
Tarun Chandrayadula
1.2K posts




In India, the craze for imported coffee is real and so is the irony behind it. India grows some of the world’s most unique coffee including the legendary Monsooned Malabar that Europe has prized for centuries. We export 70-80% of our total production (including our best Arabica & Monsooned beans). Monsooned Malabar story is in fact pure accidental genius: In the 1700-1800s, Indian beans shipped to Europe in wooden boats got soaked & aged by monsoon winds for months. Europeans went crazy for the mellow, low-acid result. India later turned that accident into a deliberate GI-protected process. Now, a chunk of it lands in Switzerland & Germany (India exported coffee worth ~$73M to Switzerland alone in recent yrs). European companies roast, blend, freeze-dry, package it under fancy brands, & ship the finished product back to us. We pay 400-500% markup for the privilege of drinking international qualit” while our farmers get farm-gate prices. So we invented the very thing Europe still uses… then we export it & import the fancy jar.







@gauravsabnis @SaibBilaval I learnt to write better while studying in USA, most of the craft while repeating my papers or technical reports. You are right in that the Americans write in short sentences, and care a lot for where the punch lands.






Shridhar Venkatesh Ketkar, sociologist who wrote the first major scholarly work by an Indian on history of caste. Read it free here openlibrary.org/books/OL701398… He also composed the first ever Marathi encyclopedia. There's even a Dnyanakoshkar Ketkar Road near my Pune school.











Gauss invented the FFT algorithm in 1805. Cooley and Tukey reinvented it in 1965.



The darker side of Madras in the 1860s: Prison life today is often spoken of in hushed terms, where those inside manage to get what they want, from narcotics to deadly weapons. It is interesting that it was no different in the 1860s. @MadrasMobile ✍️ thehindu.com/news/cities/ch…















