Asima Chatterjee’s menu
Break-time drink (cha)

Adrak Cha — Bengali ginger tea

DrinkDocumented🌶️ 🍯facile10 min

A robust black tea infused with milk, sugar, and crushed fresh ginger, sometimes spiked with a cardamom. Comforting, pungent, it is the drink of all conversations and all working hours.

Break-time drink (cha)

A robust black tea infused with milk, sugar, and crushed fresh ginger, sometimes spiked with a cardamom. Comforting, pungent, it is the drink of all conversations and all working hours.

Work in the laboratory is long, and there is no fatigue that a cup of hot cha cannot dispel. Crush your ginger in a mortar, throw it into the water with the tea, and let it boil vigorously — a timid cha has never woken anyone. Add the milk, the sugar, and let it rise once more. It is at the four o'clock cup that the best ideas are born, believe an old chemist.
Asima Chatterjee
Ingredients
  • Black tea (Assam or Darjeeling)a good pinch (base)
  • Fresh gingera crushed piece (aromatic heat)
  • Milka little (roundness)
  • Sugarto taste (sweetness)
  • Cardamomone pod (optional) (perfume)
How it was made : Sweetened, spiced milk tea spread in India under the British Raj, when the tea industry of Assam and Darjeeling sought a domestic market. The Bengali household adopted and personalized it, ginger being a popular addition, appreciated for its virtues against cold and cough.
Sources : Lizzie Collingham, *Curry: A Tale of Cooks and Conquerors* · K.T. Achaya, *Indian Food: A Historical Companion*

See also