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AYURVEDA & YOGA PRODUCTS
Every plant is a medicine, the question is when to use it.
ESSENCE OF AYURVEDA
Dr.George Eassey story to Ayurveda.
What is Ayurveda? How is this ancient medical system connected with yoga, meditation, healthy food, relaxation in nature and modern life style?
Ayurveda trails are dedicated to everyone, who is searching answers to these questions. It does not want to be anything else, but art expression of healthy life style inspired by Indian ancient healing traditions, creating harmony with the dynamics of contemporary life.
Two Slovak chefs scout for recipes from Kerala to recreate at Moshi Moshi, their restaurant in Bratislava.
Published in India, November 22, 2013: THE HINDU – “On a common plate”
Jan Angus and Zuzana Zwiebel Magdova from Slovakia were friends as school children, but life took them down different paths. Zuzana came to Manipal for a degree in geopolitics, stayed on to travel South Asia, and finally settled in Kochi. Jan studied econometrics, dabbled in business, and eventually turned chef with his sushi restaurant in Bratislava, Slovakia - Moshi Moshi. Several years later, they got in touch again - this time for Jan to learn Kerala’s unique cuisine and present it back in Slovakia, as well as for him, and his colleague Martin Sestak, to present Slovak staples in Kochi.
Jan and Martin arrived in India on November 6, and were whisked away to Gokarna, followed by short stays in Alappuzha, Marari and Fort Kochi over the last three weeks. “At each spot, they interacted with chefs at different hotel properties who taught them the specifics of Malayali cooking, with a focus on ayurvedic methods and specialities,” says Zuzana, who organised their entire journey through her travel portal Ayurveda Trails in partnership with CGH Earth Hotels. “There’s quite a misconception in Slovakia of India being absolute chaos, but I’ve found that there’s an order to the madness,” says Jan.
His biggest surprise though, has been the similarities he has discovered between Slovak and Indian cooking styles. “We share the same principles of using local vegetables, quick preparations and simple recipes! But few customs differ — for instance, while you roast the masalas in oil at the start of the dish, we add the spices right at the end.”
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Moreover, while Slovak cuisine has a wide variety of soups to warm them up in cold winters, Jan saysdal is quite similar to a traditional Slovak preparation. His favourite Indian dish so far, has been the street-side masala dosa, while Martin steers toward deep-fried snacks such as aloo bonda and mulagu bhaji.
Recreating their experience for a Slovak audience is going to be an innovative and interesting experience says the duo. While the two countries are miles apart, Jan says Kerala food embodies a movement that is slowly gaining traction in Slovakia - that of going back to one’s roots, and cooking with regional produce.
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“At Moshi Moshi, we follow chef Jamie Oliver’s philosophy of the Food Revolution, which encourages people to move away from fast food, cook from their organic gardens and develop healthy eating habits,” says Jan. To incorporate this ideology the restaurant launched a “health food” menu alongside the sushis, two years ago. “The ayurveda-based dishes will be an extension of this menu,” says Martin.
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Interactions with local chefs have taught them the medicinal and therapeutic properties of various ingredients. “I’ve learnt how to use food correctly; what effect each spice has on the body and how to blend them correctly. India has given me a different point of view,” says Jan. For instance, Jan explains that he has had arguments with several doctors of Western medicine on the foods that could potentially reduce the body’s acidity (pH values), a concept which ayurveda practitioners here have affirmed.
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Jan cautions though, “We certainly can’t cook these dishes in Slovakia exactly like the typical Kerala way. But Indian stores there do provide us the same spices, and I can replace the unavailable Malayali vegetables with ours. The hope is to generate an interest in this food, strong enough to direct people back to India to taste it for themselves”.
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Before they leave Jan and Martin will serve up for Kochi, at Cafe Papaya this Sunday, a sample of their trademark recipes. “Our cuisine uses potato and dumplings a lot. So we will be making salty dumplings with cabbage, as well as dumplings with plum jam, made by my mother, and poppy seeds from Slovakia.” Also on the cards are potato pancakes, pumpkin soup and several salads, spreads, watermelon gazpacho and Spanish omelettes. Join the Moshi Moshi chefs at Cafe Papaya on November 24 for “Food Revolution at Cafe Papaya” from 5 p.m. to 10 p.m.
