High tea in London
#1
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High tea in London
I'm visiting London for 10 days in Oct. and although I've been there a number of times I've yet to experience a proper high tea. I would like some suggestions for somewhere not terribly formal since I'll be going alone and want to feel comfortable. I can get around the city pretty easily so location is not an issue. Thanks for any ideas.
#2
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You might find this helpful: http://www.afternoontea.co.uk/top-af...-winners-2013/
#3
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Do you really mean "a proper high tea"? This might strike some as pedantic, but to many of us high tea is a real meal we'ved been indulging in on and off for the past half century and more or less unavailable in central London.
The Dean Street Townhouse does offer it: you can get proper high tea staples like buck rarebit, macaroni cheese and fish fingers in mid-afternoon just as if we were back in the mid-1950 in a proper department store restaurant. Virtually nowhere else in the centre does, though.
If you're interested in that ghastly faux version of tea in the afternoon that features on soaps like Downton, Sparkchaser's list is a perfect list of places anyone wanting somewhere "not terribly formal " would kill their mother to avoid, and the precise reason most of regard the invention as a tourist industry ripoff.
For the kind of mid-afternoon cakes and sandwiches walkers have after 15 miles across fields, or people take their aunties to: High Teas of Highgate, the Maids of Honour at Kew or anything at http://www.timeout.com/london/food-d...teas-in-london
The Dean Street Townhouse does offer it: you can get proper high tea staples like buck rarebit, macaroni cheese and fish fingers in mid-afternoon just as if we were back in the mid-1950 in a proper department store restaurant. Virtually nowhere else in the centre does, though.
If you're interested in that ghastly faux version of tea in the afternoon that features on soaps like Downton, Sparkchaser's list is a perfect list of places anyone wanting somewhere "not terribly formal " would kill their mother to avoid, and the precise reason most of regard the invention as a tourist industry ripoff.
For the kind of mid-afternoon cakes and sandwiches walkers have after 15 miles across fields, or people take their aunties to: High Teas of Highgate, the Maids of Honour at Kew or anything at http://www.timeout.com/london/food-d...teas-in-london
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Thanks so very much sparkchaser and flanneruk for your suggestions and links as well as your quick response to my question. That's why posted the question, hoping that someone local would steer me away from a "tourist industry ripoff". I have a few weeks to do a little research. Thanks.
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I had an excellent afternoon tea at Brown's Hotel, neither faux nor ghastly and certainly pre-dating Downton Abbey by about two decades.
Virginia Wade was seated next to me, lots of faux? Brit accents around the room, no doubt clueless tourists like me.
It was a wonderful afternoon and just the thing if you don't want a large meal before the theater.
Virginia Wade was seated next to me, lots of faux? Brit accents around the room, no doubt clueless tourists like me.
It was a wonderful afternoon and just the thing if you don't want a large meal before the theater.
#8
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This looks lovely:
http://www.fairmont.com/savoy-london...g/thamesfoyer/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UAQqQs7m_8Q&feature=plcp
We didn't have tea but it looked wonderful there.
http://www.fairmont.com/savoy-london...g/thamesfoyer/
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=UAQqQs7m_8Q&feature=plcp
We didn't have tea but it looked wonderful there.
#12
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Thanks FraDiovolo I will pass on a £45 afternoon tea considering the USD exchange rate. Latedaytraveler, this about my 12th solo trip to London (yes I'm an Anglophile.) After going a few times with family and friends and visiting most of the "must see" tourist sights I decided I enjoy things that others may find boring like wondering through neighborhoods taking in the architecture and window boxes, shopping all the street markets and auctions and making side trips to villages outside of London. Also have taken a few day trips to Paris via Eurostar. I usually eat take away meals in hotel room or grab something from Tesco or M&S. So I'm feeling the need for a nice afternoon tea.
#14
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I had lunch at Momo a couple of months ago and saw them serving a British meets north African afternoon tea that looked very good. Another one for your shortlist perhaps...
http://momoresto.com/fileadmin/momo/...ernoon_TEA.pdf
http://momoresto.com/restaurant/lond...-cafe-terrace/
http://momoresto.com/fileadmin/momo/...ernoon_TEA.pdf
http://momoresto.com/restaurant/lond...-cafe-terrace/
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I used to frequent Richoux's mostly the one across from Harrods, however a few years ago the wait staff shifted from ladies in period dress and pleasant smiles to rather gruff ( albeit efficient) waiters. IMO the charm of the place is gone. Furnishings were looking very shabby . Perhaps they have renovated, but I haven't returned.
#18
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Great suggestions just keep coming. RM67, the Moroccan style afternoon tea, looks very interesting. Tabernash2, The Savoy does look expensive but your comment also brings up the question I haven't thought about, "What the heck will I wear?" Some of the high end hotel-based teas probably have a dress code. I'm your basic blue-jeans or black-jeans kind of girl (well 63 y.o. grandmother but I'm sticking with girl) I guess most of the websites will advise me.