Friday, August 23, 2019

Learn To Cook Easy Recipes For Prasad And Sweet For Lord Krishna


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Hey Everyone!




Learn 



Easy To Cook Recipes 




For Prasad and Sweet



For Lord Krishna 

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All over India Janmashatami is celebrated to commemorate the birth of Lord Krishna, who is believed to be the eighth avatar of Lord Vishnu. According to calendar, the festival is said to be celebrated on the eighth day of the Krishna Paksha. Lord Krishna is known to be a die-hard fan of sweets. Prasad and Sweets made on Janmashatami in most of the Indian houses.

Sukhae (Dry) Attae Ki Panjiri Prasad 


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Ingredients for Panjiri


  • Wheat flour - 150 grams (1 cup)
  • Ghee - 50 grams (1/4 cup)
  • Boora (ground sugar) - 100 grams (half a cup)
  • Makhane - 10 - 12
  • Cardamom - 2 (peel and grind)

Method - How to make Panjiri


Sieve the flour in a vessel and remove it. 

Put the pan-fried pan on the gas flame and heat the ghee in the pan, put the flour in the hot ghee and fry it by stirring it on the medium gas flame, turn off the gas flame when the flour starts smelling and the color turns brown. . 

Allow the roasted flour to cool. 

Cut a Makhana into 4-5 pieces, put 2 small spoons of ghee in a small pan and heat it, put the chopped Makhane in hot ghee and fry it while stirring with a spoon. Peel cardamom and make powder. 


Mix roasted Makhane, Bura, Cardamom powder in flour, ah this delicious panjiri is ready. You eat these now and fill the remaining in an air tight container, whenever you feel like, take out the registries from the container and eat it, the registries will be good even for 2 months.



Charnamrit 



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Ingredients for Charnamrit


  • Fresh curd - 400 grams (2 cups)
  • Cold milk - 100 grams (half cup)
  • Sugar - 50 grams (1/4 cup)
  • Honey - 1 tbsp
  • Makhane - 10 - 12
  • Tulsi leaves - 8-10

Method - How to make Charnamrit


Take out the curd in a big pot. 


Add milk, sugar and honey to the curd and stir with a spoon. 


Cut the makhane into 4 pieces and mix it in this mixture, add finely chopped basil leaves as well, 
take it, your Charnamrit is ready

Besan burfi 


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Besan Ki Burfi - Indian sweet with Bengal gram -Chickpea flour

Besan burfi recipe is a traditional Indian sweet or dessert. Though the ingredients are similar to besan laddo, the taste, consistency, shape is different as the cooking process is different.

Both besan burfi and besan laddoos are easy to make but besan barfi takes less time to make as there is no time needed to make the balls as with ladoos.
The shelf life of besan barfi is long and so it is a preferred sweet during the festivals such as diwali and at parties or at any other time when you need to make a lot of dishes.
You can make besan barfi a few days in advance and serve it later.

How to make besan burfi - Gram flour barfi

Ingredients for besan burfi

Main ingredients for besan barfi
Besan (chickpea flour)
Sugar
  • 1 cups besan(bengal gram flour)
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1/2 cup water
  • 3/4 cup ghee
  • dry fruits such as kaju, badam(Almonds/ cashew nut ) pieces - to decorate
  • Ilaichi (Cardamom) powder - 1/2 tsp
Method to make besan barfi
Grease a plate with a little ghee. Keep aside
Heat a thick-bottomed pan. Add ghee and besan. 
Roast the besan in ghee on low flame for about 10-15 minutes or until the raw smell goes and you start getting a good aroma. The color of the mixture will change to very light brown. Do not let it get dark brown, it will taste bitter.
In another pan, add sugar and water. Bring to a boil and cook for 5-8 minutes or until the syrup reaches two threads consistency. 
Add this sugar syrup to the roasted besan and ghee and mix well. 
Add cardamom powder. Mix well. 
If you wish, you may add half the cashew almond pieces to this mix now.
Pour this mixture into a greased tray. garnish with almond and cashew nut pieces. 
Let cool completely for 1-2 hours or longer if necessary. 
Remove the pieces carefully and Store in an airtight container.
Tips :
Vegans(those who do not want to use ghee, a dairy product) can use pure edible coconut oil for roasting and greasing the plate. The taste and flavor will change accordingly.
Take care while roasting the flour. The flame should be low. Roasting on high flame will give color fast but it will still taste raw. It may also taste bitter.

