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Sarpir-maṇḍa

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
sarpir-maṇḍa
Chinese name
Chinese醍醐
Transcriptions
Standard Mandarin
Hanyu Pinyintíhú
Korean name
Hangul제호
Transcriptions
Revised Romanizationjeho
Japanese name
Hiraganaだいご
Transcriptions
Romanizationdaigo

Sarpir-maṇḍa (Sanskrit: सर्पिर्मण्ड) was a type of dairy product, one of five stages of milk described in Hindu and Buddhist texts.

In Buddhist texts

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Buddhist texts including the Nirvana Sutra describe five stages of milk as an analogy to stages of purification of the spirit:

Sanskrit Chinese translation English translation
1 क्षीर kṣīra milk
2 दधि dadhi curd or sour milk
3 नवनीत navanīta 生酥 butter
4 सर्पिस् sarpis 熟酥
5 सर्पिर्मण्ड sarpir-maṇḍa 醍醐

乳變為酪,酪為生酥,生酥為熟酥,熟酥為醍醐,醍醐為第一。

— 『長阿含經』[1]

Milk yields curd; curd yields butter; butter yields sarpis; sarpis yields sarpir-maṇḍa; sarpir-maṇḍa is the best.

Sarpir-maṇḍa has been theorised to be the early form of ghee.[citation needed]

In East Asia

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In Chinese Buddhist texts, sarpir-maṇḍa was translated to tíhú (醍醐). The entry for tíhú in Compendium of Materia Medica (1578) quotes various references, the earliest of which was written in the 5th century Liu Song dynasty.[2]

The word 醍醐 is pronounced daigo in Japan. The word has been used in Daigo Temple, Emperor Daigo (who was named after the temple), and the word daigo-mi (醍醐味), which means a superb flavor.[3]

According to The Japanese Dairy Association, Emperor Daigo encouraged the production of so, daigo, and other cheese-like products during his reign in the 10th century.[3]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ zh:s:長阿含經/卷十七
  2. ^ zh:s:本草綱目/菜之二#醍醐菜
  3. ^ a b "チーズの歴史 日本乳業協会 (History of Cheese, by Japan Dairy Industry Association)". 日本乳業協会. Japan Dairy Industry Association. Archived from the original on 24 May 2011. Retrieved 19 August 2012.