Recipes / Karak

Karak Chai

The Gulf's midnight fuel. Strong, sweet, unapologetic.

Beginner-friendly 15 min Home kitchenCafe bar Stovetop only
Step-by-step, with built-in timers
Instructions for

Same drink, three depths. Switch anytime — beginner steps assume no scale, barista steps assume no fear.

Karak means "strong", and the cafeteria classic of the Gulf earns the name: tea boiled hard, sweetened generously, and made silky with evaporated milk. It is the drink of late-night drives and roadside counters — and it is absolutely makeable at home.

The method · Beginner

Boil tea hard in water

Water, tea, and crushed cardamom into the pan. Boil properly — harder than feels polite — until the liquid is dark mahogany.

⏱ 4:00 timer in guided mode

Add sugar into the boil

Sugar goes in while it boils. In karak, sugar is an ingredient cooking with the tea, not a garnish at the end.

⏱ 1:00 timer in guided mode

Pour in evaporated milk

Add the evaporated milk — this, not fresh milk, is what gives karak its signature body — and bring it back to the boil.

⏱ 2:00 timer in guided mode

Simmer it down

Lower the heat and let it simmer and thicken slightly. The longer it goes, the more "karak" it gets. 3–5 minutes is the sweet spot.

⏱ 3:00 timer in guided mode

Strain from height

Strain into small glasses, pouring from a little height for a light froth. Drink it hot, drink it now.

↑  Level it up

Evaporated milk, a genuinely hard boil, and a visible reduction are non-negotiable. Enthusiasts pull it between vessels; baristas treat the 10–15 % reduction as a spec, not a vibe.

Questions we always get

Can I use regular milk?

You will get good milky chai, not karak. Evaporated milk's concentrated milk solids are the drink's identity. Condensed milk works too — skip the sugar.

Why is cafeteria karak so much better?

Volume and time — pots that simmer for hours — plus fearless sugar. Match the reduction step and pull it from height; you will get 90 % of the way there.