Where can the best Indian Chai be purchased?
I'm looking for high quality, loose leaf, and as authentic as possible. I know I could just look up how to make it, but I want to try a few pre-mixes of chai before I get into all that. Please and thanks!
Jan 31st, '15, 00:17
Posts: 72
Joined: Jul 19th, '12, 16:10
Location: New Jersey
Contact:
teaformeplease
Re: Where can the best Indian Chai be purchased?
Yogic Chai has been my go to for years. They're a local company (to me in NJ) and it's as close to authentic as I've been able to find. Better than what most Indian tea companies have sent me 
http://www.yogicchai.com/original-masala-chai.html

http://www.yogicchai.com/original-masala-chai.html
Re: Where can the best Indian Chai be purchased?
I've never bought chai so I can't give you a direct answer. The online shops below sell chai and are based in India. I would like to think they are authentic. Maybe try a local Indian grocery store?
http://goldentipstea.com/
http://www.teabox.com/
http://goldentipstea.com/
http://www.teabox.com/
Last edited by Alucard on Jan 31st, '15, 13:45, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Where can the best Indian Chai be purchased?
Desi and "international" grocery stores often have mixes. So do maybe specialty tea shops, though they're expensive. Sometimes tea + spices in a bag or loose, sometimes an instant tea powder (obviously much inferior but still tasty). If you can, you'd probably love to go to a good, authentic Pakistani or Indian restaurant and have chai there 
Nothing like making it yourself, though, and it's really easy, especially once you've had some premade stuff and gotten a feel for what you like. Here's a good site with many recipes: http://www.chai-tea.org/recipes.html
You can make it as simple as tea + cardamom + sugar and it's still great. I just throw it all in a lidded cooking pot with some water, let it boil, pour milk in, let it froth, and take it off the burner. Some people throw the milk in with everything else, reducing it to one step. Just make sure you don't boil the milk.

Nothing like making it yourself, though, and it's really easy, especially once you've had some premade stuff and gotten a feel for what you like. Here's a good site with many recipes: http://www.chai-tea.org/recipes.html
You can make it as simple as tea + cardamom + sugar and it's still great. I just throw it all in a lidded cooking pot with some water, let it boil, pour milk in, let it froth, and take it off the burner. Some people throw the milk in with everything else, reducing it to one step. Just make sure you don't boil the milk.
Last edited by JAndrews2 on Feb 5th, '15, 15:35, edited 3 times in total.
Re: Where can the best Indian Chai be purchased?
Also- the best chai I've made or been served was made with low quality, CTC/crushed leaves and even- gasp!- teabags. The tea is there to provide a base for the flavor, but not the whole flavor. So your priority is something strong and black that will cut through all the sweet stuff. Finer notes will be drowned out by all the wonderful milk and spices you're putting in.
Don't get me wrong- I love high quality tea, but that's what my yixing and ceramic pots and my gaiwans are for. Although experimenting is fun, I don't make a habit of boiling my expensive Darjeeling or single estate Assam or Yunnan in a steel cooking pot for 5-10 minutes
Don't get me wrong- I love high quality tea, but that's what my yixing and ceramic pots and my gaiwans are for. Although experimenting is fun, I don't make a habit of boiling my expensive Darjeeling or single estate Assam or Yunnan in a steel cooking pot for 5-10 minutes

Feb 10th, '15, 15:03
Posts: 445
Joined: Mar 25th, '13, 23:03
Location: Lexington Park, Maryland
Re: Where can the best Indian Chai be purchased?
I've been using this recipe:
http://thehathicooks.blogspot.com/2011/ ... -ever.html
And this tea:
http://amzn.com/B007SH2C6S
Turns out pretty good. I've recently transitioned from brown sugar to palm sugar, as well, which is nice.
M.
http://thehathicooks.blogspot.com/2011/ ... -ever.html
And this tea:
http://amzn.com/B007SH2C6S
Turns out pretty good. I've recently transitioned from brown sugar to palm sugar, as well, which is nice.
M.