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Tirupati Temple Laddu Turns 300, Here’s a Little History

The most sought after ‘prasad’ after prayers to Lord Venkateswara, enters its 300th year. 

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The Tirupati laddu, given away as prasad at the hill shrine of Lord Venkateswara at Tirupati, has entered its 300th year. Temple officials say the sacred offering was introduced on August 2, 1715.

No pilgrimage to the world’s richest Hindu temple is complete without the laddu, made from flour, sugar, ghee, oil, cardamom and dry fruits. The mouth-watering sweet is the most sought after prasad after prayers to Lord Venkateswara.

Although the temple offers various types of ‘prasad’, the laddu is most popular among pilgrims. According to the Tirumala Tirupati Devasthanam (TTD), which manages the affairs of the hill shrine, about ninety million laddus were given away to pilgrims in 2014.

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Temple’s Source of Income: Laddu

The temple authorities issue laddu token to the pilgrims after collecting the money. The sweet is also made in Delhi and some state capitals on special occasions.

The authorities sell the prasad round the clock during Brahmotsavam.

The sale of prasad is a major source of income for the temple, which had a budget of Rs.2,401 crore for fiscal 2014-15.

The normal price of a 300 gram laddu is Rs.25. The TTD says that use of quality ingredients makes it costly, but it sells the laddu at a highly subsidised rate. As a privilege to pilgrims, two laddus are issued at a further subsidized rate of Rs.10 each.

TTD had projected an income of Rs.190 crore from prasad sale, the same as the income expected from sale of human hair of pilgrims who tonsure their heads.

Last year, about 1.8 million laddus were sold in the first seven days of Brahmotsavam, breaking all previous records.

The authorities make elaborate arrangements to ensure uninterrupted supply of laddus to the pilgrims. They have the capacity to produce 300,000 laddus a day but they keep sufficient stocks during Brahmotsavam.

Employment for Almost 1000 People

Nearly 620 people, including 270 cooks, work in the laddu and other prasad making units. The TTD took up modernisation of the temple kitchen last year with the installation of two escalator belts for laddus and boondi crates.

TTD Joint Executive Officer K.S. Sreenivasa Raju said that the conveyor systems have the capacity to transfer up to 800,000 laddus every day.

The Office of the Registrar of Patents, Trademarks and Geographical Indications in 2014 awarded the Geographical Indication (GI) status to the Tirupati laddu.

TTD officials said they had to enforce GI rights as some small-time miscreants as well as large known sweet outlets have been selling laddus with names similar to Tirupati laddu.

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