Originally posted by Bryn
View Post
Tea drinking
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostAnd what of ritual?
Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostA saucer is compulsory (I’m pleased that some years ago I broke the habit of pouring tea into my saucer if it was too hot and slurping it from there)
Originally posted by Beef Oven! View Post....Milk in after water.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by ostuni View PostI was a regular drinker of standard tea-bag teas for years, but discovered the pleasures of Darjeeling teas while on holiday (in Austria, actually). I then started exploring various other types, mostly through the excellent Canton Tea Company, and discovered that I really like most Oolongs, and First Flush Darjeelings. A (glass, single-serving) pot of Oolong, made mid-morning, gets repeated infusions during the day (each one intriguingly, if slightly, different in taste); during the afternoon I change to a darjeeling (which, again, is good for more than one infusion - not as many as the typical oolong, though).
Some of these teas look quite pricey, but they still (with those multiple infusions) work out plenty cheaper per serving than the wine I have in the evening, or the malt whisky if I settle down for some late-evening listening...
Funny enough, when I’m listening to music of an evening, a few cups of tea goes really well. Just as good as a single malt or a Chablis (my wine weakness) and you get to keep yer whits about ya!
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostBack in antiquity (1960s) people ‘round my way loved sterraz in their tea! I’ve never had it, but I liked drinking sterilised milk. Can you still get it, I wonder?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by teamsaint View PostI have it on good authority that Queen Mary drank her tea from a saucer.Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View PostThat's why she had her head cut off.
... come now, Mary I died of influenza or ovarian cancer, Mary II died of smallpox (you may recall P'cells musicke thereanent). No real Queen Mary had her head cut orf...
.Last edited by vinteuil; 15-01-17, 14:02.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... real toffs put milk in last. Other real toffs put milk in first. Real toffs couldn't care less what the plebs might do or might think.
But of course it's the middle classes who invent such 'rules' and expressions - to sustain the illusion of their differences from the 'lower orders', and their aspiration to join those 'above'.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by teamsaint View PostWhen I was in a student house in Southampton, we had a Sikh ( not sure which nationality) landlord who was doing some work on the house.
When ready for a cuppa, he just threw leaves, milk , water and sugar in a saucepan and boiled the lot up,which I gather is quite popular..
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by ostuni View PostI was a regular drinker of standard tea-bag teas for years, but discovered the pleasures of Darjeeling teas while on holiday (in Austria, actually). I then started exploring various other types, mostly through the excellent Canton Tea Company, and discovered that I really like most Oolongs, and First Flush Darjeelings. A (glass, single-serving) pot of Oolong, made mid-morning, gets repeated infusions during the day (each one intriguingly, if slightly, different in taste); during the afternoon I change to a darjeeling (which, again, is good for more than one infusion - not as many as the typical oolong, though).
Comment
-
Comment