Have a great Janmashatmi    celebration and enjoy making    these easy and Delicious Recipes
  
Hope you enjoyed reading and    Like these Recipes;)

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“Hope You Like And Try These Recipes?Please Share your thoughts in the comments below as I learn just as much from you as you do from me! 


Bye for Know,





Sameer




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Should I Buy My Own House Or Rent One ? This Economist’s Perspective Will Come As A Big Relief


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Hey Everyone!


Should I Buy My Own House


Or Rent  One ? 


This Economist’s Perspective Will 

 

Come As A Big Relief




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Dear Emily,
I’m 30 years old, and my husband and I are thinking about buying a house. He’s all for it, but frankly, I’m terrified of the idea of taking on a mortgage. I know a number of people who lost their homes during the financial crisis. The housing market seems like it isn’t the sure thing everyone said it was. And we have significant student loan debt as it is. So my question is—is homeownership really all it’s cracked up to be? And what should young people do when they’re already swimming in debt as is?
Dear Renter:
I distinctly remember the time in 2006 when a relative told me I should “definitely” buy a house because “the housing market always goes up.”  This was obviously not good advice, though it certainly reflects prevailing wisdom at the time. And I can see why in the wake of the housing crisis, you’d fear that the housing market always goes down. Which is also not true.

There is one unambiguous argument in favor of buying a house: Sometimes it is hard to rent the house you want. In most places, if you want to live in a single-family detached house, there are not many rental options, certainly not long-term ones. So you may find yourself coming up short on good rentals, and buying may be the only way to get what you want.
However, let’s assume that you are happily renting someplace and your only motivation to buy is financial. Is it cheaper to rent or buy? In equilibrium, the answer is: The price to rent or buy should be about the same. Why is that?
Imagine that rents were so high that you could buy a place and rent it out and still have loads of money left over—even after paying the mortgage, maintenance, and everything else. If that happens, the market will adjust. People will start coming in, buying properties, and renting them out. But as apartment-hunters have more options to choose from, rental prices will fall. And they’ll fall to the point where the rental price just about covers the cost of owning.
Alternatively, if rents were so low that owners would lose money renting houses, they’d stop doing it. But as the number of available rentals goes down, the prices will go up. And they’ll go up to the point where the rental price will cover the cost of owning.
This is an example of what economists call “equilibrium” and it means that ultimately, it will likely cost you about the same to rent or to buy.
You can also try to do this calculation directly. Think about what it costs you to rent. Then think about what it would cost to buy the same quality house. Take into account the mortgage, of course, but also insurance, maintenance, foregone interest on the down payment, and the value of your time spent fixing things that the landlord would fix in a rental. I suspect you’ll find that the costs are about the same.
Given this reality, the only other strong argument for buying a house is the view that the “housing market always goes up,” so when you sell, you’ll make money. But you don’t have to go very far back in history to see that isn’t true, so it’s probably not a great argument. The housing market also doesn’t always go down, so that’s not a great argument, either.

As to your debt question: Student debt may limit your ability to get a mortgage, but it shouldn’t keep you from buying a house if you want to. Your housing debt is collateralized by your house, so unless the value of your house goes down so much that you’re underwater on your mortgage, it’s not debt in the same sense that your student debt is.
A final note: Time horizon matters. There are a lot of fixed costs with buying a house: you pay the realtor, closing costs, etc. If you are going to own a house for 30 years, these do not matter much. But if you’re planning to sell in a few years, they significantly raise the effective buying price. And if you rent, so much the easier to flee the in a coming war with Australia.

Hope you enjoyed reading this;)



“What Do You Think?Do you agree or Disagree or Have any other ideas?Please Share your thoughts in the comments below as I learn just as much from you as you do from me! 

Bye for Know,


Sameer



There’s more to that
If you’re looking for more,Please subscribe to my blog by clicking on Subscribe in a reader the icon or Subscribe via Email by submitting your email id on the side bar ;)

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