Meethi Lassi — Sweet Punjabi Yoghurt Drink

Punjab cuisine

Meethi Lassi — Sweet Punjabi Yoghurt Drink

Prep: 10m Cook: 0m Total: 10m Serves: 2 easy Updated 2024-07-30

Meethi Lassi — Sweet Punjabi Yoghurt Drink is a traditional Punjab Pakistani dish. 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.

If you've ever spent a summer in Lahore, you know that meethi lassi is not optional — it is survival. Served in tall clay kulhars (earthen cups) that keep it cool, or in oversized glasses piled high with malai (cream), a good Punjabi lassi is thick enough to slow a spoon and cold enough to make your eyes water happily.

The word 'lassi' comes from the sound of the wooden madhani (churning stick) — 'luss luss luss' — as it was spun between the palms to churn the dahi. The Lahori meethi lassi is distinct from its thinner Indian cousins: it is aggressively thick, deeply cold, and the malai floating on top is generous enough to be considered a separate food group.

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. CHILL EVERYTHING: For the best meethi lassi, your dahi (yoghurt) and bartan (bowl) should be cold before you start. Place the yoghurt in the freezer for 15 minutes if it's not fridge-cold. HINT: Warm yoghurt makes a lukewarm lassi. Lassi must be cold enough to produce condensation on the glass — that's the goal. FUN FACT: Traditional Punjabi lassi is made with a madhani (wooden churning stick), spun rapidly between the palms, creating a frothy, aerated texture that no electric blender quite replicates — though a blender comes close.
  2. BLEND THE LASSI: Add dahi (yoghurt), cold pani (water) or ice cubes, cheeni (sugar), and freshly ground elaichi (cardamom) to a blender. Blend on high speed for 60-90 seconds until completely smooth, frothy, and slightly aerated. HINT: Don't be shy about blending time — the more you blend, the frothier and lighter the texture. Taste it now: if it needs more sugar, add it and blend for 10 more seconds. The lassi should be pale white, thick enough to coat a spoon but still pourable.
  3. ADD ROSE WATER: If using gulab jal (rose water), stir it in now by hand — do not blend it. Blending causes the delicate rose fragrance to disperse into the foam. A gentle stir keeps the aroma concentrated. Taste once more. HINT: Rose water is potent — go easy. A teaspoon is enough; more than that and you're drinking perfume.
  4. POUR AND FLOAT THE MALAI: Pour the lassi into tall, chilled glasses — fill to about 2cm from the top. Now the most important step: spoon the malai (cream) generously over the surface. A proper Lahori lassi has a thick cap of malai you almost have to eat before you can drink. Float it gently so it sits on top rather than mixing in. HINT: Use a spoon held close to the surface and pour the cream over the back of the spoon slowly — same technique as floating cream on Irish coffee.
  5. GARNISH AND SERVE: Sprinkle crushed pista (pistachios) over the malai. If feeling extravagant, add a tiny pinch of saffron strands. Serve immediately with a long spoon or a straw — the traditional way is to stir the malai into the lassi yourself at the table, getting a bit of cream in every sip. Drink fast — a melting, warming lassi is a disappointment. HINT: Never serve meethi lassi at room temperature. If you're making it for a gathering, keep the blended base in the fridge and add malai just before serving.

Chef's Secrets

  • Full-fat dahi is non-negotiable. The fat is what gives lassi its silky, coating texture. If your yoghurt is watery, strain it first.
  • For the thickest Lahori-style lassi, freeze 2-3 ice cubes made from dahi itself — this thickens the lassi without diluting it as the ice melts.
  • If you don't have malai, use the thick layer that forms on top of refrigerated full-fat milk — carefully scoop it off with a spoon.
  • Blend the lassi for at least 90 seconds — the longer you blend, the more air gets incorporated, which lightens the texture pleasantly.
  • Cardamom and rose water are a classic pairing but don't both need to be heavy — if using generous rose water, use less cardamom, and vice versa.

Common Questions

How long does Meethi Lassi — Sweet Punjabi Yoghurt Drink take to make?

Total time is 10m.

How many servings does this recipe make?

This recipe makes 2 servings, and is rated easy difficulty.

Which region of Pakistan is Meethi Lassi — Sweet Punjabi Yoghurt Drink from?

Meethi Lassi — Sweet Punjabi Yoghurt Drink is from Punjab, Pakistan — one of the country's most distinctive culinary traditions.

What do you serve with Meethi Lassi — Sweet Punjabi Yoghurt Drink?

Serve immediately after blending in tall, chilled glasses. Perfect alongside oily or spicy food — the dahi soothes the heat. A great partner for biryani, nihari, or even a simple paratha. In summer, lassi with paratha is a complete breakfast in Punjab.

Nutrition Facts

Per serving

Calories280
Protein8g
Fat14g
Carbs32g
Sodium95mg

Serving Suggestions

Serve immediately after blending in tall, chilled glasses. Perfect alongside oily or spicy food — the dahi soothes the heat. A great partner for biryani, nihari, or even a simple paratha. In summer, lassi with paratha is a complete breakfast in Punjab.

Goes Well With

Recipe by Ahmed Khan

Ahmed specializes in South Punjabi delicacies, highlighting the use of rich spices and deep flavors.

What Cooks Are Saying

4.3 3 reviews
Nadia Q. 2025-10-16

This is now my go-to recipe. Made it three times already.

Kamran B. 2025-03-19

Great flavours, took a little longer than the stated time but worth every minute.

Waqar N. 2024-12-15

Good recipe, clear instructions. The end result was delicious.

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