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Top 10 Telugu Street Food Legends Only Locals Know in 2026

Move-Over-Biryani-Top-10 Telugu Street Food Legends-Only-Locals-Know
Move Over, Biryani: Top 10 Telugu Street Food Legends Only Locals Know!
Telugu Food Culture

Move Over, Biryani.
Top 10 Telugu Street Food Legends
Only Telugu People Know!

Yes, biryani is glorious. But Telugu street food is a whole universe of spice, nostalgia, and pure roadside magic that the rest of India is sleeping on.

BY A PROUD TELUGU FOODIE  |  ANDHRA & TELANGANA FOOD CULTURE
🌶 Spicy AF 🏠 Pure Nostalgia 🍽️ Top 10 Legends ❤️ Telugu Pride

Let’s be honest. Every time someone talks about Telugu food, the conversation starts and ends with biryani. And look, we love Hyderabad biryani with every cell of our being. But our people have been sitting on a goldmine of Telugu street food legends so ridiculously good that it honestly feels like a crime to keep them a secret.

Picture this: it’s 7 PM somewhere on Vijayawada’s Eluru Road. A tiny stall, a crackling iron pan, mustard seeds popping like tiny fireworks, and the smell of green chilli hitting hot oil from fifteen meters away. Your mouth is already watering. Your legs are already walking toward it. You haven’t even seen what’s cooking yet, and somehow your entire childhood just flashed before your eyes.

That’s what Telugu street food does to you. It doesn’t just feed you. It takes you somewhere. Whether you grew up in Vizag’s coastal lanes, Warangal’s old bazaars, or in a sleepy Godavari district town where the evenings smelled of tamarind and sesame, these foods are encoded in your DNA.

“Vanka pedite vellipoyindi” — the aroma took me away.
A Telugu expression capturing that irresistible pull of a great roadside smell, especially for Telugu Street Food. Perfect for everything on this list.

So here we go. Forget the biryani discourse for a minute. These are the ten Telugu street foods that deserve their own documentaries, Instagram reels, and deeply emotional reunion moments. If you’re Telugu and you’ve had even half of these, you already know. And if you haven’t? Ayo, we need to fix that urgently.

The Legends List

Ranked not by fame, but by the kind of love that makes you close your eyes after the first bite.

01
Punugulu
📍 Coastal Andhra & Vizag Beaches
Crispy Outside Fluffy Inside Green Chilli Kick Served in Paper Cone

If Vizag had a mascot Telugu Street food, it would be Punugulu. These golden, bite-sized fritters made from fermented rice and urad dal batter are essentially idli’s cool street-food cousin who decided to dress up in hot oil and show up at every beach in coastal Andhra looking absolutely immaculate.

You’ve eaten them at RK Beach. You’ve eaten them while watching the sea. You’ve eaten them at 6 AM at some tiny stall with a guy who has been making the exact same recipe since the 1980s and will not be taking feedback. They arrive in a newspaper cone with coconut chutney and a fiery groundnut pachadi that makes your nose run and your heart sing simultaneously.

The genius of punugulu is in the fermentation. That slight tang from the batter, the charred bits where batter met oil at just the right temperature, the airy pocket inside that traps steam like a little flavor bomb. You can eat fifteen before realizing you’ve eaten fifteen. We’ve all been there.

🌊
Local Secret The best punugulu in Visakhapatnam are made by the aunties near Ramakrishna Beach at dusk. Look for the stall with the longest queue and the smallest cart. That’s always the one.
02
Mirapakaya Bajji
📍 Everywhere. Literally everywhere in Telugu states.
Fire Level Gram Flour Crisp Stuffed Masala Tamarind Chutney

You don’t understand. Mirapakaya bajji is not food. Mirapakaya bajji is an emotion. A philosophy. A rite of passage. Every Telugu person has a defining bajji moment — the railway platform one eaten too fast, the rainy evening one from the corner stall near the college gate, or the ones your nanna bought on the way home from the market wrapped in old newspaper, still warm.

A long Bhavnagari chilli is slit open, deseeded (or not, depending on the stall and your tolerance for personal suffering), stuffed with a tangy filling of onions, lemon juice, and spices, then dipped in spiced gram flour batter and fried until blistered and golden. The result is simultaneously the crispiest and the most dangerous thing you will eat on a Tuesday.

