow and offered hundreds of dishes of akkāra at .icil at the Tirumāliruñc ōlai temple of Cuntararāja Perumāl .before he reached Ān .t .āl .'s home temple (where she had united with Lord Vis .n .u, in Śrīvilliputt ūr) (Venkatesan 2010, p. 212).The significance of Ān .t .āl .'s worship of Lord Vis .n .u with offerings of akkāra at .icil is held to be so important that even to this day Vais .n .avas still recreate the offering while reciting the Tirumol ¯i verses.North American diaspora Vais .n .avas re-enact Ān .t .āl .'s feeding of her god by ceremonially offering a hundred pots of akkāra at .icil to Vis .n .u as far removed from Śrīvilliputt ūr as is North Carolina. 70his food offering also appears in a similarly dated epic poem that is one of the five great epics (makākāppiya ṅkal .) of Tamil ¯literature, the Cīvakacintāman .i (v.928).This reference to the religious offering is scathing; the epic, a Jaina text, promotes Jaina values and does not endorse the Hindu practices or worship of its day (probably ninth century CE). 71The surrounding verses (vv.927 & 929) criticize decadent and sinful practices more generally (gambling, lust, drinking, wealth, and dancing) and suggest breaking free from this lascivious, illusory cycle (sa ṁsāra) of birth, death, rebirth, and re-death (v.917).This food verse hints at a critique of particularly Hindu behavior and singles out the excess of offerings like akkāra at .icil.The milky sweet lentil rice (ām pāl akkārat .alai) is here called by the traditional temple name used in inscriptions-akkārat .alai-amongst descriptors such as "sweet milk offering," "boiled [dishes] the color of decadent gold," and "many varieties (pālavarai) of offerings" (amirtam, i.e., specifically religious food offerings) "gushing with fragrant ghee" (v.928). 72y now it should be clear: this is a very special food offering indeed.The literary references nicely highlight the fact that what might look today to be a relatively simple dish-rice, dal, ghee, milk, sugar-is in fact something special.Value-added ingredients due to complex refining (ghee and sugar) and laborious, time-consuming processing from raw materials (rice and dal) result in an indulgence, as fine an offering as one can give to god.The two recipes that I have encountered for akkārat .alai in the inscriptions slightly postdate the above literary references.One tenth-century recipe appears in an incomplete inscription recorded in a Śaivite temple, 73 73 The dating is unclear but certainly corresponds to the tenth century.The inscriptional notes indicate that it corresponds to the third year of Uttama C ōl ¯a's reign, so 972 CE, but this volume is for Parakesarivarman's (Parantakan ¯'s) reign, so perhaps 910 CE.Inscription #60, (Archaeological Survey of India 1986, p. 29).Vol.19.On the west wall of the Anantīsvara temple, at Ut .aiyārk ūt .i, near Kāt .t .umannārk ōyil, Cidambaram taluk, South Arcot district.This describes a land endowment endowed by M ūttan ¯Kāman ¯alias Nārāyan .a Vil ¯uppērarayan ¯, made after purchasing the land from another: ". . .for the daily offering devotee's donation was intended for the Śaivite temple where it was engraved or for another temple; it was relatively common practice of the day to record a donation in one temple that was intended for another.The other recipe appears in an eleventh-century inscription at the Tirumukk ūt .al temple, definitely Vais .n .ava.Offerings of akkārat .alai and more are for the Mahāvis .n .u at Tirumukk ūt .al, a site not far from Ce ṅkalpat .t .u, relatively close to both Kanchipuram and Chennai. 74ince these recipes appear close both chronologically speaking and in terms of ingredients, I have listed them in chart form for easy comparison (Table 1).Despite an unfamiliarity with classical measurements, 75 it is easy to tell at a glance that the later, eleventh-century Vais .n .ava offering is significantly sweeter and richer in both sugar and ghee, even after compensating for a greater volume of dal and milk used in the later recipe.Only one century later, we see over a doubling of sugar by actual weight (a topic to which I will return a little later) and a quadrupling of ghee (by actual volume) used in the recipe, making for an offering even better suited for god.Looking at the later amounts of sugar and ghee in this rich dish, it is easier to comprehend the Jain resistance to such a decadent religious culinary practice, as we saw in the Cīvakacintāman .i's clash with Hindu ways of expressing devotion to god.So, what about the bananas?As we saw earlier with Srirangam appam and kan .n .āmutu, it was not uncommon to use fruits such as banana in a sweet offering for god, although I am hard-pressed to find a modern-day recipe of cakkarai po ṅkal that does.While in conversation with one temple head priest's wife, my suggestion of a theoretical addition of raisins-quite sweet to my mind-to cakkarai po ṅkal brought a grimacing look of disgust to her face: "raisins would make cakkarai po ṅkal bitter!"76Needless to say, modern taste has become so accustomed to extreme sweet that fruit is only found in fruit offerings, like the temple offering of five fruits in coconut, sugar water, etc., i.e., pañcāmr .tam of the Pal ¯an ¯i variety.On the other hand, a modern devotee cook might find lacking the absence of cashew nuts, today a perennial addition to cakkarai po ṅkal.The cashew, of course, only arrived to the Indian subcontinent with the Portuguese who brought it from Brazil, so it does not make an appearance in Indian cooking until the sixteenth century CE, still quite early in comparison with the potato or tomato, two other modern perennials of Indian cooking.

