how a chai wala makes it · 15 minutes · stovetop
Whole spices, the boil-and-reduce technique, the pour from a height. Not chai tea. Just chai.
before the recipe · an ancient backstory in three sentences
Long before tea reached India, ancient Ayurvedic texts described a spiced water called kadha, brewed in royal courts and country kitchens alike to stay alert, aid digestion, and soothe coughs. No tea. No milk. Just spices and water.
When the British planted tea in Assam in the 1830s and tried to sell it back to Indians, vendors took the cheap broken leaves and added them to the spice-and-milk tradition already on every stove. Masala chai as we know it was born in that collision.
The recipe below is one chai wala's version of that 2000-year accident. Whole spices first, then tea, then milk, then sugar at the end. The technique matters more than the proportions. Read it once before you start.
The version below is built around the way Shantanu brews it at his stall in Pune. The proportions and the rhythm are his. The text is ours. Every chai wala has small variations, but the bones are shared.
Smash the ginger under the flat of a knife or in a mortar. Crack the cardamom pods open so the small black seeds inside can speak. Lightly bash the cloves, cinnamon and peppercorn just enough to break them.
Why crushed and not powdered: ground spices burn off their oils fast in boiling liquid. Whole crushed spices release their flavour over the full 10 minutes of brewing without going bitter.
Put your crushed ginger, cardamom, cloves, cinnamon and pepper into a pot with the water. Bring it to a gentle boil and let it simmer.
This first stage, water and spices only, is what the ancient Ayurvedic texts call kadha. You're essentially making the original ancient version of the drink before you add any tea or milk.
Add the CTC tea to the simmering spice water. Let it brew for about 90 seconds. The water will turn a deep mahogany red. Don't stir it too aggressively. Just let it darken.
If your tea is loose-leaf: you can add slightly more, since loose leaves are less concentrated than CTC granules. Aim for the same dark colour.
Pour in the milk. Stir once. The chai will go from dark red to a milky tan colour. Bring it back up to a gentle boil. Watch carefully now, it will rise fast when it gets there.
This is where the technique earns its keep. Once it rises, lower the flame. Let it settle. Then bring it back up. Repeat this rise-and-fall twice more, three times in total. Each rise pulls more colour and flavour from the tea and the spices into the milk. This is the secret to depth.
the technique behind the cup · "boil and reduce"
If you take only one technique away from this recipe, take this one. Bring chai to a boil, lower to a simmer, bring it back to a boil, lower, repeat. Three rises is the household number. Some chai walas do five.
Each rise drives more of the spice oils and tea polyphenols out of the leaves and into the milk. The chai gets darker, deeper, and more cohesive. A chai brewed in one boil tastes thin. A chai brewed in three boils tastes round.
Add sugar. Stir until dissolved. Let it bubble once more. This final boil is what marries the milk, tea and spices into something singular.
If you want to "pull" the chai (optional, theatrical, makes it frothy): ladle some of the chai out from the pot and pour it back in from about a foot above the surface. Do this three or four times. The chai aerates and develops a thin layer of foam on top. This is what street vendors do as showmanship and to cool the liquid just enough to drink.
Hold a fine-mesh strainer (a chalni) over each glass and pour the chai through it. For the proper chai stall theatre, pour from six inches above the glass. You'll get a small layer of foam and your kitchen will smell like a tapri.
Serve immediately. Chai does not reheat well. The moment of the first pour is the entire point.
Not folklore. Not vibes. What the research says.
adrak · the warm pulse
The most-studied natural digestive aid in chai. Research consistently shows ginger reduces nausea and supports gastric motility. Also gives chai its forward sharpness.
digestion · circulationelaichi · the floral note
The signature aroma of masala chai. Cardamom is antimicrobial, antioxidant-dense, and used across Ayurveda to ease bloating. Crack the pod before adding.
aroma · gutdalchini · the slow warmth
Cassia cinnamon (the kind in chai) contains compounds shown in studies to support insulin sensitivity and reduce post-meal blood sugar spikes.
