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Chana Masala
🍛 Curry · Level 1

Chana Masala

Street food chana masala — chickpeas dry-coated in an intense spice masala. Not the restaurant gravy version. The version served in paper cones at every chaat stall in India.

Prep15 min
Cook45 min
Serves4
Level1 — Beginner
🥬 Vegetarian🌱 Vegan🟡 Jain (omit onion/garlic)

Street food chana versus restaurant chana

There are two distinct versions of chana masala. The restaurant version is a saucy curry — the same technique as chole. The street food version is semi-dry: chickpeas coated in an intensely spiced, slightly tangy masala with little to no gravy. This is the version served with bhatura, with puri, and at every chaat stall. The key differences are more spice, less water, and the use of anardana (pomegranate powder) and black salt for the characteristic street-food tang.

⚠️Common mistakes to avoid
  • Too much water — Street-food chana is semi-dry. The masala should coat the chickpeas, not pool beneath them.
  • Skipping black salt — Kala namak (black salt) provides the sulphurous, distinctive tang of street-food chaat that regular salt cannot replicate.
  • Mild spicing — Street-food chana is assertively spiced. Under-spiced versions are flat.
  • Not mashing some chickpeas — Mashing 20% thickens the masala coating.
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Ingredients

Chana Masala
4 servings
Chickpeas
  • 400gkabuli chana (chickpeas)— soaked overnight and cooked, or 2 tins
  • 1black tea bag— for colour if cooking from dried
Masala
  • 3 tbspoil
  • 1 tspcumin seeds
  • 1large onion, finely chopped
  • 1 tbspginger paste
  • 2tomatoes, finely chopped
  • 2 tspchana masala powder
  • 1 tspKashmiri chilli powder
  • 1 tspcoriander powder
  • ½ tspturmeric
  • 1 tspamchur
  • ½ tspanardana powder
  • ¼ tspkala namak (black salt)
  • ½ tspgaram masala
  • Fresh coriander, green chilli, ginger julienneto finish
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How to make it — step by step

Step 1
Cook chickpeas with tea
⏱ 45 min from dried⚡ Tea for colour

If using dried chickpeas: soak overnight, pressure cook with tea bag for 6 whistles. Drain, reserve some liquid. If using tinned: simmer with tea bag 15 minutes, drain.

🔬The Science

As with chole, the tea bag adds tannins that stain the chickpeas a characteristic dark colour while adding mild astringency. Tannins bind to the chickpea's outer coat proteins via hydrogen bonds, producing colour that persists through the subsequent masala cooking without washing out.

Step 2
Build and bhuno the masala
⏱ 20 min🔥 Medium-high then high

Fry cumin seeds in oil. Add onion, cook 12 minutes until golden. Add ginger, cook 2 minutes. Add tomatoes, chana masala, Kashmiri chilli, coriander, turmeric. Bhuno on high until oil separates — 10 minutes.

🔬The Science

The chana masala spice blend contains black cardamom, whose camphor-like volatile compounds (cineole) are heat-stable relative to other aromatics — they benefit from the longer bhuno rather than being destroyed by it. Adding the complex spice blend at the bhuno stage allows each component to undergo its optimal extraction — oil-soluble terpenes extract into the fat phase, water-soluble compounds extract into the tomato water, and volatile aromatics concentrate as water evaporates.

Step 3
Add chickpeas — keep it dry
⏱ 10 min🔥 Medium

Add chickpeas to masala. Add only 100ml of cooking liquid — keep this semi-dry. Mash 20% of chickpeas. Cook 8 minutes, stirring frequently. Add amchur, anardana, kala namak, garam masala. Cook 2 more minutes. Finish with coriander, green chilli slices and ginger julienne.

🔬The Science

Kala namak (black salt) contains hydrogen sulphide — the same compound responsible for the smell of hard-boiled eggs. In small quantities, this sulphurous note contributes the distinctive savoury, slightly eggy character that defines street-food chaat. It is not a substitute for regular salt — it is a flavour compound that cannot be replicated by any other ingredient. The three-sour combination (amchur + anardana + kala namak) creates the complex, layered tanginess that characterises North Indian street food.

Chana Masala — answered
What is the difference between chana masala and chole?
In practice they overlap significantly. Chole (Punjabi) tends to be darker, more heavily spiced with whole spices, and uses anardana prominently. Chana masala is a broader term often used for the tomato-based curry version or the street food dry version. Both use kabuli chana (white chickpeas). Outside Punjab, the terms are used interchangeably.
What is kala namak and where do I find it?
Kala namak (black salt or Himalayan black salt) is a volcanic rock salt from South Asia with high hydrogen sulphide content — it smells strongly of hard-boiled eggs. Available at all Indian grocery stores and online. It turns pale pink when ground. Use sparingly — it is flavour active, not just salty.
Can I make this without chana masala powder?
Yes: combine 1 tsp coriander, ½ tsp cumin, ½ tsp black cardamom, ¼ tsp clove, ¼ tsp dry ginger, ¼ tsp cinnamon. This is a simplified version of the blend.
What do I serve chana masala with?
Bhatura (deep-fried bread) for the classic chole-bhature combination. Puri for street-style. Kulcha (soft leavened bread) for a lighter option. Plain basmati rice also works for a more everyday meal.
Why does my chana masala lack the street food flavour?
Missing kala namak and anardana — these two ingredients provide the distinctive street-food tang. Also check that the chana masala powder is fresh — old powder loses its volatile aromatics quickly.