OdishaPlus Bureau

Odisha on Monday bagged the much-awaited Geographical Indication (GI) tag for its ‘Rasagola.’ The Registrar of Geographical Indications, Chennai, has issued a certificate registering the sweetmeat as ‘Odisha Rasagola’ under the Geographical Indications of Goods (Registration and Protection) Act, 1999. The certificate will be valid until February 22, 2028. A GI tag recognizes a product as distinctive to a particular locality or region.
Odisha Rasagola
Welcoming the development, Odisha Chief Minister Naveen Patnaik said ‘rasagola’ is loved by the Odiyas across the globe.
Odisha rasgola GI Tag
“Happy to share that #OdishaRasagola has received GI Tag in Geographical Indication Registry. This mouthwatering culinary delight made of cottage cheese, loved by Odias across the world, is offered to Lord Jagannath as part of bhog since centuries,” Patnaik tweeted. Union Petroleum and Steel Minister Dharmendra Pradhan said ‘Odisha rasagola’ is an inseparable part of Odia culture and cuisine.
RASGOLLA PURI JAGANNATH
“Offered to Lord Jagannath as bhog, the #OdishaRasagola is an inseparable & ancient part of Odia culture & cuisine. GI tag for #OdishaRasagola is yet another time for us Odias, to celebrate with a bite of the mouthwatering delicacy,” Pradhan tweeted.

Since 2015, Odisha has been embroiled in a bitter battle over the origin of the delicacy with West Bengal, which had in 2017 secured the GI tag for ‘Banglar Rasogolla’.The application for the GI tag for ‘Odisha Rasagola’ was moved by Odisha Small Industries Corporation Limited (OSIC), together with Utkal Mistanna Byabasayee Samiti (association of sweetmeat traders) in 2018. Odisha’s MSME minister Dibya Shankar Mishra said the GI tag has made every Odia proud.

rasgulla‘Rasagola’ has been a part of the state’s centuries-old rituals performed for Lord Jagannath and found its mention in a 15th century Odia epic ‘Dandi Ramayana’. As per the rituals of “Niladri Bije”, ‘rasagola bhoga’ is traditionally offered to Devi Lakshmi on behalf of Lord Jagannath. Legendary writer Fakir Mohan Senapati had written about ‘rasagola’ in Utkal Bhramanam, which was published way back in August 1892. The popularity of the confectionery can also be gauged from a travelogue written by Senapati in 1904.
Asit Mohanty
Noted researcher Asit Mohanty, who had submitted a report to the government claiming that ‘Rasagola’ has been mentioned in ancient Odia literature, said people in the state had been relishing the sweetmeat for more than 500 years.