blood sugar · warmthlaung · the slight numb
One of the most antioxidant-dense foods on earth by ORAC value. A natural antibacterial. Use sparingly: two cloves per pot, no more. Otherwise the chai tastes medicinal.
antioxidant · use sparinglykali mirch · the kick
Contains piperine, which has been shown to boost the absorption of other nutrients (including those in turmeric and ginger). A few cracked peppercorns is enough.
absorption · heatpatti · the base
One of the highest dietary sources of polyphenols, antioxidants associated with reduced inflammation. CTC Assam is the chai standard: fast, strong, holds up against milk.
polyphenols · caffeinethe signature move · pour from a height
Hold the kadhai about six inches above the glass. Tilt it slowly. Let the chai fall in a thin stream, through the chalni (strainer), into the glass below.
What looks like showmanship is actually engineering. The stream aerates the chai on its way down, mixing in tiny air bubbles. The result is a thin layer of light foam on top, the kind of foam no spoon can produce, and a slightly cooler liquid by the time it lands. Just barely cool enough to drink without burning your mouth.
The same principle is at work in Singaporean teh tarik (pulled tea), Spanish sherry pouring, and a few other traditions worldwide. The hand-and-eye coordination matters. Practise over the sink before you try it in front of guests.
1. Aerates the chai, building light foam. 2. Cools it from boiling to drinkable. 3. Strains the spices and tea cleanly through the chalni in one motion.
Drag the sliders. Tweak the spice ratio. We'll name your chai, profile its flavour, and save it as your personal blend. Yours alone, lives in your browser.
your blend
Same base recipe. Different region, different mood, different season.
Double the tea, reduce the milk slightly. Brew through five rises instead of three. The 5am working-class default.
Triple the ginger. Skip the cardamom. Add a few tulsi leaves if you have them. The chai you make when someone shows up coughing.
Add 4 to 6 fresh tulsi leaves with the spices in step 2. Peppery, slightly clove-like, sacred-tasting.
Crumble 6 to 8 saffron threads into the milk before adding it. Wedding chai. Golden, perfumed, decadent.
Triple the pepper. Add a tiny pinch of crushed dried chili. Punjabi winter style. Warms from the inside out.
Oat milk works best. Coconut milk gives sweetness but takes over the spices. Avoid almond, it splits when boiled.
Brew the standard recipe extra strong. Serve in tiny 100ml glasses. Drink scalding, in three minutes. Mumbai morning style.
Skip the water entirely. Brew the chai in pure milk. Long boil, thickens up. Punjabi guest-of-honour chai.
Swap white sugar for a small chunk of jaggery. Caramelly, mineral, deeper. Add at the very end and stir fast, gud can split milk.
CTC stands for Crush, Tear, Curl. The small dark granules brew dark and bold in minutes. Loose-leaf orthodox works, but you'll need more of it. Avoid Darjeeling first flush, it gets steamrolled by milk and spice.
The fat is what carries the spices. Skim milk feels thin and lets the bitterness through. Plant milks vary: oat is most reliable, coconut sweetens the cup itself, almond splits when boiled so save it for cold brews.
Most household recipes use a 1:1 water to milk ratio. Some chai walas go up to 3:1 (more milk) for a richer cup, particularly with non-homogenised milk. Experiment to find your ratio.
This is the single highest-leverage technique. Don't just simmer the chai once. Bring it to a boil, lower it, bring it back. The flavour development happens between rises. One boil chai tastes thin. Three boil chai tastes round.
Sugar early in the brew burns slightly and turns the chai bitter. Sugar at the end melts cleanly and balances the tannins. Most chai walas put their sugar in the last 30 seconds.
A pour from six inches above the glass aerates the chai and develops a thin foam on top. Use a small clear glass, not a mug. The chai cools at the right rate and you can see the layers.
Chai does not reheat well. The volatile oils in cardamom and clove fade after a few minutes. The moment of the first pour is the entire reason you made the chai. Honour it.
Once you've brewed it once, you'll know what to adjust. More ginger. Less sugar. Saffron next time. Every household's chai is a little different. Yours will be too.