Unlike Eid, the Navratri are a time of avoidance of certain foods rather than complete abstinence and while there is an emphasis on purification and cleansing, food is still at the heart of the celebrations. Home cooks and restaurant chefs deploy considerable creativity to devise inventive ‘vrat ka khana’, and there is a wide range of new dishes and snacks to explore. It is a time when, traditionally, stocks of wheat flour are running low just before the harvest, and are replaced by those made from dried singhara, buckwheat, millet and amaranth, resulting in a range of unusual breads. Halwa is made from sweet potato and lauki instead of semolina and tapioca, which I’d last seen in school dinners, is used in a hundred different ways, including in pakoras, fritters and khichdi. I was also delighted to discover that deep-fried snacks, sticky sweets, ghee and milk are still very much on the Navratri menu. Definitely my kind of fast.