{"id":24963,"date":"2026-05-21T08:40:28","date_gmt":"2026-05-21T13:40:28","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.indianeagle.com\/travelbeats\/?p=24963"},"modified":"2026-05-21T11:22:55","modified_gmt":"2026-05-21T16:22:55","slug":"brook-eddy-bhakti-chai","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.indianeagle.com\/travelbeats\/brook-eddy-bhakti-chai\/","title":{"rendered":"After a trip to India, She Quit Job, Launched Bhakti Chai in USA, Built a Multimillion-Dollar Tea Brand"},"content":{"rendered":"
Chai is an elixir of life in India. This sacred beverage in Indian households is an integral part of the Atithi Devo Bhava<\/em> belief in India<\/strong>. Tea that the British introduced in the colonized India does sell like a hot cake and hit the jackpot across the globe today. It went through naturalization for decades before it became an iconic Indian beverage. These days, the world is cashing in on Indian Chai with ginger aroma and other flavors. Brook Eddy, a social entrepreneur in the US state of Colorado, has built a multimillion-dollar business empire by selling Bhakti Chai.<\/p>\n Back in 2002, Brook Eddy took flights to India from Denver<\/span><\/a>, Colorado and joined a social-justice movement then. She was offered tea most of the time during her visit to villages in West India<\/strong>. She wholeheartedly fell in love with chai and its different flavors varying from one region to the other depending on ingredients used. Unlike other foreign travelers who take home handcrafted artifacts as souvenirs from India, Brook Eddy\u2019s takeaway from India was her love for tea.<\/p>\n The myriad flavors of Indian chai that had spellbound her senses were missing from the caf\u00e9s in Boulder, Colorado. She went on to brew a unique flavor of tea and named it Bhakti Chai. What started as a humble attempt to spread her love of Indian chai around has evolved into a multi-million dollar business over the years.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n By 2007, she started selling jars of her version of tea from her car in and around Boulder.<\/strong> Her homemade brew became a favorite of her friends and neighbors who often took away jars of iced tea from her refrigerator and put the money on the table. It made her realize that her version of fresh ginger tea (which she called Bhakti Chai) could be produced and monetized for cafes and retailers.<\/p>\n A single mother of twins, Brook Eddy quit her fulltime job and focused on commercialization of Bhakti Chai.<\/strong> With the first round of investment in 2008, she employed two brewers, built a team, bought a ginger press and zeroed in on the packaging of Bhakti Chai. Thus, she laid the foundation of Bhakti Chai on what she experienced in and borrowed from India.<\/p>\n