Tag Archives: drinks

Better Late than Never in Making Masala Chai at Home

Containers of chai cooling down for the fridge

Containers of chai cooling down for the fridge

You can file this under lame, or lazy, or just plain wasteful.

Why I never started making masala chai (Indian spiced tea) at home I’ll never know.  I have been telling myself to look into this for years, but just never got around to it.

Enter a post I read related to Project Food Blog, a FoodBuzz competition, from The Doctor’s Kitchen.  There it was:  a simple recipe to make what you have to pay dearly for in any cafe.  I adapted the masala chai recipe slightly to serve my main purpose, which is “generic” cold chai, sans milk, to do whatever I please with.  Often I just pour it over ice and add a little sweetened condensed milk, or just skim milk, or I drink it as-is.

Easy, easy, easy, and you’ll be flush in chai.  Make plenty at a sitting, like I do.

If you want it hot, sweet and milky, as served in a cafe, just add some milk and sugar (or sweetened condensed milk) after the steeping and bring to just under a simmer.

By the by, chai just means “tea,” thought it has taken on the meaning of “masala chai” over the years among the English and the Americans.

Please don’t pour it over ice as soon as it’s made or it will be cloudy and weak.  Let it cool on the counter top and then move it to the fridge to get cold.  It’ll be worth the wait – nice and strong and clear.

Making chai

Making chai at home

Masala Chai
   Makes 2 quarts

2 quarts water
8 whole cloves
8 green cardamom pods
1 whole cinnamon stick (which you can reuse a couple of times – I do!)
6 tea bags (use bags that produce a good, strong cuppa BLACK tea)

1).  Bring water and all spices to a boil in a saucepot.
2).  Simmer for 15 minutes.
3).  Add tea bags and simmer for no more than 2 minutes.
4).  Remove from heat and squeeze and remove tea bags.
5).  Allow to cool a bit in the pan.
6).  Remove spices with a skimmer, reserving the cinnamon for the next pot.
7).  Transfer to glass pitchers.
8).  Allow to cool almost completely on the counter and then cover and pop in fridge.
9).  When completely cold, serve as you like.

Iced tea on the cheap

Heat wave.  You might not think that 80-something Fahrenheit is all that bad, but to wimps like us in the Berkeley area, it’s pretty hard to take.  We have no insulation in our houses, no AC and not enough room for a pool in the backyard – not that we would have one if we could, since residential pools are a waste of resources, but it’s nice to fantasize about a dip.  What is easily attainable, though, is a never-ending container of iced tea on the kitchen counter.  Go get one of those gallon-size so-called “sun tea” makers.  They are of glass and often have some kind of horrible motif painted on them, like beach balls.  There’s a spout so you can serve yourself all day long by simply having the thing on the edge of your counter.  Spend about $5.  Next, get a big box of 1 ounce tea bags at a restaurant food supplier like Smart and Final, which sells a box of 24 for about $4, last I checked.  Throw a tea bag in the jug and fill it up with cold tap water.  Start drinking it in about two hours.  I don’t add sugar but I often toss in a cut-up lemon.  If you are so damned spoiled that you can’t drink iced tea at room temperature, then add ice, but then you might want to make your brew with two tea bags.

Don’t drink and drive

Coffee spill in the car

Matthew and I grabbed two iced lowfat decaf lattes from the drive-thru Starbucks on San Pablo Avenue in El Cerrito this afternoon. They were pretty good. Pretty good up until Matthew’s defective plastic cup collapsed and sent drink and ice cubes south. We drove home wet with a lake of milk and coffee in the change cup between us. Since Matt couldn’t reach the whole spill during clean-up, I’m sure this will be a gift that will keep on giving. I’m thankful there was no sugar involved.