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”Though just 18 or 19 at the time, I had no doubt that the struggle for statehood was a movement for Uttarakhand’s separate identity and its traditional foods and dishes were an integral part of it,” Semwal told PTI in an interview. When Uttarakhand was created in 2000, Semwal’s strong conviction about the delicious taste and high nutritional properties of traditional hill food set him on the mission to popularise a typical Uttarakhandi ‘thali’ made of delicacies of the mountains named ”Garh Bhoj”. The purpose was two-fold — to keep the state’s culture alive by helping people develop a taste for traditional Uttarakhandi food and give a push to farming of local crops, especially millet-based produce by creating a market for them. Twenty-three years on, Semwal has a sense of achievement as kodo, jhangora, manduwa and dishes made out of these crops, which grow aplenty in the state, are being served to students in government schools across the state at least once a week as part of the mid-day meal.
‘Garh Bhoj’ stalls dealing in traditional food items like ”mandue ka halwa” ”jhangore ki kheer”, ”swale ki puri”, ”gahat ka fanu”, ”gahat ki patungi” and ”gahat ki roti” can now be seen in all cultural fairs of Uttarakhand, he said. The state government has issued orders to buy 9,600 metric tonnes of Mandua to supply them to schools. A Minimum Support Price (MSP) of over Rs 3,500 per quintal for mandua has also been announced. Semwal sees the Centre’s decision to celebrate 2023-24 as millet year and the subsequent approval recently by the state cabinet to Uttarakhand’s Millet Mission as a culmination of the efforts made collectively by activists like him and the successive governments towards promotion of local cuisine and agricultural produce. The state government’s millet mission will facilitate monthly distribution of 1 Kg of millet to each Antyodaya family through the Public Distribution System. ”Such a push by the government will create a bigger market for millet and promote its cultivation by our farmers besides strengthening rural economy and putting brakes on continued migration from the hill villages,” Semwal said. Uttarakhand Police has also made it compulsory for its 365 canteens in the state to serve Garh Bhoj consisting of delicacies typical of the state at least once a week to its personnel, he said. Garh Bhoj has also been put on the menus of hospitals.
The Uttarakhand Bhawan in Mumbai also serves Garh Bhoj items twice a week, he said. ”Traditional foods and dishes of Uttarakhand apart from being tasty are high on nutrition and help build immunity. It was one of the reasons why their consumption during the Covid pandemic increased,” Semwal said. ”Mandua and jhangora are good for diabetes , Gahat or Kulthi soup for kidney stones and Chaulai Mujli for first stage cancer,” Semwal said underscoring the medicinal properties of traditional crops of Uttarakhand and dishes made out of them. Similarly, ”Jhangore ki kheer” is good for the liver and prescribed as a guaranteed treatment of jaundice, he said. The successive state governments have been extremely supportive towards Semwal’s campaign. Former chief minister Harish Rawat had agreed in principle to grant the status of state food to Garh Bhoj in 2015, he said.
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He said his campaign will also gain much strength from the budgetary thrust to millet promotion and the state cabinet’s approval to the Millet Mission. They will encourage more and more people in the hills of Uttarakhand to take to farming and strengthen their economy, he said.