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Patang Launches Across India, Bringing Authentic Regional Indian Flavours Back
Patang Launches Across India, Bringing Authentic Regional Indian Flavours Back

News18

time6 days ago

  • Business
  • News18

Patang Launches Across India, Bringing Authentic Regional Indian Flavours Back

BusinessWire India New Delhi [India], August 11: It begins with smoke. Not the synthetic haze of a factory floor, but the comforting curl rising from a blackened kadhai in Kolhapur. A mother drops puffed rice into simmering oil, adding fiery masala with the flair only years of instinct can give. A state away, in the coastal gullies of Thoothukudi, a boy races on his bicycle–his handlebar sack swinging with the weight of freshly-roasted pepper cashews. No branding. No preservatives. Just flavour, passed hand to decades, this was how India snacked. Until it wasn' Problem: When Our Snacks Forgot Where They Came FromAt some point, taste took a once-glorious world of namkeen, with its pride, place, and peculiarities, became a battleground of shelf life and margin. That Kolhapuri crunch was now neon orange. That Seeval from Madurai? Now drowned in bad oils and lab-tested for longevity, not love.A 2024 FSSAI report quietly confirmed what most grandmothers already suspected: over 60% of India's packaged snacks contain refined palm oil, an industrial fat linked to rising LDL cholesterol and long-term heart risk. And that's before you even reach the preservatives aisle: BHA. TBHQ. that wouldn't dare enter a home kitchen now fill our snack Rediscovery: Where Memory Still LivesPatang was born not in a boardroom, but in a moment of yearning. For real food. For the smell of mustard oil hitting iron. For the feel of snacks that spoke of place, people, and time.'We didn't want to build a brand," says Shoury Gupta, Patang's Founder. 'We wanted to trace a memory. I wanted to eat like I did when I was ten."And so, Patang went searching. To Bengaluru, where a retired teacher still makes Tapioca Chips every Sunday for her neighbours. To Madurai, where Seeval is cut not with blades, but fingers. To Thoothukudi, where cashews are still pan-tossed in pepper and pride. These aren't factories. They're families. Communities. Tiny kitchens with huge Revival: Small Batches, Big HeartToday, Patang launches across India with a quiet rebellion. No preservatives. No colours that could double as a science project. Patang flavours are:a. 100% vegetarian (some even vegan)b. Made in its region of originc. Crafted in 60-90 kilo batchesd. Cooked in healthier oils such as cold-pressed groundnut and mustardEvery pack comes not just with a crunch, but with a tale of someone, somewhere, still doing things the old way.A recent Mintel survey found that 72% of urban Indian millennials now read ingredient labels before buying snacks. They're saying no to Tartrazine, no to 'contains permitted antioxidants," and yes to foods that feel familiar, trustworthy, and true. These consumers aren't just looking for clean ingredients – they're looking for a speaks their language. Not in marketing gloss, but in the dialects of Kolhapuri, Tamil, Bengali, Marathi – the unspoken tongue of snacks that travelled in dabbas, not cartons. Of Calcutta Chanachur wrapped in newspaper. Of Bhadang passed around train compartments. Of rainy Sundays, hot chai, and the soft rustle of old recipes brought back to Invitation: Come Taste a StoryPatang's inaugural collection features eight regional specialties, available nationwide through

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