MANGAO LASSI TV
^ "HSBC Lassi/Washing Machines TV Ad".^ "HSBC Bank : Washing Machine and Lassi".^ "Can This Lassi Ad Really Be True?".^ Anthony Bourdain: No Reservations Collection 2, Episode 5 Final Segment."The Bhang Lassi Is How Hindus Drink Themselves High for Shiva". Cambridge, U.K.: Cambridge University Press. Manak Hindi Ke Shuddh-Prayog-V-3 (in Hindi). ^ The Indian Journal of Medical Research.Wikibooks Cookbook has a recipe/module on In 2013, Kshitij, the annual techno-management fest of IIT Kharagpur, launched a campaign to name the next version of the mobile operating system Android, Lassi. The proprietor offered him three varieties of bhang lassi: normally strong super duper strong and "full power, 24 hours, no toilet, no shower". On his No Reservations television program, celebrity chef Anthony Bourdain visited a "government authorised" bhang shop in Jaisalmer Fort, Rajasthan. The owner tells him he is able to "make ten times as much lassi as I used to!"
On arriving, the representative investigates a lassi parlor, where he is warmly welcomed, and finds several washing machines being used to mix it. Cultural references Ī 2008 print and television ad campaign for HSBC, written by Jeffree Benet of JWT Hong Kong, tells a tale of a Polish washing machine manufacturer's representative sent to India to discover why their sales are so high there. Uttar Pradesh is known to have licensed bhang shops, and in many places, one can buy bhang products and drink bhang lassis. It is legal in many parts of India and mainly sold during Holi, when pakoras containing bhang are also sometimes eaten. The resulting beverage is known as salted lassi.īhang lassi is a cannabis-infused drink that contains bhang, a liquid derivative of cannabis, which has effects similar to other eaten forms of cannabis. It is prepared by blending dahi (yogurt) with water with added salt. The traditional namkeen (or salty) form of lassi is more common in the Indian subcontinent. Makkhaniya lassi is simply lassi with lumps of butter in it. Saffron lassis, which are particularly rich, are a specialty of Rajasthan and Gujarat in India and Sindh province of Pakistan. Sweet lassi is a form of lassi flavoured with sugar, rosewater or lemon, strawberry or other fruit juices.
Benaras-ki-lassi, a style of lassi Sweet lassi