Dresil
A sweet rice that's about generosity rather than complexity: hot basmati glossed with melted butter, fattened with cashews, sweetened just a little with sugar and softened raisins, and (in the traditional version) studded with droma, small starchy wild roots harvested in central Tibet that look a bit like miniature sweet potatoes and taste vaguely chestnut-like. Without droma the dish is still recognisably dresil, just simpler. Yak butter is the real-thing fat, tangier and stronger than supermarket butter; ghee is the closest accessible substitute. The sweetness is restrained, Tibetan sweets in general aren't very sweet by Western standards, which is part of why dresil eats well alongside salty butter tea. Smell is warm butter and toasted nuts. Easy to make: it's essentially a stir-through. The first thing eaten on the first morning of Losar (Tibetan New Year) in many Central Tibetan households, with each family member taking a small bowl as part of the day-one rituals, and a quiet dish despite being a celebration food.