The word
pda is derived from the
Sanskrit word
Piṇḍa or
Piṇḍaka which refers to a lump of food and also a milk & flour-based sweet in the form of a lump.
Piṇḍaka as a sweet finds mention in
Ayurvedic &
Pākaśāstra texts ranging from
Charaka Samhita of the 4th century BCE to
Bhojanakutūhala of 17th century CE.
Charaka Samhita enlists
piṇḍaka along with flour-based Indian sweets and describes them as heavy.
Bhojanakutūhala describes the preparation of the sweet using milk and sugar with the use of spices like cardamom, cloves and pepper. The sweet
Doodh peda is mentioned in Sanskrit literature by different names like
Dugdha Piṇḍaka and
Kśīravațikă. For example, Ayurveda Mahodadhi by Acharya Sushena mentions its preparation in Kritanna Varga. Another Ayurvedic treatise
Brhadyogatarangini describes
Kśīravați sweet which is presently called doodh peda. Modern variations of pedas originated in the city of
Mathura in present-day
Uttar Pradesh. The
Mathura peda is the characteristic variety of the city. From Uttar Pradesh, the pedas spread to many parts of the Indian subcontinent.
Thakur Ram Ratan Singh of
Lucknow who migrated to
Dharwad (in the present-day
Karnataka) in the 1850s introduced pedas there. This distinct variety is now famous as the
Dharwad pedha. Kandi pedha from
Satara in
Maharashtra is another variety of peda. Dood peda, made famous by the Nandini Milk Co-operative in Karnataka, is another popular variety. File:Kesar Peda.jpg|Kesar peda with Garnishing of Pistachio and Cardamom File:Peda Makers of Bokakhat.jpg|Peda Makers at Bokakhat, Assam, India. Bokakhat is famous for its peda industry. == Nutrition ==