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Strain into 4 tea glasses.

CHENNAI CHAI

Call this version from Chennai—established by the East India Company in 1639 and known as Madras until 1996—masala chai light. Or at least lighter. Instead of boiling the spices in the milky liquid, the ginger and cardamom are placed in a droopy cloth strainer and the tea is poured through them. (While the cardamom here is for the flavor, the ginger is largely for health.) You make this at home but also get it on the street, where the strainers are stained and stretched from use.

Makes 2 glasses:

1 Tbsp strong black tea leaves or 1 tea bag

½ cup/120 ml whole milk

2 Tbsp sugar or to taste

2 cardamom pods

½-inch/1.25-cm piece of fresh ginger, peeled

In a saucepan, bring 1½ cups/360 ml water to a boil, add the tea, and boil for 4 minutes. Add the milk, return to a boil, and boil for 1 minute. Stir in the sugar.

Meanwhile, in a mortar, crush the cardamom pods with a pestle. Add the ginger and give it a firm smack. Transfer to a strainer.

Slowly pour the tea through the strainer into 2 tea glasses.

TIBETAN TEA WITH SALT AND BUTTER

“Tea is a favourite beverage, the black sort brought from China in large cakes being that preferred,” wrote Dr. Archibald Campbell, Darjeeling’s first superintendent and the area’s original tea planter, of the Lepchas. “It is prepared by boiling, after which the decoction is churned up in a chunga, with butter and salt; milk is never taken with tea.”1

Visitors to Darjeeling today still find similar salty butter teas—though usually with the addition of milk—prepared by the Tibetan community. In 1959, the fourteenth Dalai Lama, then a teenager, and about 80,000 of his followers fled China over the Himalayas into India after an abortive uprising. Today 150,000 Tibetan refugees live in India, including many in Darjeeling.

This recipe is adapted from Kunga’s, a decades-old-favorite, family-run Tibetan place in the center of Darjeeling just below the Planters’ Club. “Yak’s milk is best,” the owner advises. “But if you don’t have yak’s milk, then use Amul Gold.” For those that can’t find that popular brand of Indian milk, any other whole milk or even half-and-half works well.

It’s a warm, caloric, and energy-supplying drink, great for cold weather and mountainous climates.

Makes 4 glasses:

2 heaped Tbsp loose black tea or 2 tea bags

½ cup/120 ml whole milk or half-and-half, either cow, goat, or yak

1 heaped Tbsp butter, preferably salted, and ideally from yak milk

Generous pinch salt (more if using unsalted butter)

In a saucepan, bring 3½ cups/800 ml water to a boil, add the tea, remove from the heat, and let steep for 5 minutes. Strain the tea, and discard the leaves.

Transfer to a blender. Add the milk, butter, and salt. Cover the blender tightly and blend for 2 to 3 minutes until frothy.

Return the liquid to the saucepan and bring to a boil. Pour into tea glasses, and serve scalding hot.

FRESH PASSION-FRUIT CHAI

The restaurant of the quirky and efficient Cochrane Place Hotel in Kurseong is aptly named Chai Country Café as it sits within minutes of Ambootia, Castleton, and Makaibari estates, with another dozen gardens visible from its terraces. The bar has a resident tea master and mixologist, a young Bengali named Laltu Purkait, who prepares highly original drinks that range from Paan Chai, which recalls paan—betel leaf filled with areca nut, lime paste, spices, and all sorts of other ingredients and chewed after a meal—to an even more exotically spiced Tandoori Chai, which uses almonds and rosewater to balance its heady, savory spice blend and offer floral notes to the flickering hints of fire.

This recipe is Laltu’s specialty during the monsoon, when passion fruit are in season. Brilliant, cloudy orange in color, with high tangy notes, a certain sweet freshness, and nonaggressive bite of pepper. Don’t discard the seeds. They are good for digestion, Laltu insists.

Per glass:

1½ tsp Darjeeling or another orthodox long-leaf tea

Pulp of ½ fresh passion fruit, with all juices and seeds, about 1½ Tbsp

1 Tbsp sugar

1 generous pinch freshly ground black pepper

In a stove-top teapot or saucepan, bring 1 cup/240 ml freshly drawn water to a boil. Remove from the heat. Add the tea, cover the teapot, and let infuse for 4 minutes.

Meanwhile, in a tall tea glass, add the passion fruit pulp, juice and seeds, sugar, and black pepper, and whisk well.

Strain the tea into the tea glass. Serve hot.

BEGINNINGS TO A DARJEELING DAY

ALOO DUM

This classic potato dish, popular across much of India, is a breakfast favorite in Darjeeling. Often including tomatoes and a thicker “gravy,” this version is the kind of quick and simple one found on many tea gardens and takes its inspiration from Prem, the family cook on Goomtee Tea Estate. At the center of the estate is the factory, and up a couple dozen meandering rockery steps through flower gardens, is the red-roofed manager’s bungalow, with its varnished wood floors and walls, airy rooms, and long, enclosed verandah, built by the India-born, British tea pioneer Henry Montgomery Lennox for his family.

Serve the aloo dum with hot puri (following recipe) as Prem does.

Serves 4 to 6:

2 pounds/910 g small or medium white potatoes

Salt

6 garlic cloves, roughly chopped

1 heaped Tbsp freshly grated fresh ginger

3 Tbsp sunflower or canola oil

1 heaped tsp cumin seeds

2 generous pinches turmeric

½ tsp chili flakes

Finely chopped, fresh cilantro (coriander leaves), for garnishing

Scrub the potatoes but do not peel. Place them in a pot, cover with water, and bring to a boil over high heat. Add a generous pinch of salt, reduce the heat to medium low, partly cover the pot, and gently boil until tender (but not mushy) and the tip of a knife penetrates with little resistance, 20 to 25 minutes. Drain. Once the potatoes are cool enough to handle, peel and cut into pieces just bigger than bite-size.

Meanwhile, mash the garlic to a paste in a mortar with the ginger.

In a large sauté pan, skillet, or wok, heat the oil over medium heat and add the cumin seeds. When they begin to jump, stir in the garlic-ginger paste. Cook until aromatic, about 30 seconds. Stir in the turmeric and chili flakes, season with salt, and immediately add the potatoes. Add 2 to 3 Tbsp water and turn to coat the potatoes in the sauce well. Reduce the heat to low, loosely cover the pan, and cook for 3 to 5 minutes until hot and cooked through. Garnish with cilantro and serve.

PURI

Puri—fried flatbread that puffs up like a bellows—is a favorite companion to aloo dum (previous recipe) on Darjeeling gardens, especially for guests or on special occasions. (Chapatis and parathas are other daily options.) Puri is also a classic snack combo in the north of the country with a glass of masala chai. Puri never tastes better than when eaten on an Indian railway platform during—or better, after—a long train journey.

Makes about 12 puri:

2 cups/250 g atta flour or an equal blend of whole-wheat flour and all-purpose flour (see note below)

½ tsp salt

1 Tbsp vegetable oil plus more for deep-frying