13 recipes

Meethi Lassi — Sweet Punjabi Yoghurt Drink

Meethi Lassi — Sweet Punjabi Yoghurt Drink

Punjab

Meethi lassi is Punjab's legendary sweet yoghurt drink — thick churned dahi (yoghurt) blended with sugar, cardamom, and sometimes rose water, topped with a thick layer of malai (cream). It is Pakistan's most refreshing summer drink and the original desi smoothie.

Doodh Pati Chai — Pakistani Milk Tea

Doodh Pati Chai — Pakistani Milk Tea

Punjab

Doodh pati chai is Pakistan's national drink — tea brewed entirely in full-fat milk with no water, producing an intensely creamy, deeply rich cup that bears little resemblance to the tea served anywhere else on earth. Strong, sweet, and non-negotiable.

Hunza Gurgur Chai (Butter Tea)

Hunza Gurgur Chai (Butter Tea)

Gilgit-Baltistan

Hunza Valley's ancient salted butter tea — brewed strong, blended with butter and salt until creamy and emulsified, served in a bowl and drunk piping hot. Surprising, nourishing, and one of the most shareable 'unexpected Pakistani food' stories you'll ever tell.

Kahwah — Peshawari Saffron Green Tea

Kahwah — Peshawari Saffron Green Tea

KP

Kahwah is the soul of Peshawari hospitality — a fragrant, golden green tea simmered gently with green cardamom, cinnamon, cloves, and a pinch of saffron, served with whole almonds floating on top and a drizzle of honey. It is warmth in a cup, and it will make your kitchen smell like a spice market in the best possible way.

Green Tea Kahwah — Kashmiri Valley Style

Green Tea Kahwah — Kashmiri Valley Style

KP

The authentic Kashmiri green tea blend — saffron, cardamom, cinnamon, and crushed almonds in fragrant green tea. This is the real kahwah that Kashmiris have been brewing for over a millennium, worlds apart from any commercial version.

Saffron Kahwah — Premium Celebration Blend

Saffron Kahwah — Premium Celebration Blend

KP

The elevated, saffron-forward kahwah reserved for weddings and special guests — a richer, more aromatic brew with crushed pistachios, rose petals, and a generous hand with the saffron.

Gurgur Chai — Hunza Butter Tea

Gurgur Chai — Hunza Butter Tea

KP

The warming, savory butter tea of Hunza and Gilgit-Baltistan — strong tea churned with salt and butter (traditionally yak butter) into a thick, sustaining beverage that has kept mountain communities warm for centuries.

Karachi Falooda with Rose Syrup

Karachi Falooda with Rose Syrup

Sindh

Karachi's iconic falooda layered with rose syrup, chilled milk, basil seeds, vermicelli, and a crown of vanilla ice cream — the ultimate street food dessert drink. This layered glass of joy is what Karachi summers are made of, and now you can make it at home.

Namkeen Lassi — Lahori Salted Buttermilk

Namkeen Lassi — Lahori Salted Buttermilk

Punjab

Frothy Lahori namkeen lassi made with thick dahi, chilled water, salt, roasted cumin and a pinch of kala namak — blended until light and airy. The savoury alternative to sweet lassi that serious Lahori breakfast spots swear by, and the world's best digestive drink.

Mango Lassi — Summer Special

Mango Lassi — Summer Special

Punjab

Thick, creamy mango lassi blended from ripe Pakistani mangoes, full-fat yoghurt and a touch of cardamom — the drink that defines a Pakistani summer. Sweet, cool, and thirst-destroying, this is peak seasonal simplicity in a glass.

Karak Chai — KP Street Tea

Karak Chai — KP Street Tea

KP

Bold, brassy KP-style karak chai made by simmering loose tea leaves hard in water before adding full-fat milk, simmering again, and serving strong enough to wake up a whole baithak. The Pashtun chai standard — dark, punchy, barely sweetened, deeply satisfying.

Adrak Wali Chai — Ginger Tea

Adrak Wali Chai — Ginger Tea

Punjab

Warming Punjabi adrak wali chai (ginger tea) made by simmering crushed fresh ginger with tea leaves, milk and cardamom into a fragrant, throat-soothing cup. The go-to chai for cold days, monsoon mornings, and any time your body is asking for something comforting.

Kashmiri Pink Chai — Noon Chai

Kashmiri Pink Chai — Noon Chai

KP

Authentic Kashmiri noon chai (pink tea) made by brewing Kashmiri gunpowder tea with baking soda until it turns deep red, then adding cold milk which magically transforms it into a beautiful rose-pink colour. Served salted and topped with cream and crushed pistachios.

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