Feeding God
The whole point of discussing recipes (ingredient combination and ratio) as the epigraphical record of naivedya for gods is that food preparation mattered to individuals, temples, and priests, and not just to temple cooks-who already, presumably, knew the usual ratios-for the correct feeding of gods.The inscriptions highlight the quantities and weights of ingredients because of the value of such ingredients.The price of a sack of paddy mattered, as did the value of processed refined sugars compared to less refined jaggery, the value of processed, threshed, hulled, and aged rice, cooked ghee, dry spices, and any number of other ingredients.It is fortunate for us that the cost of ingredients mattered when keeping accounts for inscriptional purposes; this is how we have access to these medieval recipes in the first place.
Priests like Babu Shastri and scholars like Breckenridge have supposed that regular naivedya practices in temples came about to sustain increasingly voluminous crowds of pilgrims who needed refreshment during and following temple visits.However, I theorize that the feeding of gods as a regular feature of temple life was more direct in intention: one feeds god to nourish god, with as lavish an offering as one can offer on display in the public arena77 that is the Tamil temple (versus giving vast offerings at home, which feeds and impresses the god, but impresses the community and visitors at large less so) (Appadurai and Breckenridge 1976; Talbot 1991, 2001).I suggest that the C ōl ¯a medieval practice of offering naivedya for god is first and foremost for feeding, sustaining, and nourishing god, which goes against the sociologico-functional explanation that naivedya was institutionalized to feed large numbers of pilgrims.
In order to understand the actual function of naivedya, one must pay close attention to the inscriptions themselves and to ideological concerns expressed in religious texts up through the C ōl ¯a period.Both the C ōl ¯a inscriptions and religious doctrinal texts suggest the theological reality of feeding the actual bodies of the gods held in these temples.The typical formula for these inscriptions is that a certain amount of gold (or coin or land) is meant to pay for raw materials (usually paddy) for ingredients for a certain festival day or ritual for the god held at a certain temple, and that this amount of gold was invested in the temple treasury or with the temple capai (sabhā).Often these inscriptions refer to the god directly by his or her name, usually the local name at that temple site.But again and again, we see inscriptions that indicate that the offering is "for the tirumen ¯i (holy body) at X [temple]."In one example from the Br .hadīśvara temple at Thanjavur (historically called Tañjai), we read that each kaśu (coin) put in the treasury brings the interest to pay out for the four nāl ¯is of aged rice for the twice daily "holy offering for the holy body which has graciously appeared" (referring to appearing for processional viewing), with two nāl ¯is of rice being used each time, and then further detailing the quantity of each ingredient used in addition to the rice. 78In the C ōl ¯a inscriptions and in later devotional contexts, 79 tirumen ¯i (the holy body) 80 is the standard term used for the image (where in Sanskrit we find the terms vigraha or m ūrti) housed in the temple, whether it refers to the (often sculpted) figure of a deity carried around during festival processions or to any of the fixed main icons that permanently reside in temple san ¯n ¯itis (shrines).Leslie Orr first recognized this usage when pointing out that C ōl ¯a inscriptions frequently do not use any word at all to refer to the image housed in a temple.The direct mention of the name of the god himself/herself carries with it the implication that the god's actual "pervasive presence at a particular sacred site. . . is of primary significance" (Orr 2004, p. 458).Orr indicates that tirumen ¯i means "sacred form," 81 which it certainly does, as does Sanskrit vigraha in the sense of form (shape) of the body of something.The first definition that the Tamil Lexicon gives for mēn ¯i is "body" in the literal sense of ut .ampu, which is how it was defined by the (roughly contemporaneous with C ōl ¯a inscriptions) Tamil lexicographer Pi ṅkala.I think it is important not to downplay the physicality of divine embodiment, which using a translation like "form" does, when the inscriptions donating foods to feed temple gods actually indicate giving the offerings to the holy body residing at a given temple.This is especially true given the theological understanding at the time that the god actually resides in the temple as a theophany or embodiment and not some form, figure, or sculptural representation of a god who is elsewhere.The Sanskrit equivalent appearing in other contexts is divyadeha (divine body) (Davis 1997, p. 37), which, while indicating "divine" in some spiritual sense, equally indicates that one confronts the body of god in temple.
