# Cha Yen, Oliang and the Blue One: A Guide to Thai Drinks

> A friendly guide to Thai drinks beyond beer and coffee: cha yen, oliang, pink milk, herbal coolers and fruit shakes — and how to order them less sweet.

Order a drink in Chiang Mai and you quickly realise the choice runs far beyond a cold Chang or a flat white. Thailand has a whole everyday drinks culture of its own — sweet, icy and often startlingly colourful — sold from glass-fronted carts, motorbike sidecars and tiny old-school cafes for not much more than the change in your pocket. Once you know what to look for, a stroll past a row of market stalls turns into a tasting menu. Here are the classics worth knowing, what's actually in them, and how to order them the way you like.

## The orange icon: cha yen

**Cha yen** (literally "cold tea") is the one you've almost certainly already spotted: a tall glass of sunset-orange tea over crushed ice, finished with a generous swirl of sweetened condensed and evaporated milk. The base is a strong black tea, brewed dark and sweet, then crowned with creamy milk that you stir in yourself, watching the colour soften from amber to peach. It is unapologetically dessert-adjacent — if you have a sweet tooth it sits happily alongside anything from [a plate of mango sticky rice](/blog/thai-desserts-chiang-mai) to a mid-afternoon slump. You'll find it everywhere, but the best versions come from carts that brew their tea fresh rather than ladling it from a vat.

![A Lanna-style illustration of colourful Thai iced drinks, cha yen, pink milk and butterfly-pea tea, on a market cart](/blog/thai-drinks-guide/visual.webp)

## Oliang: the old-school black coffee

Long before the third-wave roasters arrived, Thais were drinking **oliang** — a thick, jet-black iced coffee whose name comes from the Teochew Chinese for "black" and "cold". Traditionally the grounds are cut with a little roasted corn, soybean or sesame, brewed slowly through a long cloth sock filter, then poured over ice with a hit of sugar. The result is bittersweet, faintly smoky and bracingly strong — a world away from the meticulous single-origin pour-overs you'll find in [the cafes around Nimman](/blog/coffee-around-nimman), and all the better for it. Look for a battered metal cart with that dangling cloth filter and you've found the real thing.

## Pink milk, lime tea and green tea

A few siblings round out the cart. **Nom yen** ("cold milk") is the cheerful bright-pink one: milk sweetened with sala syrup, flavoured with the snakeskin fruit *salak*. It tastes of nothing in particular and everything nostalgic, and Thai kids adore it. **Cha manao** is iced lime tea — the same dark tea brewed without milk, then sharpened with fresh lime and sugar into something tangy and genuinely thirst-quenching on a hot afternoon. And Thai **iced green tea** is the jade-green, milky cousin of cha yen: sweet, creamy and a little grassy. Between them they cover most moods.

![A Lanna-style illustration of Thai fruit shakes and herbal market drinks in Chiang Mai](/blog/thai-drinks-guide/visual-2.webp)

## The herbal market coolers

Now the rainbow. At any fresh market you'll meet rows of glass barrels and reused bottles filled with jewel-toned herbal drinks, brewed up at home and sold by the cup. **Nam kek huai** is golden chrysanthemum tea, floral and soothing; **krachiap** is roselle (hibiscus), a deep ruby red with a tart, cranberry-like bite; **matoom** is fragrant, mellow bael fruit, gently sweet and good for the stomach. The showstopper is **anchan**, butterfly-pea tea — a deep electric blue that turns violet the instant you squeeze in lime, which makes it a reliable crowd-pleaser. You'll also see cooling **lemongrass** (*takrai*) and sweet **longan** (*lamyai*). The barrels at [Warorot Market](/blog/warorot-market-chiang-mai) and the weekend stalls at [Jing Jai](/blog/jing-jai-market-chiang-mai) are a good place to work through the lot.

## Fruit shakes and coconut water

The one word to learn here is **pan** (meaning "blended"). Point at a pile of fruit — mango, watermelon, passion fruit, pineapple — and the vendor will spin it with ice into a slushy shake on the spot. It's one of the cheapest, freshest treats in the city, and a fine way to make your way through Thailand's [glorious fruit calendar](/blog/thai-fruit-guide). When the heat really bites, nothing beats a young coconut hacked open in front of you: cool, faintly sweet coconut water straight from the husk, with soft jelly to scoop out afterwards.

## How to order it (less sweet) and where to find it

A quick word on sugar. Thai drinks are sweet by default — sometimes startlingly so — because that's how they're loved here. The magic phrase to soften the blow is **wan noi** (หวานน้อย), "a little sweet"; say it when you order and most vendors will happily ease off the condensed milk and syrup. Want none at all? Try **mai wan**, "not sweet". As for price, almost all of this is gloriously cheap — figure on roughly 20 to 60 baht a cup depending on the drink and the spot. You'll find these carts woven through the city's [street-food stalls](/blog/street-food-chiang-mai), parked outside markets and busiest at the [night markets](/blog/night-markets-chiang-mai), where an icy cup of something colourful is the perfect thing to hold while you browse. Start with cha yen, be brave with anchan, and let the cart decide the rest.
