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​10 Temples in India that offer the most delicious prasad

etimes.in | Last updated on - Sep 15, 2025, 10:19 IST
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1/11

10 Temples of India and their delicious prasad

In India, faith is never offered alone. It comes with flowers, with incense, with chants rising in rhythm and at the end of it all, with food. Prasad isn’t just something sweet pressed into your palm; it’s the flavour of devotion itself. The same laddoo or kheer you might eat at home tastes different in a temple courtyard, with bells still echoing and incense still hanging in the air. It carries both the blessing and the story of the place. Here are ten temples where the prasad is as unforgettable as the darshan.

2/11

Jagannath Temple, Puri - Mahaprasad

Earthen pots tower one over the other, rice and dal bubbling away on slow wood fires, and somehow, the magic is that the pot at the very top always finishes cooking first. What comes out is Mahaprasad that tastes smoky and grounded, food touched by earth and fire - prepared not for one but for thousands to sit together and share.

3/11

Tirumala Venkateswara Temple, Tirupati - Laddoo

Golden, heavy with ghee and cashews, the Tirupati Laddoo is perhaps India’s most famous prasad. Each bite feels both sacred and celebratory, tying faith to festivity in the simplest way. Sweet proof of a pilgrimage completed, it carries the weight of both tradition and indulgence.

4/11

Shirdi Sai Baba Temple, Shirdi - Khichdi

A simple bowl of rice and lentils softened with ghee and cumin, the prasad at Shirdi mirrors Sai Baba’s life of humility. Shared among devotees sitting side by side, it carries a quiet sense of equality and grace. Eaten in the temple courtyard - it feels nourishing and even healing.

5/11

Vaishno Devi Temple, Jammu - Dry Fruits and Halwa

The climb is steep, the prasad sustaining. A handful of dry fruits pressed into your palm feels less like food and more like encouragement to keep going. And on special days, a serving of ghee-soaked halwa feels sweet enough to make you forget the ache in your legs.

6/11

Siddhivinayak Temple, Mumbai - Modak

Steamed modaks, their soft rice-flour shells giving way to a warm coconut–jaggery heart, dissolve on the tongue like a blessing. Believed to be Ganesha’s dearest sweet, they’re offered with devotion at his most cherished shrine.

7/11

Golden Temple, Amritsar - Kada Prasad

Nutty, warm, and glistening with ghee, kada prasad at the Golden Temple is ladled out from a single vessel to everyone alike. Each bite carries not just sweetness, but the quiet grace of equality and the strength of shared community.

8/11

Kalighat Temple, Kolkata - Khichuri and Labra

Rice and lentils meet a handful of vegetables, slow-cooked with mustard oil and turmeric - the taste of everyday Bengali comfort. But at Kalighat, this simple home-style dish takes on divinity, served as bhog to the goddess with reverence.

9/11

Annapurna Temple, Varanasi - Kheer

The goddess of food is honoured with sweetness. A pot of kheer, simmered until creamy, perfumed with cardamom and scattered with nuts, feels like abundance itself - it is a simple offering that carries both love and devotion.

10/11

Meenakshi Temple, Madurai - Sakkarai Pongal

Golden with jaggery, scented with cardamom, and heavy with ghee, sakkarai pongal at Meenakshi Temple tastes like a festival in every spoonful. It carries the warmth of Tamil Nadu’s harvest - a sweetness meant for both god and devotee.

11/11

Kukke Subramanya Temple, Karnataka - Ash Gourd Majjige Huli

In this quiet, fragrant temple kitchen, fresh ash gourd gently simmers away in spiced buttermilk, slowly and beautifully transforming into something almost sacred, simple, and timeless. Tangy, cooling, deeply calming, and always paired with steaming hot, fluffy rice, it’s a humble, nourishing dish that somehow lingers warmly in memory, carrying whispers of devotion, long after the meal.

Top Comment
V
Vishwa
260 days ago
How did it miss Dharmasthala?
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