01
The kid with the idea.
Our daughter Chandni went to pre-K in the Hartford public school system.
She is observant, opinionated, and notices things grown-ups stop noticing.
What she noticed: the playground was tired. Scant equipment. Poorly
planned space. Not enough for the kids who deserved more.
She didn't want to complain about it. She wanted to fix it.
So we asked her: what would it take? And then we asked ourselves the
harder question: how do we actually fund something like that?
02
Why chai.
In Indian culture, chai is not just a drink. Chai time is a
moment — a pause where the day's noise stops and conversation begins.
Family, friends, strangers, business partners, neighbors who've never
spoken: when someone offers chai, the social distance disappears.
Classism stops. Engagement starts.
That felt like exactly the right vehicle. A cup of chai is small, warm,
shareable, and intentional — the same qualities we want this whole
project to have.
03
How it works.
We brew small batches of fresh masala chai at home, twice a month.
Real spices, slow-steeped: cardamom, clove, cinnamon, fresh ginger,
black pepper, and a generous pour of milk. We fill thermoses, and
subscribers from our list pick them up. That's the entire model.
Costs of milk, tea, and spices come out first. Everything else goes
straight into the playground fund for Hartford-area elementary schools.
We'll publish what we raise and what it goes toward — transparency
is the point.
04
About the name.
“Chand” means moon in Hindi and Urdu.
“Chandni” means moonlight —
the light the moon throws back into the world. It felt like the right
word for a project that takes one small thing — a cup of chai — and
turns it into something that lights up a kid's afternoon at recess.