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Vol I · A2 Greek Yoghurt
Wild honey, never warmed. Always raw.
A2 yoghurt, slow-roasted Kashmiri almonds, and unprocessed wild raw honey - added cold so its enzymes survive. Ayurvedic texts insist honey should never be heated. We didn’t heat it.
A2 yoghurt, slow-roasted Kashmiri almonds, and unprocessed wild raw honey - added cold so its enzymes survive the journey to the spoon.
Approximate values per 100g. Boilerplate - to be replaced with lab figures once finalised.
Sourcing
Milk from a small herd of indigenous Gir and Sahiwal cows on a single farm two hours outside Bengaluru. They eat what cows should eat - green pasture, dry fodder, the occasional jaggery treat. Picked up twice a week in steel cans and cultured the same evening. Honey from a beekeeper co-operative in the Western Ghats - single-floral, never blended, never warmed above ambient. Almonds: kagzi badam from Kashmir, hand-shelled.
Packaging
Glass jars only - re-usable, returnable, and absurdly satisfying to hand-wash. Every batch ships with a paper-and-twine seal and a return label for sending the empties back. Plastic-free, except for the lid liner (we’re working on it).
Sustainable agriculture
We work directly with the dairy on rotational grazing, native-grass restoration, and zero growth-hormone protocols. Manure composts back into pasture; antibiotics are reserved for genuine illness, never prophylactic. Slower and more expensive - and you can taste it in every spoon. Wild honey is harvested only after the bees have what they need; the co-op pays its harvesters per litre, not per kilo, which keeps the practice patient.
The 18-hour way (rooted in Ayurveda)
An important Ayurvedic note: honey should never be cooked, heated, or mixed with hot food - classical texts treat heated honey as ama-forming (toxic to digestion). Ours is added unheated and at room temperature, the way the Charaka Samhita prescribes.
Cleaner than anything in the supermarket aisle. The texture is unreal - dense and creamy in the best way.
Finally a yoghurt that doesn’t taste like a science experiment. Worth every paisa.
Glass jars are a chef’s kiss. The yoghurt is even better than the packaging suggests.
Showed up cold, sealed, and on time. Has become a weekly habit in our home.