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7 must-try street foods from Indore

etimes.in | Last updated on - Oct 26, 2025, 12:00 IST
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1/8

7 must-try street foods from Indore

Indore isn’t a city you just visit. You eat it. You breathe in the sizzling oil, the crunch of namkeen, the warm waft of ghee, and a bold culture that believes food is happiness served on a plate. The streets here don’t wait for a festival to celebrate, every evening feels like a joyful parade of flavours. And if you ever end up at Sarafa Bazaar after sundown, you’ll see exactly why Indore is called the food capital of Madhya Pradesh. Its pride lies not in fancy restaurants, but in the stalls that feed thousands with a smile, a joke, and a guarantee that you’ll be back. So if you’re heading to Indore, come hungry. Here are seven legendary street foods that define the city’s taste, each one with a loyal fanbase of its own.

2/8

Poha-Jalebi - The perfect morning relationship

Poha anywhere else is just a breakfast. In Indore, it’s an emotion. Light, fluffy poha tempered with mustard seeds, onions, lemon, and coriander - topped with sev. Then comes the twist: a swirl of hot, crispy jalebis on the side. It’s sweet meets savoury, comfort meets chaos, a pairing that makes no logical sense, yet feels absolutely right. Head to Rajwada early morning and you’ll find people crowding around the most popular stalls, pairing their plate with a cutting chai and the city’s laid-back charm.

3/8

Bhutte ka kees - Corn like you’ve never tasted it

Indore takes something as simple as corn and turns it into a creamy street delight. Fresh grated corn simmers with milk, ghee, mustard seeds, and spices until it becomes a soft, fragrant mixture - almost like a warm comfort for the taste buds. It’s light, mildly sweet, and absolute monsoon heaven. Sarafa Bazaar is the best place to try it, especially from vendors who have perfected the “kees” for decades.

4/8

Garadu - Winter’s favourite crispy addiction

When cold winds blow, Indoris start craving garadu. These are purple yams - first boiled, then double-fried to crunchy perfection, and tossed in a spicy masala that hits you like a firework. You’ll take one bite, tell yourself you’ll stop at two, and finish the entire paper cone before you even realize. Garadu is more than food — It’s winter therapy.

5/8

Joshi Dahi Bada - Where food turns into theatre

If street food had performers, Joshi Ji would be the headliner. This isn’t just a dahi bada stall - it’s a live show. Watch as he flips, spins, and throws the soft bada into a bowl with flawless precision, then seasons it with the best of his spices. You’ll be applauding before you even taste it. Then comes the real magic, the bada melts the moment it touches your tongue. The curd is silky, the spice is perfect, and the famous “aerated curd trick” makes it feel like eating a cloud.

6/8

Khopra Patties - The crunchy surprise

From the outside, they look like regular potato patties. But crack one open and you discover a soft, coconut-stuffed centre that’s sweet, spicy, and full of personality. A drizzle of tangy chutney, a sprinkle of sev, and suddenly you’re chasing that next bite like an obsession. Khopra patties are one of Chappan Dukan’s most iconic offerings, and once you try them, you’ll understand the hype.

7/8

Mawa bati - Dessert that plays by its own rules

Think of mawa bati as gulab jamun’s dramatic Indori cousin. It’s bigger, richer, and has a bold personality - stuffed with dry fruits, deep-fried until the edges caramelize, and soaked in sugar syrup thick enough to make dentists nervous. One bite and the filling oozes warmth, a sugar-high that tastes like celebration. If your sweet tooth isn’t satisfied in Indore, you didn’t try the right mithai.

8/8

Sabak (sabudana khichdi) - The street snack that loves fitness

Sometimes, healthy food gets accused of being bland. Indore disagreed and gave sabudana khichdi the glow-up of a lifetime. The pearls stay separate, soft but not sticky, tossed with peanuts, spices, lime, and coriander. Vendors crown it with sev, pomegranate seeds, and sometimes a tangy secret chutney. It’s delicious yet light and funnily enough, most people in Indore eat it even when they’re not fasting.

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Copyright © Jun 4, 2026, 09.54AM IST Bennett, Coleman & Co. Ltd. All rights reserved. For reprint rights: Times Syndication Service