Love Chai but Hate Acidity - Here’s the Fix
Chai is more than a drink - it’s a ritual, a comfort, a moment of pause.
But if you often feel acidity, burning, or bloating after your chai, Ayurveda offers a gentle reminder:
It’s not the chai—it’s how you make it.
Let’s walk through why your daily tea might be causing discomfort, and the simple Ayurvedic tweaks that let you keep sipping, without side effects
Why Your Chai Might Be Hurting You
Tannins + Milk = Acidic Trouble
Tea leaves contain tannins, a type of polyphenol.
When you overboil tea leaves (which many of us do), these tannins react with casein, the milk protein:
→ Creating an acidic compound
→ Leading to acidity, bloating, and that familiar burning sensation
Too Much Sugar = Blood Sugar Rollercoaster Having 3–4 cups of chai a day?
That’s around 6–8 teaspoons of sugar daily. This can:
Increase pre-diabetic symptoms
Worsen Type 2 diabetes
Cause sugar crashes and hypoglycemia
Ayurvedic Chai: The Healing Alternative
You can still have your chai - it just needs a small ritual shift.
Here’s how to make it delicious, grounding, and digestive- friendly:
Step 1: Start with Water & Spices
Boil water first, then add these powerful Ayurvedic spices:
Cinnamon – Anti-inflammatory, balances blood sugar
Cardamom – Supports oral and digestive health
Clove – Natural pain reliever, great for dental health
Black Pepper – Improves bronchial health, boosts
metabolism
Ginger – Strengthens digestion (jataragni), eases nausea
Star Anise – Antifungal, aromatic, and gut-friendly
Let these spices boil well to activate their medicinal properties.
Step 2: Add Tea Leaves After the Spices
Once the spice water is ready, add your tea leaves and let them steep briefly.
This avoids over-extracting tannins and keeps the chai gentler on your gut.
Step 3: Choose the Right Milk
Strain the spiced tea and add your milk directly to the cup, not into the pot.
Best options:
Almond milk – Light and cooling
Coconut milk – Nourishing and digestive-friendly
Cruelty-free dairy milk – If your body tolerates it well
Avoid boiling milk with tea—adding it fresh preserves nutrients and minimizes digestive stress.
Step 4: Sweeten Smartly
Replace white sugar with one of these Ayurvedic-friendly sweeteners:
Jaggery (gur) – Warming and rich in minerals
Mishri (rock sugar) – Calming for the throat and digestion
Organic stevia – A zero-glycemic plant-based option
Choose organic, minimally processed varieties whenever possible.
Final Sip of Wisdom
Chai isn’t bad—it’s sacred.
But how we prepare it matters.
Ayurveda reminds us that tea made with care, spices, and mindful ingredients becomes a healing ritual, not a source of acidity and imbalance.
Make your next cup count.