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​7 must-have snacks to carry when visiting abroad​

etimes.in | Last updated on - Oct 10, 2025, 15:00 IST
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1/8

7 must-have snacks to carry when visiting abroad

There’s a particular ache that sets in when you’re away from home. Not homesickness exactly, more a craving that no fancy chocolate bar or packet of crisps quite cures. Indian snacks travel differently. They are not just fillers for hunger but edible anchors, memory folded into flour, spice bottled in oil, crunch baked into habit. Slip them into your luggage and they turn airport waits, long bus rides, and strange hotel rooms into spaces that feel a little more yours. Here are seven must-have treats to carry when visiting abroad.

2/8

Namkeen mixture

Every handful is chaos and comfort. Sev that shatters, aloo bhujiya that cling to spice, puffed rice that melts on the tongue. In royal-sized tins at home or crinkled pouches abroad, namkeen mixture carries the hum of chai breaks and train journeys. On a long-haul flight, it saves you from another rubbery bread roll. Abroad, it tastes like chatter around the living room.

3/8

Khakra

Flat, crisp, and endlessly dependable. Khakra travels well across continents, keeping its texture and flavour intact. Break one open on a train, in a park, or at a hotel, and its roasted aroma brings a comforting taste of home. Methi, masala, jeera - each one is a slice of Gujarat rolled thin and cooked slow. The crunch is steadying, almost meditative, a sound that belongs to home even in the most anonymous corner of the world.

4/8

Masala peanuts

A simple nut, given flair. Roasted till golden, dusted in spice that leaves fingers tingling. Abroad, these nuts pair perfectly with meals that can often feel less masaledar, adding a punch of flavour. They slip easily into pockets, ready for when hunger arrives mid-museum tour or on an overnight bus. Protein, spice, and crunch in one bite. Small, yes, but sometimes small is exactly the comfort you need.

5/8

Thepla

No Indian family packs a suitcase without them. Thepla is resilience kneaded into dough; soft, spiced, and patient. Properly stored, it can stay fresh for a few days, still folding neatly with pickle and calming hunger that creeps in at odd hours. On a cold morning in a foreign city, unwrapping a thepla feels like someone quietly remembered to take care of you.

6/8

Chakli

Tightly wound spirals that hold the crackle of festivals. Chakli has the bite of rice flour and the warmth of spice, fried till it snaps between teeth. Tins of them have crossed oceans for decades, tucked into luggage beside woollens. On foreign soil, they taste festive even without lights or rangoli. Each bite is a coil of memory, golden and unbreakable.

7/8

Dry Fruit Laddoos

Dense, chewy, rich. Dates, nuts, and ghee pounded together into travel-sized orbs of energy. They keep for weeks, fuel long walking days, and sweeten cold evenings in unfamiliar streets. A single bite delivers the luxury of dry fruit and the warmth of home kitchens. Abroad, they feel less like a snack and more like a blessing.

8/8

Pickle jar

They do not look dramatic, but they change everything. A teaspoon of mango or lemon pickle on plain rice can transform the most joyless hotel meal. Sachets slip into bags, weigh light, and rescue you when the food on your plate feels unfamiliar, polite, and too quiet. One bite and the spice hits like memory itself; fiery, unapologetic, alive.

Top Comment
J
John Fernandes
232 days ago
Doubt if any European countries, and or Australia, New Zealand will allow your snacks and pickles thru their border stations. If this article is for people visiting India States or immediate neighbouring countries then I would agree with this article.
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Copyright © Jun 1, 2026, 10.26PM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service