Dedicated to everyone, who is searching answers to these questions: What is ayurveda? How is this ancient medical system connected with yoga, meditation, healthy food, relaxation in nature and modern life style?
Traveling from EU to India for Ayurveda
Foreign nationals as individual tourist will be able to travel to India from 15 November 2021. India has created air bubble arrangement for EU (Schengen area) with Germany, France and Netherland. Let us help you to find a way back to India.
At some point, everyone must encounter life, what we in India call ‘ayus’. My first experience with real life came from meeting with various spiritual teachers. After many years, I found out that the best piece of wisdom I had learnt was; “Do not hurt yourself…”
Narendranath is the guardian of a dying heritage. At his tiny shop in Fort Cochin, shrunken in the course of time, he reigns as the devoted practitioner of an age-old system of medicine, a rich and valuable legacy left with him by his forefathers.
Diwali is the festival of lights, it spiritually signifies the victory of light over darkness, good over evil, knowledge over ignorance, and hope over despair. It is is celebrated by Hindus, Jains, and Sikhs and some Buddhists.
Cliff View Ayurveda Retreat is built in the Bauhaus style, which aims to reunite fine art and functional design, creating practical objects with the soul of artworks. The resort embrace the philosophy of traditional Ayurveda in modern style.
Fishermen Rituals In Kerala I.
Fisherfolk in Kerala come from three different religious groups, Hindus, Muslims and Christians. Each of the groups has its own social organisation and mostly occupies separate places in a typical fishing village, although they do share some commonalties.
From the interconnected backwaters, the forests of Wayanad, the beaches of Alleppey, the temples of Thrissur, and the streets of Kochi, Kerala is right the place with the right traditions to embody what we’ve come to know as Human by Nature.
01: Ayurveda in Travancore Kingdom
If you expect stories which starts: Once upon a time, there was a princess... stop reading. Her Highness Princess Gouri Parvathi Bayi of the Travancore Royal Family will introduce us very modern and open minded view on today's Kerala society and ayurveda.
Malayalam Actresses & Raja Ravi Varma's Paintings
In a befitting tribute to one of India’s greatest painters, Raja Ravi Varma, a Chennai-based photographer G. Venket Ram has recreated 12 of Varma’s iconic paintings into photographs, in line with the theme of celebrating the spirit of Indian Womanhood.
NAVARATRI
Festival of Nine Goddesses
Navaratri is a nine night festival that honors the Mother Goddess in all her manifestations. The worship, accompanied by fasting, takes place in the mornings. Evenings are for feasting and dancing. Each day has a different ritual associated with it.
A journey in to an ancient world of India, divided in 10 short-films. It was not only a journey to India but more a journey in to another world. For some reason I was literally falling in to an unknown world touched by all that beautiful things going on in this world.
Deities associated with sacred forests transformed and evolved according to different historical eras. It is believed that the main original forest deity was Mezguasche (Forest-lady). Mezguasche was responsible for the forest and fauna.
The human spirit has the extraordinary capacity to find positivity during hardships. Some have found it in reading, others in cooking or gardening. Dear Future Me, is a virtual time capsule on social media that lets us look back and remember the good.
Narendranath is the guardian of a dying heritage. At his tiny shop in Fort Cochin, shrunken in the course of time, he reigns as the devoted practitioner of an age-old system of medicine, a rich and valuable legacy left with him by his forefathers.
RISHIKESH: Breath Of Himalayas
Rishikesh, a town in the foothills of the himalayas. It's a pilgrimage place since thousands of years, where the yogi's gather before they continue their journey in to the mountains on their path to the ultimate liberation.
02: Circassian’s Belief System
Since time immemorial, the Circassian native tribes did not follow a script or a holy book, nor erected praying temples, but rather, they have formed an unwritten philosophy based on their collective outlook on life, and worshiped in the arms of nature.
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