Butter Tea -- Po Cha
YoWangdu owner Lobsang Wangdu shares his personal recipe for butter tea recipe, also called po cha. Po cha is the most typical Tibetan drink. In Tibet many people drink it all day long because it heats them up.
Ingredients:
- Water
- Plain black tea (in bags or loose)
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 2 tablespoons butter
- 1/2 cup milk or 1 teaspoon milk powder
Materials:
One churn, blender, or large drink container with a tight lid.

The Old Way of Preparing Butter Tea
In Tibet, the process of making butter tea takes a long time and is pretty complicated. People use a special black tea that comes from an area called Pemagul in Tibet. The tea comes in bricks of different shapes, and we crumble off some tea and boil it for many hours. We save the liquid from the boiling and then whenever we want to make tea, we add some of that liquid, called chaku, to our boiling water. For the butter and milk, Tibetans used to, and still do, use yak butter and yak milk.
Preparing the Tea
Lucky for us, it is much easier to make po cha outside of Tibet. You can use any kind of milk you want, though I think the full fat milk is the best, and sometimes I use Half and Half, which is half cream and half milk.) Most Tibetan people who live outside of Tibet use Lipton tea, or some kind of plain black tea.
This po cha recipe is for four people, more or less.
- First boil five to six cups of water, then turn down the fire.
- Put three bags of tea or two heaping tablespoon of loose tea in the water and boil again for a couple of minutes.
- Take out the tea bags or if you use loose tea, strain the tea leaves.
- Pour your tea, one quarter of a teaspoon of salt, two tablespoons of butter, and a half cup of milk or a teaspoon of milk powder into a chandong, which is a kind of churn. Since churns are kind of rare outside of Tibet, you can do what some Tibetans do, which is to use any big container with a lid, so you can shake the tea, or you can just use a blender, which works very well.
- Churn, blend or shake the mixture for two or three minutes. In Tibet, we think the po cha tastes better if you churn it longer.
Serve the tea right away, since po cha is best when it's very hot.
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