Chyavanprash is an ancient formulation and product.[5] Various ancient Indian texts like Mahabharata, Puranas etc., relate that Ashvin twins, who are Vedic gods of medicine, first prepared this formulation for ChyavanaRishi at his Ashram on Dhosi Hill near Narnaul, Haryana, India, hence the name Chyavanprash.[6] The first historically documented formula for chyavanprash appears in the Charaka Samhita, the ancient Ayurvedic treatise[7] from the early first millennium BCE.
Taste and appearance
Chyavanaprash tastes sweet and sour at the same time. The taste is dominated by the flavors of honey, ghee (clarified butter) and amla, and the smell by ghee and other spices including sandalwood, cinnamon and cardamom.
Consumption
Chyavanaprash is usually consumed directly. It can also be consumed along with warm water.
Composition
The recipe of chyavanprash is mentioned in manuscripts written for ayurvedic method of treatment viz. Ashtangahridayam, Charakasamhita, Sangandharasamhita. The number of herbs used may vary from 25 to 80 but the main ingredient of all chyavanprash is amla.[8] Other chief ingredients are:
^Panda, H; Handbook On Ayurvedic Medicines With Formulae, Processes And Their Uses, 2004, p10 ISBN978-81-86623-63-3
^Bates, D, Knowledge and the Scholarly Medical Traditions Cambridge University Press 1995, p325 ISBN978-0-521-49975-0
^Johnston R (2004). The politics of healing : histories of alternative medicine in twentieth-century North America. New York: Routledge. p. 226. ISBN0-415-93338-2.