The Hyderabad Telugu street food version often comes with imli chutney drizzled right on top. Vijayawada adds raw mango shavings to the stuffing. Nellore keeps it simple and brutal — maximum chilli heat, minimum mercy. All versions are correct. There is no wrong bajji.

🌧️
When to Eat Mirchi bajji and rain are cosmically linked in Telugu culture. The moment dark clouds roll in, every Telugu person’s body instinctively begins moving toward the nearest bajji stall. This is not optional behavior.
03
Pesarattu
📍 Andhra Pradesh (Especially East & West Godavari)
Crispy Edges High Protein Green Moong Served with Upma

People outside Andhra will describe pesarattu as “just a green moong dal dosa.” Those people have clearly never had a real pesarattu. There is nothing “just” about this dish. Made from whole green moong batter spiced with ginger, cumin, green chillies, and onion, the pesarattu is thin at the edges and slightly thick at the center, crisped on a well-seasoned iron tawa until it develops that irresistible golden-brown lace along the borders.

The true Andhra way to eat it? As an MLA pesarattu — the dosa comes stuffed with hot rava upma, the whole thing folded into a fat parcel and served with ginger chutney and coconut pachadi. This combination should be legally protected. It’s a breakfast that somehow also doubles as a full life experience.

It’s a Sunday morning thing. A railway station thing. A “Amma made it fresh before 7 AM and you better eat it hot” thing. Cold pesarattu is technically still pesarattu, but eating it cold is a crime your ancestors will judge you for.

☀️
Best Time Order pesarattu at any Andhra tiffin center that’s been open since before you were born. The older the stall, the better the batter. Trust the process.
04
Gongura Mamsam
📍 Andhra Pradesh (Guntur & Krishna Districts)
Deep Spice Sorrel Sour Festival Special Slow Cooked

There is a reason Andhra Pradesh declared Gongura as its state leaf. And there is a reason that when gongura meets mutton in a pot, something transcendent happens. Gongura mamsam — mutton slow-cooked with tangy sorrel leaves, whole spices, loads of red chilli, and patience — is the dish your Andhra uncle makes when he wants to show off. Which is always. He is always showing off. And he is always right to do so.

The gongura leaves collapse into the curry as it cooks, their natural tartness cutting through the richness of the mutton fat, creating a flavor profile that is simultaneously sour, fiery, earthy, and deeply satisfying. You cannot replicate this dish in twenty minutes. It demands time. It demands respect. It demands three servings minimum.

Eat it with jonna rotte (sorghum flatbread) if you want the authentic Andhra countryside experience, or with plain white rice if you want to be sane. Both are valid life choices. The curry is so bold it will make you reach for that second helping even when you’ve already said “final” three times.

🎉
When It Appears Gongura mamsam is a wedding food, a Sankranti food, an “any important occasion where someone needs to be properly fed” food. If your host makes this for you, they genuinely love you.
05
Chegodilu
📍 Krishna & Guntur Districts (Sankranti Special)
Deep Fried Crisp Sesame & Cumin Rice Flour Base Mildly Spiced

Long before anyone invented chips or crackers, Telugu grandmothers were making chegodilu — crispy fried rice flour rings flavored with sesame seeds, ajwain, and just enough red chilli to give them personality. These spiral-shaped beauties are the kind of snack that’s impossible to eat just one of. You reach into the container for “just one more” and somehow forty-five minutes have passed.

Chegodilu are a Sankranti obsession in Telugu households. The making of chegodilu is a family event, the dough rolled into ropes, twisted into rings, laid out in rows to dry briefly, then deep fried in batches while the whole house smells incredible. They get stored in big steel dabba containers and are gifted to neighbors and relatives as part of the festival exchange tradition.

The commercial versions from Kunda Pickles and similar Andhra brands are decent. But nothing compares to the ones made at home in a big kadai, slightly uneven in shape because the kids helped, still warm, eaten directly without waiting for them to cool down even though everyone said “wait.” You never waited. Neither did we.