Orr has discussed both " Śaiva Siddhānta and Śrīvais .n .ava theologies of 'descent' into image form, which were being formulated by teachers of these traditions in the same period as the inscriptions were being engraved on temple walls" (Orr 2004, p. 459).These theologies indicate that the divine presence resides in the figure held in temple.Take, for example, Rāmānuja's teachings (eleventh-twelfth century CE; contemporaneous with the C ōl ¯a period) that advocated for the support of rituals performed on idols (vigrahas) as the bodies of gods.As Rāmānuja argued, Vis .n .u was bodily incarnated in the temple deity's arcā (image to be worshipped), so for Rāmānuja and, doubtless, for countless devotees of the same era, "image worship" was "a practice of true knowledge, not illusion" (Davis 1997, p. 48,  footnote 28). 82Richard Davis also highlights the "(G)od's actual embodiment" (Davis 1997, p. 50) in temples with the "icon" as the "body for the god being worshiped" (Davis 1997, p. 46, emphasis added).I cannot emphasize this idea enough when examining the actual practices of Hindu devotees of the period, for it is fundamental for understanding the beliefs of medieval devotees and their behavior.The abhis .ekam (bathing of the deity that precedes the naivedya feeding) is another example of taking care of the body of the god, as is the application of unguents such as perfumed sandalwood paste that 78 Inscription #6 of Rājarājadeva, (Archaeological Survey of India 1986, pp.71-72) ¯un .i and two nâr .i of paddy (are required) for (conversion into) four nâr .i of old rice (to be used) for the sacred food (tiruvamudu) at both times (of the day)"-two nâr .i of old rice (being used) each time; four nâr .i of paddy for (one) âr .akku of ghee (ney-amudu),. . .."For an understanding of my translation of el ¯untarul .uvitta, see (Orr 2004,  p. 459). 79The term tirumen ¯i appears in the Tamil ¯Vais .n .ava Kōyil Ol ¯uku (Anonymous 2007), an anecdotal history of the Srirangam temple. 80It is also remarkable that this is a Tamil ¯term, when many of the ritual terms used in these C ōl ¯a inscriptions are Tamilized Sanskrit, and recognizably Sanskrit, as we see in this "mixed Tamil ¯-Sanskrit" epigraphical "language" that Orr calls "inscriptional Man .ipravāla" (Orr 2010, p. 327). 81(Orr 2004, p. 458, footnote 28).Orr also indicates in this footnote that the term tirumen ¯i also frequently appears in Jain donative inscriptions to indicate that the physical "image"/m ūrti was set up by a given donor.She also discusses this term in (Orr 2010, p. 338). 82For details on Rāmānuja's theology, see (Carman 1974) and (Carman and Narayanan 1989, pp.34-42).
is another upacāra included in the full p ūjā worship (which was otherwise typically performed on royal bodies, for kings and princes).The ritual inclusion of intimate moments such as screening the god before bathing and changing his/her clothes, combing the hair in specific festival rituals, and showing the god his/her own image in a small mirror all accentuate the bodily and embodied aspects of icon worship.Combing a god's hair is not just sevā (service) but is taking care of the body of a god.
Again, Orr points us in the right direction in her analysis of various donations of valuable wedding tālis (necklaces) to goddesses who, as married goddesses, ought to wear tālis and not appear without a wife's appropriate adornment, like not being fully clothed (Orr 2007, pp.116-17).In these and similar C ōl ¯a donative instances, the devotees act in the manner of family, as family members would acquire the tāli for a daughter to be married.Orr's argument is that donations often establish kinship-like relations between donor and god, and that inscriptions themselves describe a family relationship between donor and god, in various cases referring to the goddess as the donor's daughter (Orr 2007,  pp.117-18). 83Following Orr's proposal, it makes perfect sense to feed one's god (daily and regularly) as a way of taking care of the god's body, just as one takes care of a daughter or son's body with regular feeding.
Seen in this light, I think it is correct to attribute the motivations for C ōl ¯a-period naivedya practices to medieval Hindu devotees' priorities of serving and feeding god, in particular, taking care of, maintaining, and sustaining a god's body.I would not attribute naivedya practices to any secondary resulting effect of having a fair amount of food at temple, which doubtless could be used to feed priests, their families who also caretake at the temple, other temple workers, or visitors.C ōl ¯a period inscriptions make the most mention of feeding the gods, occasional mention of feeding Śivayogins, religious devouts, Brahmins attached to temples, or Śrīvais .n .avas (locals), and much rarer mention of feeding pilgrims and first-time visitors called ap ūrvis in the inscriptions, people who have "never before been seen" at the temple. 84It is also clear from the inscriptional record that donations for feeding religious devouts, Brahmins, and Śrīvais .n .avas are not donations for naivedya; there is never mention of giving these meals to the god.
Feeding god-and this means the body of god-was a priority during the C ōl ¯a period.While the counted examples of detailed recipes for naivedya dish preparation are rare, we have a vast number of other C ōl ¯a-period donative inscriptions whose sole communication is coins or land donated for naivedya or tiruvamutu.Feeding the gods mattered even when the nitty gritty of ingredient quantities, measurements, and type of spice did not.Nonetheless, through the rare recipes we find, we see remarkable interest in precision on the part of the donor in specifying exact quantities and ingredients, in the same way that a grandmother insists on adding just so much spice to a dish or not failing to add some special secret ingredient.The donation-just like a specially prepared cooked dish-is meaningful to a donor because of the details.Fittingly, the old proverb clues us in: God, in fact, is in the details.
