The Exposition of the Krishna Mantra (Kṛṣṇa-mantra-prakāśa): Nyāsa, Dhyāna, Worship, Yantra, and Prayoga
अपूपा मोदका लाजाः पृथुका नवनीतकम् । द्रव्यषोडशकं ह्येतत्कथितं पद्मजादिभिः ॥ १२८ ॥
apūpā modakā lājāḥ pṛthukā navanītakam | dravyaṣoḍaśakaṃ hyetatkathitaṃ padmajādibhiḥ || 128 ||
Apūpa (gâteaux), modaka (boulettes sucrées), lāja (grains grillés), pṛthukā (riz aplati) et navanīta (beurre frais) : tels sont (parmi) les seize ingrédients rituels, ainsi que l’ont proclamé Padmajā (Brahmā) et les autres sages et divinités.
Sanatkumara (teaching Narada in a technical/ritual context)
Vrata: none
Primary Rasa: shanta
Secondary Rasa: adbhuta
It standardizes specific edible offerings as part of an authoritative “sixteen-substance” (dravya-ṣoḍaśaka) framework, emphasizing that devotion and ritual efficacy are supported by correct, traditional materials.
Bhakti here is expressed through proper upacāra (devotional service) using accepted naivedya items; offering food like modaka, apūpa, and butter becomes a tangible act of reverence aligned with scriptural injunction.
It reflects ritual codification—how offerings are categorized and prescribed—supporting correct karmakāṇḍa procedure (useful for kalpa-style practice and precise ritual performance).