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🟢 VEGETARIAN GI TAGGED FEATURED

Gaya ka Tilkut

A GI-tagged artisanal sesame-jaggery sweet from Gaya — handcrafted by master confectioners using a centuries-old manual pounding technique into perfectly smooth, melt-in-the-mouth discs.

2–3 hours of continuous pounding (artisan process)
50–100g per serving (2–3 pieces)
₹200–₹400 per kg; ₹50–₹100 for small gift boxes
Makar Sankranti (January). Also sold all year in Gaya city shops.
Gaya district, Bihar (GI tagged). Also made in Rajgir. Most famous around Makar Sankranti season.

Culinary Profile

Tilkut is a masterpiece of Indian confectionery artisanship, originating from Gaya district of Bihar. Made from just two ingredients — white sesame seeds (til) and jaggery or sugar — its creation is an exercise in technique and tradition. The sesame seeds are roasted to a precise golden color, then combined with freshly made jaggery or sugar syrup that has been boiled to an exact temperature. This hot mixture is then manually beaten and folded thousands of times with wooden hammers on stone slabs by skilled artisans (tilkut makers) for 2–3 hours. This repetitive pounding aerates the mixture and breaks down the seeds into a smooth, homogeneous, non-grainy texture. The result is a pale, smooth disc or bar with a distinctive crumble that seems to dissolve on the tongue. Gaya Tilkut received the prestigious GI tag, cementing its status as a unique product of Bihar's cultural heritage.

How It's Made — Cooking Method

Sesame seeds are dry-roasted until golden in a thick-bottomed pan. Jaggery or sugar is melted with water to make a hard-ball stage syrup (145–150°C on a candy thermometer). Roasted sesame is mixed into the hot syrup. The hot mixture is poured onto oiled stone slabs and immediately beaten and folded repeatedly with wooden mallets by two artisans working in tandem. This pounding continues for 2–3 hours until the mixture becomes completely smooth, homogeneous, and light-colored. While still pliable, it is shaped into flat discs, rectangles, or rolls and left to cool and harden.

How It's Served

Served as a festival sweet on Makar Sankranti. Sold in boxes or paper wrappers. Given as gifts. Sometimes offered at Vishnupad Temple in Gaya as prasad.

Regional Variants

Jaggery Tilkut (traditional dark amber, stronger flavor), Sugar Tilkut (white, milder, more delicate), Rajgir Tilkut (similar but slightly different texture), Soft Tilkut (chewy) vs Hard Tilkut (brittle).

DID YOU KNOW?

Tilkut-making is an entire family profession in Gaya. The pounding is done rhythmically, like music, by two artisans with wooden hammers taking turns — it is an athletic, skilled process. Master tilkut artisans can identify the exact moment of "done" by the sound and texture alone.

Key Ingredients

  • White sesame seeds (Safed Til)
  • Jaggery (Gud) — primary version
  • Sugar (alternative
  • for white Tilkut)
  • Water (for syrup)

Spices & Aromatics

None traditionally — the flavor comes purely from sesame and jaggery. Cardamom (Elaichi) in premium versions.

Flavor Profile

Intensely nutty from sesame, rich caramel-malt from jaggery, smooth and almost creamy texture that crumbles perfectly. Clean, pure, naturally sweet. The white sugar version is delicate; the jaggery version has more depth.

Nutritional Insight

Nutritionally rich: sesame seeds are packed with calcium, iron, magnesium, healthy fats, and protein. Jaggery adds minerals including iron. High energy at approximately 500–550 kcal per 100g. An excellent winter energy food.

Pairs Best With

  • Chura Dahi (Makar Sankranti tradition)
  • Warm milk
  • Masala chai
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Gaya ka Tilkut: Hand-Pounded Sesame Confection of Bihar
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Gaya ka Tilkut: Hand-Pounded Sesame Confection of Bihar

Learn about the GI-tagged Gaya Tilkut, an artisanal sesame sweet made using a centuries-old manual p...

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