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10 foods and treats that taste like school days

etimes.in | Last updated on - Oct 15, 2025, 15:36 IST
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1/11

10 foods and treats that taste like school days

There’s a special kind of nostalgia that lives in the Indian school canteen, the smell of hot samosas at recess, sticky orange ice candies melting down your fingers, and the quiet scramble to be first in line before the bell rang. It wasn’t about hunger, it was about belonging, the shared laughter, the hurried bites, the joy of spending a five-rupee coin just right. Those simple treats carried more excitement than any café menu ever could. Here are seven foods that can still pull you straight back to those carefree, uniform-wrinkled afternoons.

2/11

Bread Pakora

Nothing announced break time quite like the whiff of bread pakoras frying behind the counter. A crisp gram-flour shell, soft bread, and spicy mashed potato filling - comfort, heat, and crunch rolled into one. Served hot on scraps of newspaper, they disappeared in minutes, tongues singed, fingers greasy, and spirits instantly lifted.

Frooti and Rasna

That small yellow tetra pack was pure power during lunch breaks. Frooti wasn’t just mango juice; it was currency, traded for biscuits, shared with friends, sometimes gulped in secret before PT period. And on special days, someone would bring Rasna from home, that neon-orange drink that tasted exactly like summer, friendship, and a little bit of mischief.

Ice Popsicle

Bright, sticky, and gone in sixty seconds. The ice popsicle was summer’s purest joy, frozen syrup on a stick that left your tongue orange, red, or purple. You’d race friends to finish before it melted, then proudly show off your stained tongue like a badge of honour. Cheap, cold, and utterly satisfying, it was the quickest escape from the afternoon heat.


Tamarind Candy

Sweet, sour, and just a little mischievous, tamarind candy was the real taste of after-school rebellion. Unwrapping that crinkly paper felt like breaking a tiny rule. The first tang made your eyes squint, the next bite hooked you completely. It was pocket-sized chaos, traded in class, popped between lessons, and remembered long after the flavour faded.


Cotton Candy

It looked like a cloud, vanished like magic, and stuck to your face no matter how careful you were. Cotton candy was a festival on a stick, soft, pink, and spun with dreams. Bought outside school fairs or melas, it was less about the taste and more about the moment, the slow dissolve on your tongue, the laughter, and the sugar that felt like happiness itself.


Cream roll

Flaky on the outside, creamy on the inside, and impossible to eat neatly. The bakery-fresh cream roll was the ultimate after-school indulgence. You’d tap the crisp shell till the first crack appeared, then take one glorious bite and end up with sugar dust all over your tie. Somehow, it always felt like a small celebration after math class torture.

Oyes chips

Before “snack brands” became lifestyle choices, there was Oyes - the desi chip packet that turned recess into a mini festival. The sound of that crinkly wrapper tearing open was half the thrill. Each bite was a perfect mix of salt, spice, and that mysterious masala dust that no one could ever replicate. Sharing was rare; licking the orange-red fingers at the end was non-negotiable.

Choco bar and orange stick ice candy

When the last bell rang and the sun felt like fire, the ice cream cart outside the gate was pure salvation. You either went for the grown-up choice, the chocolate-coated Choco Bar or the bright orange ice stick that painted your tongue fluorescent. They always melted too fast, dripping down your hands before you got home but somehow, that was part of the joy.

Instant noodles

Every class had that one kid whose tiffin carried the unmistakable aroma of masala noodles. Teachers frowned, friends hovered, and the lucky one at the back bench instantly turned into the day’s celebrity. Cold, clumpy, or slightly overcooked - it never mattered. That familiar spice mix had more power than any friendship bracelet ever could.

Jam bread

Some mornings, moms didn’t have time to pack elaborate parathas and out came the humble jam bread. Sweet, sticky, slightly squashed by the time recess arrived, it was the taste of chaos and care. Sometimes it had butter or bread was replaced by paratha but it always tasted of home and sneaked into the canteen crowd.

3/11

Frooti and Rasna

That small yellow tetra pack was pure power during lunch breaks. Frooti wasn’t just mango juice; it was currency, traded for biscuits, shared with friends, sometimes gulped in secret before PT period. And on special days, someone would bring Rasna from home, that neon-orange drink that tasted exactly like summer, friendship, and a little bit of mischief.

4/11

Ice Popsicle

Bright, sticky, and gone in sixty seconds. The ice popsicle was summer’s purest joy, frozen syrup on a stick that left your tongue orange, red, or purple. You’d race friends to finish before it melted, then proudly show off your stained tongue like a badge of honour. Cheap, cold, and utterly satisfying, it was the quickest escape from the afternoon heat

5/11

Tamarind Candy

Sweet, sour, and just a little mischievous, tamarind candy was the real taste of after-school rebellion. Unwrapping that crinkly paper felt like breaking a tiny rule. The first tang made your eyes squint, the next bite hooked you completely. It was pocket-sized chaos, traded in class, popped between lessons, and remembered long after the flavour faded.

6/11

Cotton Candy

It looked like a cloud, vanished like magic, and stuck to your face no matter how careful you were. Cotton candy was a festival on a stick, soft, pink, and spun with dreams. Bought outside school fairs or melas, it was less about the taste and more about the moment, the slow dissolve on your tongue, the laughter, and the sugar that felt like happiness itself.

7/11

Cream roll

Flaky on the outside, creamy on the inside, and impossible to eat neatly. The bakery-fresh cream roll was the ultimate after-school indulgence. You’d tap the crisp shell till the first crack appeared, then take one glorious bite and end up with sugar dust all over your tie. Somehow, it always felt like a small celebration after math class torture.

8/11

Oyes chips

Before “snack brands” became lifestyle choices, there was Oyes - the desi chip packet that turned recess into a mini festival. The sound of that crinkly wrapper tearing open was half the thrill. Each bite was a perfect mix of salt, spice, and that mysterious masala dust that no one could ever replicate. Sharing was rare; licking the orange-red fingers at the end was non-negotiable.

9/11

Choco bar and orange stick ice candy

When the last bell rang and the sun felt like fire, the ice cream cart outside the gate was pure salvation. You either went for the grown-up choice, the chocolate-coated Choco Bar or the bright orange ice stick that painted your tongue fluorescent. They always melted too fast, dripping down your hands before you got home but somehow, that was part of the joy.

10/11

Instant noodles

Every class had that one kid whose tiffin carried the unmistakable aroma of masala noodles. Teachers frowned, friends hovered, and the lucky one at the back bench instantly turned into the day’s celebrity. Cold, clumpy, or slightly overcooked - it never mattered. That familiar spice mix had more power than any friendship bracelet ever could.

11/11

Jam bread

Some mornings, moms didn’t have time to pack elaborate parathas and out came the humble jam bread. Sweet, sticky, slightly squashed by the time recess arrived, it was the taste of chaos and care. Sometimes it had butter or bread was replaced by paratha but it always tasted of home and sneaked into the canteen crowd.

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