Description
Among the oldest sweets of the Bihari kitchen, Anarsa is a slow craft that few halwais still have the patience to master. It begins days before it is ever fried: rice is soaked, dried in the shade, stone-ground into a fine flour, then folded with jaggery and left to rest and gently ferment. That quiet wait is the secret — it gives Anarsa its faint tang, its airy chew, and a depth of flavour no shortcut can imitate.
Each disc is hand-shaped, pressed generously into toasted sesame seeds, and lowered into hot ghee, where it blooms and turns a deep amber. The finished sweet is a study in contrast: shatteringly crisp and sesame-crusted at the edges, soft and honey-soft within. It is the kind of mithai that tastes of a grandmother’s festival kitchen rather than a glass display case.
In Bihar, Anarsa is inseparable from Chhath and Diwali. It is prepared at home in large batches, offered as prasad, and packed into tins for relatives carrying a piece of home back to the city. For many families it is a once-a-year ritual — which is exactly why a good Anarsa is so quietly prized.
Ours is made the unhurried, traditional way in small batches, with no artificial flavours or preservatives — only rice, jaggery, sesame and pure ghee.
How to enjoy
Serve it alongside evening chai, offer it as festive prasad, or gift it during Chhath and Diwali. It pairs beautifully with a few pieces of khurma or thekua for a true Bihari sweets platter.
- Net weight: 400g
- Ingredients: Rice flour, jaggery, sesame seeds, ghee
- Texture: Crisp sesame crust, soft and chewy centre
- Shelf life: 21 days from packing
- Origin: Patna, Bihar
- Storage: Keep in an airtight container, away from moisture
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