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​5 Indian snacks with different names and recipes across states​

etimes.in | Last updated on - Sep 12, 2025, 15:00 IST
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5 Indian snacks with different names and recipes across states

India speaks in hundreds of languages, and food borrows from each one. A snack that feels comforting in one city might greet you with a new name and even a slightly different personality in another. Travel across the country and you’ll notice it: puffed rice tossed in unique ways, fritters renamed, breads stuffed and folded with regional pride. Curious to know how? Here are five everyday favorites that prove food stories travel just as widely as the people who eat them.

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Puffed rice mixes - Jhal Muri, Bhel, Churmuri

A fistful of puffed rice is a great equalizer: cheap, filling, endlessly adaptable. In Kolkata, it grows sharp and fiery as Jhal Muri, with mustard oil, chillies, and roasted peanuts stinging the tongue. In Mumbai, the same idea mellows into Bhel Puri, sweetened with tamarind chutney, balanced with sev, and eaten on the move at chowpatty. In Karnataka, it lightens into Churmuri, freshened with grated carrot, coconut, and coriander. Three names, three tempers - the same puffed grain shifting accents as easily as a traveller.

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Stuffed flatbreads - Paratha, Parotta, Bhakshyam

Nothing says comfort like dough wrapped around filling. In Punjab, the paratha rules: a circle of wheat dough stuffed with spiced potato or any number of veggies, fried crisp on a tawa, and finally drowned in melting butter. Move south, and the dough folds itself differently: Kerala’s parotta, flaky, layered and eaten with peppery curries. In Telangana or Andhra, the tradition sweetens into Bhakshyalu, where jaggery or lentils go inside, blurring the line between snack and dessert. Different flours, different folds, but the same instinct; bread that carries something hidden within.

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Fritters - Pakora, Bhajiya, Bajji

Rain in India has a taste, and it’s fried. In Delhi, it’s Pakora: potatoes, onions, or spinach dipped in chickpea batter and fried crisp, best with mint chutney and hot chai. In Gujarat, the same batter is used to make Bhajiyas, often lighter, eaten with green chutney and fried chilli. Down south, they’re Bajji, where raw bananas, chillies, or even bread meet the oil. The spelling and spice may shift, but the idea is unchanged: monsoon, tea, and something golden crackling from the kadhai.

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Sweet spirals - Jalebi, Jilipi, Imarti, Zulbia

Few shapes are as instantly recognizable as that syrup-soaked spiral. In Delhi, it’s Jalebi, eaten hot with milk or rabri, a festival constant. In Bengal, it thickens into Jilipi, chewier, sometimes part of breakfast. In Uttar Pradesh and Madhya Pradesh, it swells into Imarti, made from urad dal instead of flour, heavier and more floral. Follow the trail back far enough and you meet Zulbia in the Middle East, its ancestor. The spiral survives, the name bends, history lingers in the sweetness.

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Pani puri - Golgappa, Puchka, Gupchup

If any snack reveals the passion of Indian eaters, it’s this one. In Maharashtra and Gujarat, it’s Pani Puri: hollow shells cracked open, filled with spiced water and potato. In Delhi, it sharpens into Golgappa, tangy and spicier. In Bengal and Bihar, it’s puchka, the stuffing is sour with tamarind and mashed potato. In Odisha and Chhattisgarh, it’s Gupchup, a playful name, like the sound of quick eating. The fillings shift, the spice levels fight, but the thrill of that first watery burst is the same everywhere.

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Copyright © Jun 3, 2026, 07.49AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service