Updated On: 07 January, 2024 06:15 AM IST | Mumbai | Sumedha Raikar Mhatre
An evolving archive of lived experiences, whose debut edition focuses on Goa, offers climate solutions from cooks, poets, farmers and other experts who tell us how to eat and live

Srinivas Aditya Mopidevi and Srinivas Mangipudi, curators of the Climate Recipes project, at work
For readers who seek sustainable eating choices, mull over dietary changes, scout for undervalued yet rich ingredients, and experiment with tasty, biodiverse recipes, climate cookbooks are a current favourite. These guides provide tips, alternatives and suggestions in appetising, colourful ways to engage the reader in a dialogue on climate action.
This columnist was treated to a rather unique and petite book in this genre. It has a deliberately misleading title—Climate Recipes—and it doesn’t contain cooking directions in the conventional sense. It doesn’t have star chefs’ recommendations or any other attractive sales-driven
elements either.