Sindh cuisine
Karachi Chana Chaat with Masala
Karachi Chana Chaat with Masala is a traditional Sindh Pakistani dish. Karachi's beloved chana chaat — boiled chickpeas tossed with chopped tomatoes, onions, fresh coriander, green chilli, tamarind chutney and a generous dose of chaat masala. Quick, tangy, spicy and completely addictive — the street food that built Karachi's snack culture.
Karachi chana chaat is assembled, not cooked — and that's its genius.
Chana chaat reflects Karachi's cosmopolitan food culture — the spice combination of chaat masala uses tamarind and black salt, ingredients with roots in both North Indian and Sindhi cooking. Everything comes together cold in under 15 minutes, yet the combination of textures and flavours is more sophisticated than most dishes that take hours. This is the power of chaat: the alchemy of sweet (tamarind), sour (lemon), salty (chaat masala), spicy (green chilli) and cool (yoghurt, if you add it). Karachi's version specifically is known for its generous use of chaat masala and a more tangy-forward flavour profile compared to the sweeter Delhi or Lahori versions. Fun fact: 'chaat' comes from the Hindi/Urdu verb 'chaatna' — to lick. Named for the fact that the bold flavours make you lick every last drop off your fingers. There is no higher compliment in street food culture than being named after the act of enjoying yourself.
Ingredients
Instructions
- PREP THE CHICKPEAS: If using tinned chanay, drain and rinse well under cold water. If using dried, boil soaked chickpeas until tender but not mushy — they should hold their shape when pressed. Cool completely. HINT: Warm chickpeas absorb the dressing differently — chilled chickpeas give a cleaner, fresher chaat.
- PREP THE FRESH INGREDIENTS: Finely dice tomatoes (seeds removed), onion and green chilli. Roughly chop coriander. Having everything prepped and ready means the assembly goes smoothly and quickly.
- COMBINE: In a large bowl, combine chickpeas, tomatoes, onion and green chilli. Add tamarind chutney, lemon juice, chaat masala and salt. Toss everything together well. Taste — it should be tangy, salty, slightly sweet and well-spiced. Adjust any element as needed.
- ASSEMBLE AND GARNISH: Transfer to serving bowls or a large plate. Scatter fresh coriander generously on top. Sprinkle red chilli powder and a final shake of chaat masala. Top with crispy sev for crunch. Serve immediately.
Chef's Secrets
- Taste-balance is everything in chaat — it should have tanginess, sweetness, heat and salt all at once. Adjust one element at a time.
- Make the chickpeas and chop the vegetables ahead, but only toss with chutney and lemon juice right before serving — otherwise it gets watery.
- Add 2 tbsp of dahi (yoghurt) for a creamy dahi chana chaat variation that's equally popular in Karachi.
- The sev on top must be added at the last second — it goes soft in 5 minutes if added too early.
Common Questions
How long does Karachi Chana Chaat with Masala take to make?
Total time is 15m.
How many servings does this recipe make?
This recipe makes 4 servings, and is rated easy difficulty.
Which region of Pakistan is Karachi Chana Chaat with Masala from?
Karachi Chana Chaat with Masala is from Sindh, Pakistan — one of the country's most distinctive culinary traditions.
What do you serve with Karachi Chana Chaat with Masala?
Serve in small bowls or on small plates as a snack or starter. Perfect alongside samosas at iftaar. Also a brilliant quick lunch on its own. Can be made into a more substantial meal by adding cubed boiled potato (aloo).
Goes Well With
Karachi Chana Chaat
Karachi Chana Chaat is the city's most beloved street snack — spiced boiled chickpeas tossed with crunchy onions, tangy tomatoes, tart imli (tamarind) chutney, cool dahi (yoghurt), and a snowfall of masalas. Every bite is simultaneously sweet, sour, spicy, and salty — a flavour explosion that Karachi has made its own.
Bun Kebab Karachi Style
Karachi's original street burger — a spiced lentil patty tucked in a bun with sweet-tangy chutney, egg wash, and raw onions. The 50-rupee meal that punches above its weight.
Pakistani Spring Rolls
Crispy golden rolls with a halal chicken and vegetable filling — a Pakistani Chinese staple that shows up at every family dawat, school canteen, and street-side Chinese stall from Karachi to Lahore.
What Cooks Are Saying
Incredible depth of flavour. The spice balance is just right — not too hot, not too mild.
I've tried many recipes for this dish but this one is the best by far.
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