As a side note, I must acknowledge one common strain of religious thought that contends that the gods in temples do not actually eat the naivedya offered to them but instead smell the fragrant aromas from the food. 85This is evident even today if one catches the usually deliberately private act of a priest offering naivedya to a m ūrti, as I have witnessed on occasion (at the Nittiyakaliyān .a Perumāl .temple 83 Orr describes how female donative practices sought to link the goddess to the donor's female kin and connect the donor to the goddess (Orr 2007, p. 117).Orr refers to ARE 720 of 1916, an inscription of a woman serving the Pān .t .iyan kings who "set up an image of the goddess, in the name of her daughter and named after her daughter, to which she presented jewels and other gifts to support worship."She also mentions two tenth-century inscriptions that refer to goddess Umā as their daughter (Archaeological Survey of India 1986), Vol. 19, #404, and a male donor of the same period who claimed "the goddess Uma as his daughter, provided "her with land to support daily worship and offerings, and" gave "her in marriage to the lord of the temple (ARE 151 of 1836-37)" (Orr 2007, pp.117-18). 84(Archaeological Survey of India 1986, p. 79) Vol. 3, Parts 1 & 2, inscription #35, line 17, and (Orr 2004, p. 452).The mentions of ap ūrvis indicate that other mentions of feeding devouts, Śivayogins, and Śrīvais .n .avas were a local matter of regulars at a given temple. 85Per my interview with Mr. Babu Shastri (2015) and my anonymous informants.Also see (Malamoud 1996, p. 38).and at the Kāñci Ēkāmparanātar temple).The priest, holding the tal .ikai (plate) of naivedya in one hand, lifts the cover (usually a cloth or leaves, today often a section of silk saree) and uses the first two fingers and thumb to waft the aroma from the cooked offering in the deity's direction.This implies that gods might not savor their food but simply smell the aroma and live off the ambrosia of the wafting vācan ¯ai (scent).This interpretation explains why traditional Hindus do not smell or taste food while cooking it (one should not even smell it before offering to the god; it would be otherwise "enjoyed" and spoiled before the god can enjoy it).This is also meant to explain why naivedya is covered (traditionally with cloth or leaves) while being carried from the temple mat .aipal .l .i after preparation to the san ¯n ¯iti for offering (which of course ignores the fact of wanting to protect the food from dust and insects).
I do not intend to discredit this idea; I will simply state that it makes no appearance anywhere in the inscriptions, nor does scent or aroma at all.The aromatic components of p ūjā worship are present in the upacāras of anulepana, the application of usually scented and fragrant unguents, which is not coincidentally also known as gandha (perfuming) and in the dh ūpa (the incensing or "fumigating" of the god), and not necessarily a feature of the upacāra of naivedya, according to traditional dharmaśāstric understanding of p ūjā.This is not to say that aroma is not an important facet of many parts of p ūjā, including the feeding with naivedya.Even the upacāra of pus .pa (offering flowers) is meant to be with flowers that are fragrant and not with flowers that have no aroma, which would be an offense to god (Kane 1942, p. 733, citing the Vis .n .udharmas ūtra).So, while the fragrance of food is an aspect not to be ignored in naivedya nor in other upacāras, this facet of divine consumption does not appear in the inscriptional discourse.I thus contend that C ōl ¯a inscriptions account for the actual feeding of divine bodies, and that this idea is consistent with the epigraphy of the period, regardless of other theological understandings of naivedya as appreciated by god(s) through aroma.

Made Sweeter for God
The recipes examined above may appear deceptively simple to our eyes today but we must not mistake car ¯karai pon ¯akam or spiced and sugared Srirangam appam as humble cuisine. 86Bear in mind that, historically, processing foods from raw materials consisted of numerous laborious, painstaking, lengthy procedures.Processing paddy into aged raw rice required numerous steps, pack animals for threshing, stone machines for hulling, and months from harvest time to being ready for consumption. 87Dals also required similar processes (although shorter) to prepare the bean, dry, and split it using heavy stone machines.But the ingredient that required perhaps the most complex technologies for processing was the sugar used in these naivedya dishes, even though this sugar would have been much more like the least refined dark muscovado sugar that we can find today. 88In some temple offerings, the more refined white crystal rock sugar was required and indicated by the terms pañcatārai or kan .t . acar ¯kar[ai]; 89 the cakkarai that is "sugar" in these C ōl ¯a recipes is much more like the muscovado type and not the jaggery that epigraphists have typically considered it to be. 90There is some confusion among epigraphers that car ¯karai refers to jaggery due to incorrectly assuming that 86 I use Laudan's distinction of high and humble cuisines to designate elite culinary practices in relation to the cuisines of the masses.It is important to still designate both and all culinary cultures as "cuisine" in revision of earlier definitions of what qualifies as cuisine and what does not (Laudan 2013, pp. 2, 7, and elsewhere). 87For a thorough study, see (Greenland 1997).Monica L. Smith comments on the high investment of labor, threshing, and storage at (Smith 2006, p. 484). 88What is sold as muscovado (light in color) is still more refined and treated than early India's śarkarā would have been: closer to the darkest, lumpiest muscovado you can find rarely today at quite a price in some specialty shops importing this darkest of sugars prepared using artisanal traditional methods.the technology did not exist for refining sugar into white crystals.However, it is important to point out that the sugar-refining technologies in use in early India lost ground to the "modern" imported western industrial methods of refining and cannot be found practiced in India from the mid-nineteenth century. 91Further, mentions of rock candy in C ōl ¯a inscriptions and of white sugar in contemporaneous texts from other part of South India doubly confirm that these sugar refining technologies did exist.
