With Diwali festivities lighting up Aotea Square this weekend, we caught up with one of the festival's organisers, Albert-Eden-Roskill board member (and Bollywood dance teacher) Ella Kumar, to taste a selection of traditional Indian sweets and snacks at one of the city's longest-serving purveyors, and to talk about the significance of sweets at Diwali.
The upkeep isn't easy, but the owners of Mithai's newest branch (256 Karangahape Rd) are proud of the work they put in to maintain this heritage building: an old theatre, the tiled floor, relief work and stunning stained glass panels in an unusual curved ceiling lend the place an old-world elegance.
Which is fitting as they do things the time-honoured way in the kitchen here, with all the food made from scratch including the impressively large selection of Indian sweets, a time-consuming and highly-skilled job.
At Diwali, sweets and other snacks are significant in several ways, which is, broadly speaking, a celebration of the triumph of light over darkness, good over evil. Among numerous other rituals during the five days and nights of Diwali, sweets, made at home or bought from mithaiwallas like Mithai, are used as offerings to the gods - especially Lakshmi, the goddess of wealth - and are also given as gifts.
"Sweets, made with expensive ingredients like ghee and nuts, have long been a sign of wealth" explains Kumar. On the night of Amavasya (the new moon), Lakshmi visits every house - hence the cleaning of homes, decorating them with finery, lighting of candles to banish the darkness, leaving open the doors and windows so Lakshmi can enter and receive the offering of sweets.