The Hindu (Coimbatore)

Is on her love a air with tea sprinkled with fascinatin­g family stories from across generation­s

Mira Manek’s latest book

- Nidhi Adlakha nidhi.adlakha@thehindu.co.in

t was after writing her second book Prajñā: Ayurvedic Rituals for Happiness, that UK-based author Mira Manek realised the value behind everyday rituals. An important one was brewing her daily cup of tea.“I have always had a love aair with chai, and more speci cally with spices that are always a part of my brew, even before I started drinking tea itself,” says Mira , whose latest book delves into her love for the beverage, and her family memories linked with it. Book of Chai (published by Penguin Random House)released on April 29 and comes with over 60 recipes peppered with anecdotes about the history of tea, its health bene ts, and Mira’s personal stories revolving around the drink.

Mira explains how she grew up drinking ukaro, a drink with milk and spices

Ibrewed together, with sugar. “I never thought or planned to make chai my business,” she says, of Chai by Mira, her brand in the UK, wherein she also supplies to cafes and restaurant­s, “and de nitely did not think I would write a book on chai. But, as with all that I’ve done in life, it happened very organicall­y. I bring together my love for India, spices, storytelli­ng… those of my grandmothe­r growing up in Gujarat with her maternal grandmothe­r (nani), while her own family and mother were in Mombasa, Kenya,and her memories of her nani making chai in the morning,” says the author. The book (that she started writing in 2022) takes readers through a brief history of tea, ingredient­s to brew the perfect cup, chai with spices, herbs; regional variations of the beverage; and a section of cooking with chai. The latter comprises dishes such as sweet miso chai porridge, saron chia muesli, vanilla chai chia pots, among others. “What transpired when I started writing the book,” says Mira, “was that the stories became the focus, and the history was equally important, which took many hours and days to research. I visited the archives at the Royal Botanical Gardens at Kew in the UK a number of times to read through their incredible array of books.”

The recipes, “cover many if not all of the regional recipes of chai throughout India, spice variations, tea with and without milk, tea made with salt and so many others, but I’ve also sprinkled in my own creations like a spiced melted hot chocolate,” says Mira, who enjoys her tea with a home spice blend, freshly grated ginger, and sometimes additional cardamom and a little saron.

The Book of Chai is dedicated to Mira’s grandmothe­r. “There’s a story of her eight-month pilgrimage back to India with my grandfathe­r and their three young boys years later, of the one trunk they carried with them,” she adds, “I also have stories of my own experience­s of the Mahashivra­tri mela in Junagadh, and of serving chai at the foothill of Mount Kailas.”

Considerin­g the book is dedicated to tea, sections on coee and short eats also make their way into the book. Mira says the history of coee in India, surprising­ly, is older than that of tea, though the history of spices is the most ancient. “So, it’s important to touch upon coee being older than tea,” she says, adding that the tea pairings with varied snacks from across the country could not be missed. “From freshly fried pakora and chai in the monsoons to biscuits dunked in chai… the list is endless. I’ve also given my own take on recipes as well such as the masala chai cake, spiced overnight oats, and saron biscuits.”

The book is available on amazon.in

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