Patravali
Patravali or Pattal or Vistaraku or Vistar or Khali is an Indian eating plate or trencher made with broad dried leaves. It is mainly made from Sal leaves. It is also made from Banyan tree leaves. It is made in circular shape, by stitching 6 to 8 sal leaves with tiny wooden sticks.[1] It is popular during traditional meals, festivals and in temples.[2] It is a cottage industry in India where women work on weaving them at home in spare time.
History
It was used extensively in the ancient times by Hindu sages for its purity. It was a custom to serve food in a patravali for guest meal or celebrations, temple prasadam.
The plate
Patravali is made from wildly grown plants like sal tree, fodder, pala tree, jack fruit etc.
Regions
The plates are popular in villages in arid region in India like parts of Gujarat, Andhra Pradesh, Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtra, Jharkhand, Odisha, Chhattisgarh, madhya pradesh, West Bengal, Karnataka, Telangana, Tamil Nadu etc.[3] The Flame of the forest Butea monosperma=Modhuga in Telugu amongst others provide leaves that are used either with many pieced together or singly (only in case of a banana leaf) to make a leaf-plate for serving a meal.[4]
Custom
In olden days, until a century ago, a would-be son-in-law was tested on his dexterity in making a patravali plate and bowl (for serving more liquid parts of the meal such as daal or stew) before being declared acceptable by the soon to be father-in-law.
Modern day
The plate is made by machines with silver foil cover at the bottom and with border for better form. And the traditional patravali is back because of its environment-friendly nature and biodegradability.
German company Leaf Republic sells commercially made patravali. [5] [6]
See also
- Banana Leaf
References
- Traditional 'pattal' loses out to convenient plastic - Times Of India
- When dinner comes on nature's plate
- The Telegraph - Calcutta : Jharkhand
- Sal-leaf dishes make way for plastic ones - Times Of India
- "Leaf Republic Are A German Company Making Biodegradable Plates & Tableware Entirely From Leaves". TruthTheory. 14 April 2018. Retrieved 18 December 2019.
- "German Company Leverages Indian Wisdom Of Leaf Plates, Produces Tableware Made Of Leaves". indiatimes.com. 3 January 2017. Retrieved 18 December 2019.