Close X
Saturday, November 30, 2024
ADVT 
India

When It's Sweets, It Has To Be Lovely!

Darpan News Desk Darpan, 01 Dec, 2014 12:28 PM
    If there is a brand name that links directly to Punjab's sweet tooth, it is Lovely.
     
    The Jalandhar-based Lovely Sweets Mall has over the last five decades mastered the art of tickling the taste buds of people across northern India, particularly in Punjab.
     
    Famous for its 'moti-chur' ladoos over the years, Lovely Sweets is no longer confined to one popular item alone. It now offers over 250 varieties of sweets, besides other snacks and salted eatables.
     
    It offers over 25 types of ladoos, including 10 varieties made in rich desi ghee.
     
    "When my father, Baldev Raj, started our first shop in 1961 in Jalandhar Cantt, there were only four items available and the ladoos and barfi were the most popular. The second generation of our family initially added 20-odd items. More varieties of sweets were added later. Our third generation has introduced modern sweets which are liked by people," Lovely Sweets Mall owner Naresh Mittal told IANS here.
     
    "He (Baldev Raj) was a 'chai-pani' contractor for the army and an army officer used to request him to bring sweets from a particular popular shop in Lahore in those days (before independence). That is perhaps where the foundation of our sweets business started," Mittal said.
     
    The sweets mall, a unique six-floor building on Jalandhar's ever-busy Nakodar Road, is a full-fledged complex which offers sweets, snacks, other eatables, hundreds of types of packings, theme-based planning and packaging for special occasions like weddings, ring ceremonies, festivals and even baby-showers - all under one roof.
     
    While the traditional sweets continue to attract hundreds of the sweets mall each day, the place offers chocolates, modern dry fruits and platters for weddings and other occasions.
     
    "The highest selling items remain the moti-chur ladoos, desi ghee ladoos, pinni and barfi variants. We even have a 'Ramdev barfi' (named after famous Yoga guru Ramdev) for health and yoga enthusiasts. It is made from ghiya (gourd)," Mittal said.
     
    From budget packs of sweets which start from just Rs.20 to sweets boxes that cost over Rs.3,000 each, Lovely Sweets caters to all sections, pockets and tastes.
     
    Keeping in tune with changing tastes, particularly of the younger generation, the Lovely brand has even ventured into bakery products with its Lovely Bake Studio.
     
    "We have introduced a lot of new things to keep pace with tastes and times. We brought in the sweets mall concept, have opened a 24-hour sweets shop and introduced a new brand - Lovely Imagination - for planning theme-based events. We have also ventured into bakery items," Naresh Mittal's son Shaishav Mittal, 32, who has done his MBA from the United States and has joined the family's traditional business, told IANS.
     
    "We are bringing in the changes and introducing new concepts to cater to needs of the present generation. There is a slight decline in the consumption of sweets as people are becoming more health conscious," Shaishav, a third generation entrepreneur in the Lovely family, added.
     
    The Lovely Group is now not only known for sweets. The Lovely Professional University (LPU), located near Phagwara town, is one of the biggest leading private universities in the country with over 30,000 students, including many from abroad. The Lovely group, which had ventured into automobile business (two-wheelers and cars) in the 1990s, opened its first retail store here last week.

    MORE India ARTICLES

    Pakistan Army fires at Indian positions on LoC

    Pakistan Army fires at Indian positions on LoC
    The Pakistan Army Tuesday fired at Indian positions on the Line of Control (LoC) in Jammu and Kashmir's Baramulla district, a source said....

    Pakistan Army fires at Indian positions on LoC

    Kashmir killings: Army apology has not dampened public anger

    Kashmir killings: Army apology has not dampened public anger
    The recent killing of two people, including a teenager, by soldiers of the Indian Army has renewed calls for the revocation of the law that gives special powers...

    Kashmir killings: Army apology has not dampened public anger

    Dal Khalsa condemns Badal for Hindu-Sikh comment

    Dal Khalsa condemns Badal for Hindu-Sikh comment
    Punjab Chief Minister Parkash Singh Badal's recent statement that the alliance between the Akali Dal and the BJP was essential for Hindu-Sikh peace in the state....

    Dal Khalsa condemns Badal for Hindu-Sikh comment

    Modi inducts 21 new ministers, reshuffles portfolios

    Modi inducts 21 new ministers, reshuffles portfolios
    Prime Minister Narendra Modi Sunday expanded his council of ministers, inducting 21 new faces, including four of cabinet rank, in a bid to consolidate the....

    Modi inducts 21 new ministers, reshuffles portfolios

    Thirty percent of Indian school-goers face cyber crime

    Thirty percent of Indian school-goers face cyber crime
    Around 30 percent of Indian school-going children accessing internet have experienced some kind of cyber harm like cyber bullying, cyber stalking,...

    Thirty percent of Indian school-goers face cyber crime

    60 percent of Indian men admit violence against wives: UN report

    60 percent of Indian men admit violence against wives: UN report
    Sixty percent of Indian men admit acting violently against their wife or partner at some point in their lives while 52 percent of women admit having....

    60 percent of Indian men admit violence against wives: UN report