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​6 Hindu temples where non-veg is offered as prasad​

etimes.in | Last updated on - Sep 12, 2025, 09:49 IST
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6 Hindu temples where non-veg is offered as prasad

When someone says “temple food,” most of us imagine sattvik thalis, khichdi, or laddoos. But India’s spiritual landscape is too diverse to be boxed into one image. Faith here is not about what sits on the plate, but about the love and surrender behind it. In certain temples, non-veg food isn’t just accepted, it’s an essential part of worship. From biryani to fried fish, these sacred spaces show how devotion can wear many flavors. Scroll down for some fascinating examples.

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Vimala temple, Puri

Inside the world-famous Jagannath Temple stands the smaller but powerful Vimala Temple. Here, goddess Vimala receives offerings of fish and goat meat, especially during Durga Puja. Once the ritual is complete, the food turns into prasad called Bimala Parusa. It’s a tradition that reminds devotees that divinity is about intention, not dietary labels.

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Muniyandi Swami temple, Tamil Nadu

This little temple near Madurai comes alive during its annual festival, when the prasad is no ordinary sweet, it’s steaming plates of chicken and mutton biryani. Served early in the morning, the biryani draws people from far and wide. For many, tasting it is as important as bowing before the deity. It’s worship, but with the aroma of spices in the air.

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Parassinikadavu temple, Kerala

In Kerala’s Kannur district, Lord Muthappan’s devotees offer what they know best: fresh fish and toddy. The temple accepts these gifts as naturally as the sea accepts waves. Eating the fish prasad here feels less like a ritual and more like sharing a meal with the divine, rooted in the everyday lives of fishing communities.

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Tarkulha Devi temple, Uttar Pradesh

During Chaitra Navratri in Gorakhpur, the Tarkulha Devi Temple becomes a gathering point for thousands. Goats are sacrificed to the goddess, and their meat is cooked right on the temple grounds in big clay pots. What follows is a communal meal that doubles as prasad. For locals, this is as sacred as it is celebratory.

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Tarapith Temple, West Bengal

Famous for its strong tantric traditions, Tarapith has never really shied away from bold meat offerings. Here, goat sacrifices and hearty fish dishes like shol maach are carefully cooked into elaborate, abundant spreads, served generously alongside steaming rice and richly fragrant curries. Receiving prasad in Tarapith feels less like an ordinary meal and more like stepping into an ancient, hidden, sacred secret, where every single bite seems to carry the temple’s raw, powerful, and deeply mystical energy.

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Thanthania Kalibari, Kolkata

Amid the everyday rush of vibrant, bustling, ever-changing, restless, and ceaselessly alive Kolkata stands Thanthania Kalibari, a centuries-old sacred temple shrine devoted to Goddess Kali. Here, the ancient, traditional, and enduring practice of ritualistic animal sacrifice still remarkably continues to remain alive, with the meat later lovingly, carefully cooked and reverently offered as holy prasad. For many in the city, it serves as a striking, powerful, and unforgettable reminder that even against the dazzling backdrop of glittering modern malls and soaring concrete flyovers, these timeless, unbroken rituals from another, almost vanished era continue to quietly, faithfully, and steadily breathe, carrying strong, unwavering, and deeply rooted faith forward unchanged.

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Copyright © Jun 2, 2026, 11.33AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service