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Seena’s Chai Recipe

(A cozy, antioxidant-rich way to start your day)

Why I Love This Ritual

There’s something so grounding about the ritual of starting my morning with chai — the slow boil, the swirl of spices, and that first fragrant sip that feels like home. For me, it’s more than just a drink; it’s a moment of calm before the day begins. This is my simple, soul-soothing recipe that infuses warmth, flavor, and intention into every cup. My little labor of love to begin the day. 

Ingredients (for one serving)

  • 1 cup water
  • ¼ cup milk 
  • 4-5 crushed cardamom pods
  • 1 small piece of freshly grated ginger
  • 3–4 cloves
  • 1 Tulsi (holy basil) leaf – optional
  • Fresh ground black pepper – optional, gives it a nice kick 
  • 1 black tea bag 
  • ¼ tsp ground cinnamon or 1 cinnamon stick
  • Sugar or honey (optional — I usually skip it)

Instructions

  1. Boil the water.
    In a small saucepan, bring 1 cup of water to a boil. Add the crushed cardamom pods, freshly grated ginger, cloves, and Tulsi leaf if you have one.
  2. Cover and simmer.
    Let it boil gently with the lid on for a few minutes so all those beautiful spices infuse the water.
  3. Add the milk and cinnamon.
    Pour in about ¼ cup of milk and sprinkle in ground cinnamon (or add a cinnamon stick). Let the mixture come to a gentle boil a few times — let it rise to the top, then lower the heat and repeat.(This is a step my dad taught me when I was younger and it really is the secret to a rich tasting cha)
  4. Steep the tea.
    Turn off the stove, add your black tea bag, and let it steep for 1–3 minutes, depending on how strong you like your chai.
  5. Strain the chai into your cup to remove the spices, then enjoy.
  6. Add sugar or honey to taste. Personally, I prefer it without — the natural warmth of the spices gives it all the flavor I need.

Seena’s Note

There are so many variations of making chai, and mine is a little different than the traditional Punjabi way. I steep the teabag at the end, instead of boiling it with the water–for me it gives a smoother, less tannic taste, more control over the color, a cleaner spice-forward taste and a less chance of it getting overbrewed. 

In the South Asian culture, chai is more than just a warm drink. It’s a ritual of family time sitting together, conversation and connection.

xoxo, Seena

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