Benjamuna's Blog

Stories…. with a touch of India….

Chai! Chai! May 23, 2026

Filed under: Food,INDIA,Travels — benjamuna @ 1:25 pm
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India runs on chai, I once read. And that might well be true. You’ll find chai sellers, called chaiwallahs, around every corner, along every stretch of road. You’re not served chai in a big mug, you drink it from tiny earthen cups – at least when you buy on the streets. But I have been enough times to India to notice the change: some stalls have sadly replaced the earthen cups with tiny plastic or paper cups. It’s disappointing, from several points of view.

The earthen cups are smashed after use, you’ll see the chards around every stall – whereas plastic cups most likely end up as “runaway” garbage – still a major problem in India. And of course, chai tastes a lot better in earthen cups – or maybe that’s just a sentimental truth … But the tea definitely looks better and more genuine in those cups.

Chai is India’s unofficial national obsession, is another highly appropriate quote. There is always time or a reason for chai. As a foreigner it might be a challenge to buy chai because some chai stalls don’t meet with Western expectations of hygiene.
Chai is always boiled because it then extracts stronger flavour and blends spices with milk more effectively. Watching the chaiwallahs, often cross legged surrounded by all their paraphernalia, lifting the ladle up in the air and letting go of the light brown jet of tea back into the pot, is very pleasing to the eye – not to mention a camera. Often, the chaiwallahs put on a show for the keen goras with cameras in hand.

Those small pit stops, savoring a tiny cup of chai and a couple of sweet biscuits – the latter always kept in plastic jars, it’s simply India! If you haven’t been through this ritual, you haven’t been to India.

The history of chai goes back to British rule. The British established tea plantations in Assam and Darjeeling in the 1830’s to compete with Chinese tea imports. As production increased, tea became widely available across India. Initially, tea was said to be too complicated for the poor, but it eventually spread to the whole population. It was sold and made easily available on the streets by chaiwallahs. And over time, tea evolved into what we know as chai by adding heaps of sugar and milk which made tea into a sweet and milky concoction. What tastes even better is Masala Chai, chai spiked with cinnamon, cloves, ginger and pepper; sometimes said to be India’s way of reclaiming tea from the British.

Tea in India went from a foreign habit into the soil of Indian life. Chai is affordable and uniquely Indian. You don’t pay a lot for those small cups of chai so wildly available.
India is the world’s second-largest tea producer of tea, after China. India is also the world’s largest consumer of tea and the second-largest exporter.

Chai means tea. When Western cafes put “Chai” on the menu, or even “Chai Tea” they most probably serve tea with milk and Masala Chai would rightly be tea with spices.

Left photo: Small home industry at the banks of Hooghly river in Calcutta. Earthen cups are produced at high speed before they are set to dry in the sun.
Right photo: A woman at the Mullick Ghat flower market in Calcutta taking a small break, a chaiwallah is never far away.

 

A small enterprise…. November 9, 2013

Filed under: INDIA — benjamuna @ 6:13 pm
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It’s a ll about business in India, it sometimes seems like… What intrigues me most, is all the really small enterprises; shops virtually on the threshold of old and often dilapidated buildings. Old Delhi, my favourite spot in Delhi, is a labyrinth of lanes and a shopper’s delight…. if you like to browse or shop in congested, warm, chaotic and noisy surroundings. Old Delhi is  a wholesale market where you’ll find everything under the sun, and be prepared to step back in history. This is far from the glittering malls and don’t expect toilets to freshen up.

The man below repairs jewellery and this is his shop; a tiny table. I noticed him in February and brought a bracelet for him to repair. While I was waiting, people came and went. Threading necklaces seemed to be a sought after service.

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And talking about necklaces…. Old Delhi is an important place for gold and silver, but women don’t always need to wear “the real thing”. The guy below is making simple jewellery ready to be exported to… maybe your favourite clothes shop where you end up buying accessories matching your new dress – and that might be a necklace produced in these simple surroundings: A small room, dirty by our standards, hardly any furniture…

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BELOW:
This guy is making bracelets for export to United Kingdom, we were told. They were three in his little workshop, it looked chaotic with materials lining absolutely every wall. And the floor wasn’t exactly empty either…. I was standing in the doorway, unable to leave, taking in the solemn atmosphere.

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He showed me his bracelets,  and I asked if I could  buy some…. I got three samples for 100 rupees each; the golden one, a bluish and a red. They will always be special to me!

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I’m not sure what this guy is doing in his little workshop. One of the many small enterprises of Old Delhi. Will there be a new generation for him to pass on his workshop?

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Dying beads in the doorway. It’s amazing how this is done by one man on the threshold of his workshop. If not anything else, it’s very social…. I’m thinking; this could be done a hundred times more effectively in a big workshop or factory. But he has a buyer, he has a job and he obviously makes money!

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I came upon these colorful, padded quilts in Mehrauli and never thought they were produced in the area itself. You would think a production would need space, but a glimpse into the modest rooms told me another story.

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Raw cotton goes through the machine dating from – who knows when – and comes out refined and ready to be stuffed into the material in the room at the back. This guy is wearing protection, rarely seen in small enterprises like this….

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And last but not least…. the chai wallah! Tea is sold everywhere in small cups. Chai is tea The Indian Way; with milk and sugar. The demand is enormous, the profit can be likewise even though chai doesn’t exactly rip you off… Tea stalls are everywhere, this particular enterprise might seem simple but I was told he was one of the most prosperous chai wallahs in Old Delhi!

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It might not look too tempting… but once I tried it without sugar it felt right. But I don’t know if this is always a choice.

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Thanks to Anju afrom Master-ji Ki Haveli and Shriti of Beyond Delhi who took me places….