Of all the varieties one can and must have tasted, this one gets the Bharat 
Ratna hands down.

Pune’s World Famous Poha Chivda 

The poha chiwda available at Laxminarayans Chiwda has the best authentic 
maharashtrian taste. Its a mixture made up of crispy poha,sliced coconut, fried 
peanuts, raisins, cashews, sesame, edible oil asafoetida and spices.

The story of Pune's very popular Laxmi Narayan Chiwda goes back to 1920 when a 
Haryana hawker by the name of Laxminarayan Data fought with the British and 
roamed around the country after that to settle down and resume his business of 
selling chiwda, samoosa, ladoos, ice cream & kachoris. 

From all of this it was the chiwda that struck the peoples heart. The main shop 
is located opposite the Bhawani Mata Mandir at Bhawani Peth. They also have a 
factory at Gultekdi. The brand is so famous that 90% of the food retailers have 
stock of it in their shops. 

The best variety is of course the poha chiwda. But the potato and corn variant 
is equally popular. They use about 200 kg of coconut everyday and product daily 
output close to 3,500 Kg. This should give you an idea about their demand. They 
also ship to other cities within India and abroad. The NRIs have a lot of 
demand for this genuine tasting quality product. To cater to the young crowd 
they have started adding new products to their store like Badam Chivda, Italian 
Farsan and Chinese Bhel. However these are all made with the traditional taste 
and without any artificial colouring. 

Data went as far as Rangoon and Kabul in his search. And everywhere he went, he 
either liked a town or its people. Until he came to Pune in 1935 and fell in 
love with the Bhawani Peth area where he set up a handcart to sell chiwda, 
ladoos and ice-cream... all made by himself. He was a man of principles and 
even then, among the first things Data did was to get a license for his 
hawker’s business and subsequently to register the Laxmi Narayan Chiwda 
trademark. His son who carries on the thriving business today, Babulal 
Laxminarayan Data, still treasures the father’s old handcart license.

The brand name in Pune is famous today and if you are talking chiwda in the 
city, you have to be talking Laxmi Narayan Chiwda. Strangely enough, though 
they sell upto 800 kilos of their popular rice flour chiwda a day (150 kg of 
the cornflour and 100 kg of the potato varieties), the “Laxmi Narayan Best 
Chiwda” shop at Bhawani Peth is the only outlet in Pune for the tasty savoury. 
And it is sold simply enough over the counter. The chiwda travels outside Pune 
to Nashik, Sholapur, Sangli and Satara. And it is exported to the US, the Gulf 
and South Africa too. . Babulal Laxminarayan Data, who began helping his father 
in the business by stirring the chiwda bhattis when he was 14, can make all the 
varieties of chiwda that they sell. He has 12 workers assisting him in the 
home-run business and six family members. After his father expired in 1989, he 
took the chiwda business a step further by designing colourful air-tight 
packets and marketing the chiwda in them.

 The Laxmi Narayan Chiwda is a speciality that nobody else in Pune can make. 
The ingredients they use are rice flour, cornflakes and potato. The rice is a 
special variety grown for the business in Karnataka. It is then sent to Madhya 
Pradesh to be pressed into poha. The secret of the chiwda’s popularity is its 
taste. And Babulal Laxminarayan Data says that his father’s formula was based 
on people’s tastes! The chiwda contains no artificial sweetener like saccharine 
and dulcine and no artificial preservatives like sulphur dioxide and benzoic 
acid. It also has no synthetic colours and has been guaranteed by the Central 
Food Technical Research Institute of Mysore to be free of cholesterol! Babulal 
Laxminarayan Data, who is hands-on in the manufacturing business, and who has 
designed machinery by his own hands to hasten the preparation of the chiwda, 
swears that he can tell the taste of each batch of his chiwda just by looking 
at it!

The factory premises in Bhawani Peth is almost homely in its ambience. Friendly 
workers and staff mix with the Data family in the business of making and 
selling the chiwda. Babulal has one son who is studying hotel and catering 
technology so as to take the business further later on. He shows off the 
sparkling clean interiors and the well-oiled and cleaned machinery, the 
air-tight containers holding the chiwda’s ingredients, the rice flakes, 
groundnuts, edible oil, sugar, dried plums, cashewnuts, coconut, sesame, salt 
and edible spices... all kept in hygienic conditions.

“While making chiwda I eat upto 100 gm every day,” Babulal Laxminarayan Data 
explains. “And I won’t be able to do that if I know my factory is not clean!”

This chiwda is one of the most common item which Punekars give to guests, 
relatives who visit the city. Its a brand which has been built from the heart 
by the Dattas enterprising family and best known for its homely traditional 
taste.

By Jaya Shah, Old Bombay, Visual Storyteller.

Roland.
Toronto.

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