🏠
Hidden Gem Status Chegodilu are deeply underrated in the national snack conversation. If you see them at a Telugu sweet shop during Sankranti season, buy more than you think you need. You will finish them faster than expected.
“Telugu street food doesn’t need a Michelin star. It just needs a cast iron pan, a grandmother’s recipe, and the kind of evening where the whole neighborhood can smell what you’re cooking.” — Every Telugu street food lover, ever
06
Pulihora
📍 All of Andhra Pradesh & Telangana (Temple Prasadam)
Tamarind Sour Chilli Depth Mustard Crunch Peanuts

There are two types of pulihora in this world. Temple pulihora and everything else. And we say this with the deepest respect for home cooking, but the pulihora that comes as prasadam from Tirumala, from the Kanaka Durga temple in Vijayawada, from the Yadagiri Gutta temple in Telangana — there is a different energy in that rice. It tastes like 3 AM and devotion and something that can’t be put into words.

Pulihora is essentially tamarind rice, but that description does not come close to capturing it. Cooked rice is tempered with a generous pour of tamarind concentrate cooked down with red chillies, curry leaves, turmeric, mustard seeds popping in oil, raw peanuts for crunch, and sometimes a pinch of jaggery to balance the sourness. It’s eaten at room temperature, which somehow makes every flavor more vivid.

Puliogare powder, the dried spice blend mixed into the rice, varies by family and region. Some families guard their pulihora recipe like it’s classified information. “Appamma’s pulihora had something extra” is a real sentence said by real people who have been trying to recreate a dead grandmother’s recipe for twenty years.

🛕
Sacred Experience If you ever visit Tirumala, the pulihora served there in leaf cups is one of those once-in-a-lifetime food memories. The scale at which it’s made, thousands of portions at a time, somehow makes it taste even more special.
07
Jonna Rotte with Natukodi Kura
📍 Telangana (Warangal, Nalgonda, Mahbubnagar)
Earthy & Rustic Country Chicken Wholesome Wood Fire Cooked

This one is for the Telangana soul. Jonna rotte is a thick, unleavened flatbread made from sorghum flour, hand-pressed and cooked on an open flame until it develops dark charred patches and a dense, slightly nutty interior. It is food that has fed farming communities for centuries. It is food with memory in it.

The combination that breaks people is Jonna Rotte with Natukodi Kura — country chicken curry, slow-cooked with whole spices and coarsely ground masalas, the kind of curry that has been simmering on a wood fire for three hours in someone’s village kitchen. This isn’t the tender farm chicken of city restaurants. Natukodi is chewy and flavorful in a completely different way. It fights back a little, and that’s exactly the point.

You eat jonna rotte by tearing it, not cutting it. You eat it with your hands. You eat it with a view that includes open fields and the sound of silence. This is Telangana food culture at its most honest and beautiful, completely unhyped, absolutely magnificent.

🔥
Where to Find It Look for dhaba-style restaurants on NH-65 between Hyderabad and Warangal. The roadside places that look like they shouldn’t have good food are always the ones that do. That’s how it works. That’s how it’s always worked.
08
Royyala Iguru
📍 Coastal Andhra — Vizag, Nellore, East & West Godavari
Fiery Red Coastal Sour Prawn Perfection Served with Rice

Coastal Andhra doesn’t play games with seafood. Royyala Iguru — a dry-ish prawn preparation where fresh prawns are cooked in a thick, intensely spiced masala with loads of Guntur red chillies, ginger, garlic, curry leaves, and sometimes a dash of coconut — is proof that this region understands the sea and what to do with what it offers.

The “Iguru” style means the dish is cooked down almost dry, with the masala coating every prawn so deeply that each piece carries the entire flavor story on it. It’s eaten with hot white rice and dollops of ghee, or scooped up with freshly made hot phulkas. The combination of the tender prawn, the fiery masala, and the cooling ghee on rice is one of those food moments that Telugu coastal people carry with them forever, whether they’re in Vizag or Vancouver.

Nellore-style royyala iguru deserves its own special mention. The Nellore school of cooking is ferociously hot — they use chillies with a fearlessness that is equal parts inspiring and terrifying. If you think you can handle spice, let Nellore fish curry or royyala iguru be your final exam.

🦐
Non-Negotiable Rule Royyala Iguru must be made with fresh prawns. Not frozen. Fresh. If you’re anywhere on the Andhra coastline, the morning fish market is where this dish begins. Any compromise on freshness is a crime against the recipe.
09
Sakinalu
📍 Telangana — Nizamabad, Karimnagar, Adilabad
Crunchy Spiral Sesame Sweet Sankranti Heritage Village Craft

Outside Telangana, almost nobody knows what Sakinalu is, and that is a genuine cultural injustice. These thin, spiral-shaped rice flour snacks made with sesame seeds are a Sankranti tradition so deeply embedded in northern Telangana’s village culture that entire communities gather to make them together. The preparation is almost meditative — the batter piped in graceful spirals onto hot oil, each one requiring the hand of someone who has done it a thousand times.

