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ied in _ghi_ (clarified butter) as a luxury, and at other times in sesamum oil. Rice or ground gram boiled in buttermilk are other favourite foods. In Chhattisgarh rice is the common food: it is eaten with pulses at midday and with vegetables cooked in _ghi_ in the evening. In the morning they drink a rice-gruel, called _basi>_ which consists of the previous night's repast mixed with water and taken cold. On festivals rice is boiled in milk. Milk is often drunk at night, and there is a saying, "He who drinks water in the morning and milk at night and takes _harra_ before he sleeps will never need a doctor." A little powdered _harra_ or myrobalan acts as an aperient. The food of landowners and tenants is much the same, except that the former have more butter and vegetables, according to the saying, '_Raja praja ka ekhi khana_' or 'The king and peasant eat the same food.' Those who eat flesh have an occasional change of food, but most Kurmis abstain from it. Farmservants eat the gruel of rice or kodon boiled in water when they can afford it, and if not they eat mahua flowers. These are sometimes boiled in water, and the juice is then strained off and mixed with half-ground flour, and they are also pounded and made into _chapatis_ with flour and water. The leaves of the young gram-plants make a very favourite vegetable and are eaten raw, either moist or dried. In times of scarcity the poorer classes eat tamarind leaves, the pith of the banyan tree, the seeds of the bamboo, the bark of the _semar_ tree, [80] the fruit of the _babul_, [81] and other articles. A cultivator will eat 2 lbs. of grain a day if he can get it, or more in the case of rice. Their stomachs get distended owing to the large quantities of boiled rice eaten at one time. The leaves of the _chirota_ or _chakora_ a little plant [82] which grows thickly at the commencement of the rains near inhabited sites, are also a favourite vegetable, and a resource in famine time. The people call it '_Gaon ka thakur_,' or 'lord of the village,' and have a saying: Amarbel aur kamalgata, Gaon ka thakur, gai ka matha, Nagar sowasan, unmen milai, Khaj, dad, sehua mit jawe. _Amarbel_ is an endless creeper, with long yellow strings like stalks, which infests and destroys trees; it is called _amarbel_ or the immortal, because it has no visible root. _Kamalgata_ is the seed of the lotus; _gai ka matha_ is buttermilk; _nagar sowasan_, 'the happiness of
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