The historical methods of sugar-making reach far back into the classical period and there are abundant early references to white processed sugar as (Sanskrit) sitā, 92 a word which means white.Even if not as white as bleached sugar is today, it certainly indicated a type of sugar known for its light color.Since these inscriptions do indicate when the sugar is rock sugar (white and more refined), and since we do have other references to jaggery blocks in early inscriptions as karuppu kat .t . i, 93 in C ōl ¯a epigraphy, car ¯karai refers to soft brown sugar. 94This car ¯karai, then, is a highly refined product from the sugarcane plant that requires great skill, technology, and labor to produce, and is hence a value-added food. 95It comes as no surprise that we find such a prestigious food item in most temple recipes, even in aromatic naivedya with pepper and cumin.Sugar adds crispness to foods (like in appam or dosa), gives a golden, browned color to cooked dishes (the border of cookies and cakes), balances the savory, spicy, and acidic components in a dish (as in pasta sauce), and most importantly, is a natural preservative, retarding food spoilage, something that is significant in hot tropical South India.Despite these other various motivations that might have spurred its addition in temple dishes, the fact remains that sugar is valuable and worth offering to god simply because it is sweet and good, like the divine experience. 96Offerings to god should be sweet, even when savory!
We find similar usages of sugar, sweets, and products made from refined sugar in European and Latin American Catholic preparations, where religious monasteries actually dominated the sugar-refining technologies and processes, typically being the sweet and confectionery makers in medieval and early modern towns and cities.In medieval Europe as in medieval Tamil temples, there was a definite association between giving sweets to god, and the control of sweet production and usage at religious and monastery sites.Food historian Rachel Laudan may be correct in crediting the early Indian Buddhist monasteries with a great deal of the maintenance of sugar-refining technologies, machines, and skills (Laudan 2013, pp.113-14), for it is through the Buddhists in India of the first millennium CE that the Chinese learned the techniques of sugar refinery, later adding their own variations to the process. 97Similarly, in the monasteries and convents of medieval Europe that were 91 (Naik 1922) describes the traditional Indian sugar refining, already by that time only in demand among orthodox Hindus due to the high cost of production and not being able to compete with sugar production in Indian factories using imported modern methods.The industry was only still surviving in 1922 due to religious sentiment for traditional methods.I credit James Mchugh for bringing this and other information regarding sugar to my attention. 92In the Suśruta Sam .hitā, which has a terminus ante quem of fifth century CE for the latest layers of the text, per (Wujastyk 1998,  pp.104-5).The twelfth-century (Someśvara III 1961, p. 134) refers to white sugar as sitā, v. 1578 and elsewhere, and also details one process of how to whiten and refine sugar from the śarkarā and the four stages of candy making, p. 121, vv.1412-16.For two thorough studies of sugar-making in early India, see (von Hinüber 1971) and (Gopal 1964). 93The inscription is a public testimony recording that Villiyān .d .ān ¯-Al ¯akapperumāl .and his brothers had committed a sin against the Brāhman .as in stealing and utilizing the temple food offerings, especially "the jaggery (karuppu kat .t . i mit .āvai) for the purpose of food-offerings to the deity Tiruttal .iyān .d .anāyan ¯ār" (Archaeological Survey of India 1986, p. 157, Vol. 25,  inscription #125).Dated 1290 CE (the reign of reign of Mār ¯avarman ¯Kulaśekhara I) and located on the south wall of the first prākāra of the Tiruttal .īśvara temple in Tiruppatt ūr, Tirupattur taluk, Ramanathapuram District. 94But not the kind they sell in the supermarket today, which is refined white sugar with molasses added back in.For a detailed description of sugar classifications and terminology, and processes, see (Mchugh, In progress). 95Like ghee, sugar also has a "long shelf life (important in India) and a high value-to-weight ratio," both easily "traded over long distances" (Laudan 2013, p. 114). 96For Tamil ¯bhakti saint-poets such as Śaivite Mān .ikkavācakar likening the divine experience to sugar, see, among numerous examples, Tiruccatakam #90 in (Cutler 1987, p. 165).For the historical comparison of the sugar-refining process to alchemy, see (Laudan 2013, p. 110 and elsewhere).(Mazumdar 1998, pp. 20-33) and (Kieschnick 2003, pp.254-62)."In 647, the emperor Taizong sent an envoy to India charged with learning the secrets of sugar making.He returned with six monks and two artisans, who established sugar manufacturing south of Hangchow, where the climate was favorable to sugarcane,. . .Like the Indians, the Chinese used sites of sugar refining industries, sugar-derived products were first medicinal in purpose and then produced as confections for consumption before and after fasting, for festival days (Laudan 2013,  p. 177).In the Iberian empire, we see a similar phenomenon: the religious missionary-driven spread of sugar-refining technologies 98 and the colonial production of sugar cane on New World plantations led to nunneries leading in the confectionary production of sweets at Catholic convents in the New World as well as at Iberian colonies elsewhere, such as among Portuguese Jesuit nuns at Goa (Laudan 2013,  p. 195).Without a doubt, medieval and early modern religious culinary cultures around the world were heavily laden with sugar and dishes involving refined sugar products.