The texture is unlike anything else in the Telugu snack universe. Lighter than chegodilu, more delicate than chakli, with a gentle sesame nuttiness that makes them dangerously easy to eat. They are traditionally offered as Sankranti gifts — handed between neighbors and relatives in leaf packets and cloth bags as a gesture of warmth and community.

Finding good sakinalu outside of village settings and home kitchens is genuinely difficult, which makes them one of the most treasured and underrated items on this entire list. If an Adilabad or Nizamabad auntie offers you sakinalu, you say yes. You say yes immediately and enthusiastically.

🌾
Endangered Deliciousness Sakinalu are at risk of disappearing from younger generations who don’t learn the traditional piping technique. If your family knows how to make these, please document the recipe. This is a genuine culinary heritage worth preserving.
10
Bobbatlu
📍 All of Andhra Pradesh & Telangana (Festivals & Weddings)
Chana Dal Sweet Ghee Drizzled Golden Crust Cardamom Aroma

We’re ending on a sweet note, and not just any sweet. Bobbatlu — called Puran Poli in Maharashtra, but somehow always better when your Telugu grandmother makes it — is the dessert that marks every major moment in a Telugu person’s life. Weddings. Ugadi. Sri Rama Navami. Your cousin’s birthday party where the adults took over the kitchen and the kids got kicked out.

A soft maida or wheat dough is stuffed with a rich mixture of boiled chana dal and jaggery (or sugar) spiced with cardamom, then rolled thin and cooked on a pan in generous pools of ghee until both sides are golden, slightly blistered, and perfumed with that unmistakable roasted jaggery-ghee aroma that immediately makes every Telugu person eight years old again.

Bobbatlu are served warm, with more ghee on top, because Telugu cooking has decided that moderation is someone else’s problem. They’re soft, slightly chewy at the edges, sweet but not aggressively so, and filled with a kind of joy that is very specifically tied to festive mornings, the smell of incense, and the sound of family arriving at your door.

The Ugadi Rule If you haven’t had a fresh bobbatlu on Ugadi morning made by someone’s ammamma, have you truly celebrated? The answer the entire Telugu community has agreed upon is: no. You have not. Make it right next Ugadi.

This Is More Than Food. This Is Who We Are.

Here’s the thing about Telugu street food that no food blogger or travel guide will tell you: you can’t fully understand it from the outside. You understand it from memory. From the specific weight of a paper cone in your hand while standing somewhere that smells like coconut oil and tamarind and evening air. From the bajji your amma made when it rained. From the pulihora you ate on a temple step with someone you love. From the punugulu that burned your tongue because you couldn’t wait.

Andhra and Telangana food culture is enormous, layered, regional, and deeply personal. The Guntur district’s chilli obsession is different from Vizag’s coconut-forward coastal cooking, which is different again from Warangal’s earthy, sorghum-and-lentil heartiness. Telugu cuisine is not one thing. It’s many things, made by many hands, passed down across generations with very little written instruction and a great deal of love.

Biryani will always be the ambassador — the face on the poster, the thing everyone points to. But behind that poster is a whole world of flavor that only we know. And honestly? We kind of love that it’s ours.

Now if you’ll excuse us, we need to go find some mirchi bajji. It might rain later. That’s reason enough.

“Mana Telugu Vantalu — Our Telugu Cuisine”
There is no direct English translation that fully captures the pride in that sentence. That’s the whole point.

Did This Make You Miss Home? Good. Your People Are Waiting.

If reading this made you crave punugulu at 11 PM, or suddenly want to call your nanna and ask for the pulihora recipe, or just feel that warm wave of Telugu pride — we get it. That feeling is exactly why Telugu Chat Online exists.

It’s a free space where Telugu people from across the world connect, laugh, debate, share recipes, discuss movies, talk about festivals, and most importantly, find that sense of home that you can’t always get from where you currently are. Whether you’re in Hyderabad, Houston, or anywhere in between — your people are there, chatting in Telugu, right now.

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Chat about food, movies, culture, memories. Be among your own. Mana Telugu adda — forever free.

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Sources: Pinterest, Wikipedia.