New Delhi: As the January settles into the gentle warmth and the harvest season begins to paint the Southern skies golden, it marks the arrival of Pongal in various regions, which means a renewed sense of gratitude, abundance and cultural nostalgia along with feasting, Across Tamil Nadu and other parts of South India, homes awaken with crips scent of buring incence, turmeric-tied pots and kolams drawns at dawn, and slow simmering of rice and mmilk in clay pots as a cultural rituals.
Along with these rituals, a feast with the community is also one of the important steps. Here is our curated guide of the foods and recipes you need to prepare this Pongal for the ultimate celebrations and attract purity, prosperity and love with each bite.
No Pongal celebration is complete without Sakkarai Pongal, a decadent combination of freshly harvested rice, moong dal, jaggery and ghee.
Key ingredients: Raw rice, moong dal, jaggery, ghee, cashew nuts, raisins, cardamom, edible camphor (optional).
Ven Pongal is the festival’s comforting savoury counterpart—creamy, peppery, and luxuriously tempered with ghee.
While not limited to the Pongal menu, this fragrant green rice makes a refreshing addition to the four-day celebrations. Fresh coriander, tender coconut, green chillies and a gentle tempering offer a herbaceous counterpoint to the richer Pongal dishes. It’s light, quick to prepare and very 2026-friendly for modern palates seeking balance.
Made specifically for Thai Pongal, this kuzhambu combines seven or more seasonal vegetables like pumpkin, yams, sweet potato, broad beans and raw banana. The gravy is mildly spiced, aromatic, and symbolic of the festival’s spirit of abundance.
Often made in the Srirangam temple, Akkaravadisal is a richer cousin of Sakkarai Pongal—slow-cooked rice and dal in milk, sweetened generously with jaggery and drenched in ghee. It’s luxurious, divine and a true celebration dish.
Made specifically for Thai Pongal, this kuzhambu combines seven or more seasonal vegetables like pumpkin, yams, sweet potato, broad beans and raw banana. The gravy is mildly spiced, aromatic, and symbolic of the festival’s spirit of abundance.
Often made in the Srirangam temple, Akkaravadisal is a richer cousin of Sakkarai Pongal—slow-cooked rice and dal in milk, sweetened generously with jaggery and drenched in ghee. It’s luxurious, divine and a true celebration dish.