Seen from this perspective, the religious priority of using value-rich sugar in most Tamil temple offerings is obvious.But is a rise in sugar usage over time detectable in the data?It is possible to observe an increase in the prevalence of sweet preparations overall in the C ōl ¯a period inscriptional record (compared to unsweetened dishes, Tables 2 and 3) which is also confirmed by an even greater increase in sweet dish prevalence in the Vijayanagara period inscriptions, with a greater variety of sweet dishes offered as donative foods (Tables 4 and 5). 99The inscriptional data not only suggest a greater presence and frequency of sugar's appearance in temple offerings as time passes, but also reflect increased sugar usage over time, determined by quantity or weight of sugar used.For the C ōl ¯a period, although my data is not completely exhaustive, it is apparent that sugar gradually appears more frequently used in temple recipes, with 25% of tenth-century recipes containing sugar, 50% of eleventh-century recipes requiring sugar, and 100% of thirteenth-century recipes calling for sugar.By gross volume of sugar used in these same C ōl ¯a recipes, the amount increases from an average of six palams required per recipe in the tenth century, to twenty-seven palams required per donative offering in the eleventh century, to an impressive two hundred and three palams needed per offering in the thirteenth century. 100milk to whiten sugar, though they used their own edge-runner presses rather than the Indian ox-driven pestles and mortars.The Chinese produced several grades and kinds of sugar, most of them soft and brown" (Laudan 2013, p. 120). 98Augustinian missionary "Martin de Rada, on a mission to one of China's major sugar manufacturing areas, Fujian, reported on it to both Spain and Mexico.Other missionaries studied sugar-making methods in India and China."All happening primarily in the sixteenth century, with the mill technologies transferred much earlier from India to China, per (Laudan  2013, p. 193), who also cites (Daniels and Daniels 1988, pp. 527-30). 99In my survey, out of twenty-three completely described Tirupati Vijayanagara recipes, seventeen (74%) contain some form of sugar.Newer varieties for the inscriptional record include: atirasam, sweet tōcai (dosa), cukiyan ¯(modern sukhiyan), and cit .ai (modern cīt .ai).Compare this to nine out of a total eighteen (or 50%) complete recipes from the C ōl ¯a period inscriptions calling for sugar. 100The conversion from nāl ¯i to palam is challenging, since palam is a weight measure and nāl ¯i volume, but I calculate that if: 1 kācu = 28 grs.(per (University of Madras 1936)), and 4 kācu = 1 palam (per (Sircar 1966)), then 1 palam = 112 gr., so there are 9 palams to the kg.There are 5 āl ¯ākku to the kg., and 8 āl ¯ākkus to the pat .i (per (University of Madras 1936, p. 253 & p. 2435)), and 1.6 kgs. to the pat .i. So, 1 kg. is 0.625 of a nāl ¯i, hence 2 nāl ¯is = 1.25 kg, which is approx.11.25 palams.For fear of my data being potentially misleading in its conclusions, I should point out that the sample of available data for the C ōl ¯a thirteenth century is rather reduced, limiting the extent of my findings.Furthermore, over time, we do see an increase in overall volume of donative offerings at a more impressive scale, meaning that some increase in the amount of sugar would be expected over time, to balance the generally larger offerings being given in temples.Also, what we know from the literary mention of dishes like akkāra at .icil suggests that sweet offerings always made up a significant and noteworthy aspect of donative gifting of food to gods in temple, even in times preceding the C ōl ¯a period.With this, I do not want to imply that an increase in use of sugar in food offerings was a particular feature of the C ōl ¯a period.At this time, my data must remain suggestive instead of entirely simply left out of the inscriptions because their acquisition did not involve an exchange of values in the temple treasury and storehouse, through which raw materials such as paddy and ingredients and dry grains like ghee or urad dal would be accessed.Epigraphic references abound to nantavan ¯ams on site at temple complexes.These gardens were intended to grow flowers to offer to and garland gods; they also included orchard trees, according to the inscriptional evidence. 108I suspect fresh greens would have been obtained directly-when available-from these temple gardens, so there was no need to endow funds to secure a regular supply of green produce such as curry leaves.If this is the case, it could be hard to isolate what might be missing from these recipes.Taking a small amount of leaves from the temple garden would not require an attentive transfer of funds for food from the treasury and would hence not be recorded in the inscription.Only spices that were not available in the immediate locale, however, would appear in the inscriptional record, as happens with salt, even if coming from a relatively nearby salt field.Spices' storage at the temple pan .t . āram (bhān .d .āram) would necessitate accounting for how much to dole out in exchange for a certain value taken from the donation's interest.
