The most popular Indian raita — crispy boondi in seasoned yogurt. The timing of soaking boondi determines the final texture.
Boondi raita is the most ordered raita in North Indian restaurants — tiny crispy chickpea pearls (boondi) in chilled, spiced yogurt. The texture question is the whole recipe: add boondi too early and they become completely soft and mushy; add them too late and they are unpleasantly crunchy in the cold yogurt. The window between pleasantly yielding and still slightly crisp is about 10–15 minutes at room temperature.
Whisk yogurt until smooth. Add roasted cumin, red chilli, chaat masala, salt and black salt. Whisk again. Taste and adjust — the yogurt should be well-seasoned on its own because the boondi absorbs some of the seasoning.
Black salt (kala namak) contains hydrogen sulphide compounds that give it a distinctive egg-like, savoury character. In raita, it adds a depth that regular salt cannot replicate. Roasted cumin's cuminaldehyde is fat-soluble — it dissolves into the yogurt fat, distributing throughout the raita. Pre-seasoning the yogurt ensures even flavour distribution before the boondi are added.
Add boondi to the seasoned yogurt. For restaurant texture: serve within 5–10 minutes — some crispiness retained. For home texture: rest 15–20 minutes — completely softened through. Refrigerate until serving.
Boondi are deep-fried chickpea flour pearls with a crispy, porous structure. In yogurt, the moisture penetrates the porous structure via capillary action — the thin channels draw in the liquid. At 5 minutes, only the outer layer is hydrated. At 15–20 minutes, the entire pearl has absorbed moisture and softened completely. The preference between these textures is personal — neither is wrong.