vada pav
🍔
Mumbai · the working person's lunch
A deep-fried potato patty inside a soft bun, with green chutney, sweet tamarind chutney, and a smear of garlic-chili. Two rupees, four hundred calories, the unofficial fuel of Bombay's commute.
The pav (bun) is soft and sweet, the potato is fried and salty, the chutney is sharp. Cutting chai cuts through all of it and resets the palate for the next bite.
pair with: cutting chai
samosa
🥟
all of India · the universal companion
Triangular fried pastry stuffed with spiced potato and peas. Originally Persian (sambusa), naturalised as Indian centuries ago. The single most ordered snack at a chai stall.
The flaky crust holds heat for ages. The filling is heavy on garam masala. Masala chai with a hint of extra ginger cuts the oiliness and matches the spice profile of the filling note for note.
pair with: masala chai or adrak chai
glucose biscuit
🍪
all of India · the dunker's choice
A small, hard, glucose biscuit, the kind sold for a few rupees in iconic yellow-and-white wrappers in every shop in India. Cheap, sweet, structurally honest. India's most-eaten biscuit, and the first thing on every chai wala's counter.
The entire engineering of this biscuit is for dunking. Hold it in the chai for exactly two seconds. Pull it out. Bite the wet part. Repeat. Longer than two seconds and the biscuit dissolves in your cup. Less and it stays brittle.
pair with: any chai (the glucose biscuit is universally compatible)
bun maska
🥖
Mumbai, Hyderabad · Irani cafe staple
A soft sweet bun split open and slathered with cold salted butter. Served in the Parsi-Irani cafes of Mumbai and Hyderabad. The simplest combination on this list. Possibly the best.
The butter melts when you dunk the bun in chai. The salt of the butter balances the sweetness of the chai. The bun is just a delivery mechanism for the butter and the chai to meet. The Irani cafe is where this combination achieves transcendence.
pair with: irani chai
khari biscuit
🥐
all of India · the savoury option
Salty flaky puff-pastry biscuit, layered like a thin croissant. Also called puff biscuit or kharee. Originated in Mumbai's Parsi bakeries. Buttery, crisp, faintly salted.
The savouriness of khari is the perfect counter to a too-sweet chai. The flakes crumble into the chai if you dunk them, so most people break the khari into chunks and chase a chai sip with a chunk.
pair with: strong masala chai
marie biscuit
🍪
all of India (and the UK!) · the gentle dunk
A round, plain, slightly sweet biscuit. Originally British, adopted by India in the colonial era and never let go. Less aggressive than the glucose biscuit, slightly more sophisticated, ideal for visiting relatives.
Marie biscuits hold their structure in chai for about three seconds. They have a faintly milky flavour that lets the chai's spices come through cleanly.
pair with: sada chai or elaichi chai
pakora
🥗
North India · the monsoon snack
Vegetables (onion, spinach, potato, chili) dipped in spiced chickpea batter and deep-fried. Crispy outside, soft inside. The default snack the moment it starts raining in India.
Pakora and adrak chai (ginger chai) is the official combination of the Indian monsoon. The ginger warms you, the pakora keeps you full, the rain falls outside, you sit somewhere dry. The whole season is built around this combination.
pair with: adrak chai
bhel puri
🍿
Mumbai · the beach evening
Puffed rice mixed with onion, tomato, sev (chickpea noodles), tamarind chutney, mint chutney, lemon juice. Crunchy, tangy, sweet-sour, light. The Mumbai equivalent of street snack royalty.
Bhel is unusual on this list because it's cold and chai is hot. The contrast works. The tamarind in bhel echoes the warmth of the spices in chai. Best at sunset on a Mumbai beach with cutting chai in a half-glass.
pair with: cutting chai
poha
🍚
Maharashtra, MP · the breakfast plate
Flattened rice cooked with onions, mustard seeds, curry leaves, turmeric, peanuts, and sometimes potato. Light, lemony, the default Indian breakfast across central India. Shantanu sells poha alongside chai at his stall.
Poha and chai is what most of India eats in the morning. The poha is gentle, the chai is gentle, the whole experience is the breakfast equivalent of a polite hello. Best with a small kadak chai to wake you up while the poha keeps you steady.
pair with: kadak chai
cream roll
🥯
all of India · the bakery indulgence
A spiral of flaky pastry filled with sweetened cream. Sold in Indian bakeries since the Raj era, when British bakery techniques crashed into Indian sweet tooths. Shantanu sells these too.
Cream rolls double down on the sweetness instead of fighting it. The pastry is buttery, the cream is rich, the chai is sweet. This is dessert chai. Eat one. Don't eat two. You will regret two.
pair with: elaichi chai (cardamom amplifies the cream)
maska bun (with chai)
🍞
Parsi cafes · the dunker's variant
Like bun maska but specifically engineered for dunking. The bun is split, slathered with butter, then torn into pieces and dropped into the chai. The chai turns yellow-cream with melted butter. The bun softens. The whole glass becomes a single dish.
If you're squeamish about texture, skip this. If you trust the Parsi grandmothers of Mumbai who invented it, dive in. It is genuinely transcendent.
pair with: irani chai · slightly less sweet than normal
gulab jamun
🍯
all of India · the wedding pairing
Deep-fried milk solid balls soaked in rose-and-cardamom sugar syrup. Sweet beyond reason. Served at every Indian wedding, every Diwali, every reason there is to celebrate.
The classic test pairing: order an adrak chai (heavy ginger) and a gulab jamun. The ginger from the chai cuts the syrup. The syrup softens the ginger bite. This is the chai pairing every grandmother teaches you.
pair with: adrak chai