A similar phenomenon might be at work with some vegetable items that could potentially have been procured on site from the temple nantavan ¯am as well.We do find explicit mention of vegetables in some inscriptions, 109 but in many inscriptional recipes, vegetables seem absent where one would expect them. 110In these cases, inscriptions list a total amount of paddy required for a number of offerings, and it is unclear if this is meant to be exchanged for fresh vegetables at market, if a gross total value was listed in paddy for all goods required in cooking the offerings (as is sometimes evident from the text), or if the vegetables might not also have been obtained from the temple garden.One recipe for a vegetable offering (kāykkar ¯i amutu) in an inscription dated ca.1013 calls for one and a half cevit .u of pepper and three cevit .u of mustard seed, explicitly lists no amount of vegetable, but does list a bulk amount of paddy and salt required in common among a number of amutu dishes. 111In other instances, whether vegetables are actually involved remains uncertain: when a dish is called kar ¯iyamutu, it might or might not actually have a vegetable, although one suspects that it would.But in this case of the kāykkar ¯i amutu, the name explicitly indicates vegetables.This same ca.1013 inscription details a por ¯ikkar ¯i amutu (fried curry or fried vegetable offering) and only lists the amount of ghee required, three cevit .u, without indicating the vegetable quantity.Salt and paddy requirements are shared among all offerings, so again, one cannot be sure if the paddy amount refers to a value that could be used to procure fresh vegetables or if the vegetables simply came from the temple garden.
Less of a mystery-although perhaps surprising to some considering the implicit hierarchy of god over earthly kings-is the absence of very spiced, flavored, and contrived dishes that we find in royal culinary manuals of the same period. 112The multi-step elaboration in royal recipes is not present in usually reserved in modern usage for the coriander/cilantro leaf, since this inscription refers to spices purchased for temple use, logic suggests that it must refer to the dried seed. 108Inscriptions discuss the gardens' expansion, caretakers, tree planting, and more, for example in Vol. 3, Inscription #302, (Archaeological Survey of India 1986). 109As in Vol.21, inscription #17, (Archaeological Survey of India 1939), discussed just above.Also in Vol. 1, inscription #207 (in the Tirumalai temple, 1434 CE), (Vijayaraghavacharya and Sastry 1998, p. 209), around line 37.The vegetables are included in the paruppuviyal tiruppōn ¯akam, a boiled dal offering, to me resembling modern aviyal, to Breckenridge resembling sundal, (Breckenridge 1986, p. 40), in spite of the addition of vegetables in the inscription. 110We see the vegetables specified in a recipe for kar ¯i amutu (vegetable offering).Inscription #2 (discussed earlier), appendix to Vol. 32, line 5, (Archaeological Survey of India 1986, p. 388)  1986, p. 127).This is the inscription with the appakkāy recipe discussed earlier. 112Cf. recipes in (Someśvara III 1961) and (Mahārājanala 1983).Examples of contrived elaborations include adding flowers to perfume a dish and removing them before service, fumigating dishes, chopping vegetables and other ingredients all to the same size as the rice for the trompe l'oeil effect that the whole dish consists of rice alone, and disguising meat dishes in the shape of vegetables to trick the diners.
about its development that read backward from later practice.This historical archive also allows us to explore the role of sugar in Hindu religious practice, doubly illuminating when seen in light of scholarship on the history, anthropology, and sociology of sugar elsewhere in the world (Mintz 1985).
It is also worth taking pause to discuss this important foodstuff in Hindu offerings given sugar's prominence in other world religions' histories.Finally, the diachronic examination of textual descriptions of naivedya suggests that the C ōl ¯a period was instrumental in the institutionalization of more complex offering practices in temples.The C ōl ¯a-era effluence of inscription writing was also pivotal in the creation of novel forms of culinary writing as recipes written in stone and initiated a more widespread practice of recipe writing adopted in Vijayanagara-period epigraphy.This indicates that, as with the strong C ōl ¯a patronage of infrastructure, temple art, and religious culture, C ōl ¯a-period patronage allowed culinary culture to flourish during this time period when religious culinary practices and culinary writing thrived.
