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.

Essential for This Recipe

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Yogurt Culture/Starter

Make fresh yogurt for raitas and marinades at home — authentic and cheaper than store-bought

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Green Cardamom Pods (Elaichi)

The fragrant heart of biryanis, pulaos, chai, and desserts — use whole pods for best flavor

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Rose Water (Pure)

For desserts, kheer, and lassi — adds floral elegance to sweet dishes

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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

Cite This Recipe

Writing about Pakistani food? Use these ready-made citations.

Web / Blog <a href="https://pakistani.recipes/recipes/chai/doodh-pati-chai/">Doodh Pati Chai — Pakistani Milk Tea</a> — Pakistani Recipes
Plain Text Ahmed Khan. "Doodh Pati Chai — Pakistani Milk Tea." Pakistani Recipes, 2024. https://pakistani.recipes/recipes/chai/doodh-pati-chai/
Academic Ahmed Khan. (2024). Doodh Pati Chai — Pakistani Milk Tea. Pakistani Recipes. Retrieved 2026-05-22, from https://pakistani.recipes/recipes/chai/doodh-pati-chai/

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.