Guide details
Best time to visit
Any time, but breakfast (7 to 10am) is when the city eats best
How to get there
Spread across Mylapore, T Nagar and Triplicane
Highlights
Idli, dosa, filter coffee, Chennai biryani, Chettinad curries
Good for
Food lovers, first time visitors, breakfast people
Price range
Rs 30 to Rs 400 per meal
Ask anyone about chennai famous food and they will start with the same three words: idli, dosa and filter coffee, then keep going for another ten minutes because this city cannot stop at three dishes. Chennai eats with real seriousness, from the steam of a roadside idli stall at six in the morning to a slow Chettinad dinner that runs past ten at night. Here is what to try, and where locals actually go for it.
Idli, Dosa and Filter Coffee: The Heart of Chennai Famous Food
Soft idli and a proper dosa with crisp edges are non negotiable in Chennai. Murugan Idli Shop, now a chain with branches across the city, is the safest bet for pillowy idlis with sambar and three types of chutney. For something more old school, head to Karpagambal Mess near Kapaleeshwarar Temple in Mylapore, a no frills institution that has been feeding pilgrims and locals for decades. Ratna Cafe in Triplicane and T Nagar does a masala dosa that regulars will argue about for years. And no meal is complete without filter coffee, made with a metal tumbler and davara, strong enough to wake you and sweet enough to remind you where you are.
Chennai Biryani, From Ambur to Dindigul Style
Chennai biryani is its own thing, lighter and more fragrant than the north Indian version, usually made with seeraga samba rice rather than basmati. Ambur Star Biryani and Buhari, an old hotel on Anna Salai with genuine claims to biryani history in the city, are both worth a visit. Triplicane, with its large Muslim community, is the real biryani neighbourhood, and small shops like Zam Zam serve it with a fried egg and onion raita that just works. Dindigul Thalappakatti has also become a Chennai favourite for its distinctive small grain rice and mutton curry on the side.
Chettinad Food for When You Want Heat
Chettinad cuisine comes from the Chettinad region south of Chennai, but the city has adopted it completely. Ponnusamy Hotel, running since 1963, is one of the originals, known for pepper chicken and kothu parotta. Anjappar, which started as a small Chennai eatery before becoming a national chain, still does a fiery Chettinad chicken curry that will make your eyes water in the best way. Expect black pepper, star anise, fennel and dried red chillies doing most of the work.
Sundal and Marina Beach Snacking
Walk along Marina Beach any evening and you will see vendors selling sundal, a simple, addictive snack of boiled chickpeas or lentils tossed with mustard seeds, curry leaves, coconut and a squeeze of lime. It is especially big during Navratri, when Chennai homes hold golu displays and swap sundal recipes with neighbours. Besant Nagar and Elliot’s Beach have their own steady stream of sundal and bhel puri carts too, best eaten while watching the sun go down over the Bay of Bengal.
Banana Leaf Meals: How Chennai Actually Eats Lunch
A proper Chennai lunch comes on a banana leaf, with rice, sambar, rasam, kootu, poriyal and curd served in a set order that servers know by heart. Saravana Bhavan, which opened its first branch in Mylapore in 1981 and is now known worldwide, is a solid choice, as is Rayar’s Cafe, a tiny Mylapore institution loved for its ghee roast and vadai. Unlimited meals usually cost very little and the staff will keep refilling your leaf until you physically stop them.
More Chennai Famous Food Worth Seeking Out
Beyond the main dishes, save room for sweets from Grand Sweets and Snacks in Adyar or Sri Krishna Sweets, both good for mysore pak and badam halwa to take home. Adyar Ananda Bhavan, known simply as A2B, is reliable for snacks and sweets across the city. If you only remember one thing about chennai famous food, remember this: eat breakfast properly, order the banana leaf meal at least once, and always finish with filter coffee.
Chennai’s food scene rewards patience and a bit of local guidance more than fancy restaurants do. Follow the queues outside the small messes rather than the glossy signboards, and you will eat better for less.