. Corresponds to the twenty-third year of Parakesarivarman's (Parāntakan ¯I)'s rule, i.e., 930 CE.Located on the jagati (south), in the central shrine of the Chandraśēkhara temple, Tiruccentur ¯ai, Trichy taluk, in Trichy district, describing offerings to be made to the god at Īśānama ṅkālam, on the occasion of the first feeding of Bh ūti Parāntakan's son: "for this, three times a day, 6 nāl ¯is of paddy [are required], and for the vegetables given three times a day, 6 nāl ¯is of paddy, and for the spices, salt, and tamarind, 3 nāl ¯is of paddy [value is required].". . .kar ¯iyamutu potu mun ¯r ¯ukku nel ar ¯u nāl ¯iyum kāyattukkum uppukkum pul .ikkum nel mun ¯n ¯āl ¯iyum. . . 111Vol. 2 Parts 1 & 2, inscription #26, (Archaeological Survey of India The number one is implied when nāl ¯i is specified with no descriptor.Tenth-century inscription dated to ca. 991 CE (the sixth year of Irājarājac ōl ¯a's reign) (Archaeological Survey of India 1986), Vol.34, p. 15. 23 Line 2 of inscription #2, (Archaeological Survey of India 1986), Vol. 3, p. 4 (section on Ukkal inscriptions).This inscription dates to the thirteenth year of Irājarājac ōl ¯a's reign, so ca.997-998 CE.We learn that Nārāyan .For preparing the holy ambrosia offering [unusually redundant here, literally "holy offering offering"] of four nāl ¯is [of rice is implicit] at high-noon time for the deity/divine Tiruvā[y]mol ¯i.") Vais .n .ava inscription in Śivac ūl .ā[man .ima ṅ]ka[l]am village, also known as Śrī Vikramābharan .accatu[r]vetima ṅkalam.
= the partially dried, less refined sugar).The Lexicon (p.3025) also derives kan .n .āmat .ai as kan .n .ā+mat .ai, with mat .ai as an offering for a deity, like boiled rice (mat .ai is apparently cōr ¯u in the Pi ṅkala Nikantu, per (University of Madras 1936), so, a sweet rice offering which is slightly tan in color due to the sweetener (unrefined sugar or jaggery being used in the present day).
34(University of Madras 1936), p. 692, derives kan .n .amutu from kan ¯n ¯al, a word for (less refined) sugar or candy (related to kan .t .u from Sanskrit khan .d .a Inscription #80, line 7, (Archaeological Survey of India 1986) Vol. 3 Parts 1 & 2, p. 188.For an approximate conversion, this is 3 kgs. of raw rice, 0.3 or 0.4 kg. of ghee, 5 c. sugar, and 10 bananas. 36scuss all Vijayanagara recipes for kan .n.āmutu in the body of my text, except for one additional tiru kan .āmat.airecipe that This inscription is actually engraved in the G ōvindarājasvāmi temple located at Tirupati (not in the main temple), and dates to 1445 CE.Inscription #212, (Vijayaraghavacharya and Sastry 1998) Vol. 1, p. 216.38To me this suggests the fruits are four in number, but V. Vijayaraghavacharya and Sadhu Subrahmanya Sastry have interpreted this to mean four kinds of fruit.I am familiar with Hindu offerings that require five different kinds of fruit, but to my knowledge do not know of a ritual specification for four fruits.Since other inscriptions indicate quantities such as "vāl ¯aippal ¯am pattum" (line 7, inscription #80, (Archaeological Survey of India 1986) Vol. 3 Parts 1 & 2, p. 188, the recipe for tirukkan .n.āmat.ai in the body of my text) with the meaning of "ten bananas," I see no reason not to read this as four pieces of fruit.39Alsounspecified is whether this is dried ginger powder or fresh ginger.Typically the inscriptions only record the more costly dried spices, as when an early inscription mentions the five kāyam ("pungent" spices), inscription #17, (Archaeological Survey of India 1939) Vol.21, p. 102, lines 4143.Usually, dried ginger is indicated in modern Tamil ¯with the term cukku, which I do not recall ever seeing in a temple inscription.40Forone offering of tirukkan .āmat .ai: 1 marakkāl of rice, 1 nāl ¯i and 1 uri of ghee, and 60 palams of cakkarai (unrefined processed sugar, muscovado type).Inscription #29, (Vijayaraghavacharya and Sastry 1998) Vol. 4, pp.59-60.In the Tirumalai temple, on the western kumudapat .
If one reads only the translation provided below this inscription, one misses the whole point, since it reads "for (the requirements of) the image,. . .(One) kur Archaeological Survey of India 1986, p. 299), Vol. 7, inscription #485, lines 6-7.Please note that both of these inscriptions require rock sugar candy to be given as a separate offering to god, not to be used in a culinary preparation.For Vijayanagara-period uses of rock sugar candy in recipes (pañcatārai), see(Vijayaraghavacharya and Sastry  1998, p. 26), Vol. 4, inscription #12, and elsewhere.90PerV. Vijayaraghavacharya and Sadhu Subrahmanya Sastry's translations in the (Vijayaraghavacharya and Sastry 1998).
However, the (University of Madras 1936) correctly defines car ¯karai as sugar, not jaggery.

Table 5 .
Vijayanagara period data by inscription in chronological order.