Muniyandi Swami temple in Vadakkampatti, Madurai, Tamil Nadu, features a distinctive prasad during its annual festival—the biryani. This tradition draws food enthusiasts from across Tamil Nadu to Madurai during the Muniyandi festival, where they receive the flavorful biryani for free.
According to ANI, Devotees throng the annual festival at Muniyandi Swami's Temple, where biryani is served as prasadam. Locals believe that biryani is the favourite food of the deity, Lord Muniyandi.
Why Biryani?
The decades-old temple festival began when a Vadakampatti resident found success in the hotel business in 1973. To express gratitude for his success, he organised a grand feast dedicated to the deity. Over time, the villagers started many hotel entrepreneurship ventures, naming their establishments after the local deity, Muniyandi, and ensuring the inclusion of non-vegetarian offerings. Currently, there are more than 500 Muniyandi hotels successfully run across South India.
During the festival, hoteliers from the community pool funds to organize the event symbolizing their gratitude for the success of their businesses. The highlight of the celebration is the presentation of delectable mutton biryani as an offering to the deity. Each year, the community contributes to cooking over a tonne of biryani, using more than 1000 kg of rice and 500 kg of mutton.
Media reports suggest that this festival serves as a means for the community to give back to both society and the deity.
In Tamil Nadu, a ritual known as 'keda vettu,' which literally translates to the cutting of a goat, is also conducted in temples to present it as an offering to the god.