- Posted on May 15, 2026
- By Jyoti Yadav
- In Food & Cooking
Matar Kulcha Recipe That Feeds Four for ₹80
My Story with This Recipe
Matar kulcha has always been my first choice whenever I step out for street food. There is something about it that feels light on the stomach but still fills you up completely and I never have to think twice before ordering it.
But this time, I decided to try it at home.
And honestly? That one decision changed everything.
I made a simple, oil-free version with whatever I had in my kitchen and when we all sat down to eat, all four of us were full. Completely, comfortably full. For just ₹80 total.
That’s when it hit me. Outside, we pay ₹80 for a single plate. One plate. And we never really stop to think about how it’s being prepared, how clean the water is, or how fresh the ingredients actually are. We just eat it because it’s there and it smells good.
At home, I knew exactly what went in. No excess oil. No shortcuts. No guessing.
It was light, it was budget-friendly, and it tasted just as good maybe even better — because I made it myself.
That’s why I wanted to share this recipe with you. Because if four people can eat well, eat clean, and feel full for ₹80, that’s something worth knowing.
Simple Ingredients
- 1.5 cups White matar (dried white peas)Soaked overnight

- 4Kulcha (store-bought)Or plain naan, pav, or even plain bread
- 1 tspCumin seeds
- 1 mediumOnion, finely chopped
- 2 tspGinger-garlic pasteFresh is lovely, but the jar kind works fine
- 2Tomatoes, chopped to taste.Salt, cumin powder, coriander powder, chaat masala
- 1 tspAmchur (dry mango powder)Gives that tangy, street-food soul
- HandfulFresh coriander leavesOptional, but makes it look like love

Steps to Prepare
1.Pressure cook the matar — Drain the soaked peas, add fresh water and a pinch of salt, and pressure cook for 3–4 whistles until soft.
2.Add the matar and spices — Pour the cooked peas into the bowl. Add chopped onion, tomatoe, imli water, lemon juice, cumin powder, coriander powder, salt, chaat masala, and amchur. Stir well and let it rest for 8–10 minutes so the flavours can find each other.
3.Warm the kulcha — Toast them lightly on a tawa or dry pan for a minute each side. That slightly crisp edge is everything.
4. Serve and breathe — Ladle the matar into a bowl, scatter coriander on top, add a little raw onion and a squeeze of lemon if you like. Eat slowly. You’ve earned this.
How This Recipe Saved Me Money
A full bowl of matar kulcha at our local dhaba costs ₹120–₹150. I made enough for four people at home for roughly ₹80 total. Here’s where the savings really come from:
Dried white peas are one of the cheapest pantry staples a whole bag costs less than a single coffee.
Minimal fuel just one pressure cooker round and a short simmer. No oven, no elaborate frying.
No outside food order ,no delivery fee, no packaging markup, no impulse add-ons.
The matar keeps well in the fridge for 2–3 days, so one cook gives you multiple meals.
Why This Recipe Is Healthy
Protein
Naturally plant-based
White peas are quietly high in protein and fibre, keeping you full and steady — no afternoon crash.
Digestion
Gentle on the gut
Cumin, ginger, and coriander have been used in Indian kitchens for centuries to settle the stomach and ease bloating.
Iron & minerals
More than it looks
Legumes are quietly rich in iron and magnesium the kind of nourishment you don’t notice until you feel better.
Mood
Warmth from within
Warm, spiced food genuinely soothes the nervous system. There’s a reason every grandmother reaches for something like this first.
❤️
Why I Love This Recipe
- It’s ready in under 25 minutes
- The spices are flexible. Add more chilli if you need heat. Keep it mild on tender evenings. It adapts to your mood.
- It tastes like something someone cooked for you even when you made it yourself. That matters.
- The leftovers get better overnight. Tomorrow’s lunch is already sorted.
- It asks almost nothing from you no elaborate technique, no special equipment, no hard-to-find ingredient. Just time, and a little tenderness.
Mindful Tip
“On the days when you have the least to give, feed yourself with something that doesn’t ask much from you.”
A warm, simple meal is a small act of self-respect. You don’t have to earn comfort you just have to make it. Even when the kitchen feels like the last place you want to be, ten minutes of quiet stirring can become the softest kind of meditation.
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