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Drinking Tea in the United Kingdom

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Drinking Tea in the United Kingdom

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Old Apr 4th, 2004, 01:39 PM
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Drinking Tea in the United Kingdom

I'm from the Southern part of the United States where we have our own special flavor of tea. Over the years, I have branched out and have tried many different types of teas, but now I have the opportunity to visit London and do it right!

Give me some idea what to expect. I routinely purchase Earl Grey loose tea and use a tea ball. Will it be similar to this? What if I just can't live without my wonderful Southern iced sweet tea? Will I be able to find something like this? While on the subject, what about coffee? I have an addiction after all. Will coffee be as readily available as in the U.S.? Here we have a coffee pot in most hotel rooms.

Thanks in advance for the advice.
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Old Apr 4th, 2004, 01:45 PM
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You will most often be served a small pot of hot water and a cup and a tea bag or the pot will have loose tea leaves in it. There will sometimes be an extra pot of hot water to dilute,heat up the pot.
You will have to add your own sugar for sweet tea, they don't even do sweet tea in that many places in the US outside of the South.
Funny, I grew up drinking tea (British grandmother) and lived in the South, iced tea...sweet!
I lived away from the South and now I am back and I find all that too sweet tea cloying. I never thought that I would not like Sweet tea!
Some of the best coffee I have had has been in London. Our hotels always served good coffee and I always bring back Harrods coffee when visiting.
*just watch out for those lovely scones with all that clotted cream and jam that taste so good with your tea and coffee *
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Old Apr 4th, 2004, 01:51 PM
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Sadly, despite all the tea they drink in the UK, iced tea as we know it is almost unknown. It is recently gaining popularity, but I only tend to see it as that nasty canned stuff. I hate it because it is all sweet, but since you like sweet tea you might like it better than I do. I've gone to many places and asked for brewed tea and a big glass of ice so I can "make my own", but I rarely will get more than one or two ice cubes in the glass, so that just doesn't work. One of my greatest joys of renting a flat in London, is that now I can at least make my own real iced tea.
My experience in most hotels is that you will find an electric tea kettle for boiling water. And they will often have a tea pot for use, but coffee will then need to be instand crystals.
The good news is that there must be roughly 17 million coffee shops in London alone, one every three of four doors as you walk down any street.
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Old Apr 4th, 2004, 02:15 PM
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Coffee will be no problem, but I'd forget about easily finding the sweet ice tea.

As much as I like it, going without for a few days doesn't bother me much anymore. Not worth the time and energy to keep asking for it and getting disappointed with the odd stuff they bring you.
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Old Apr 4th, 2004, 03:28 PM
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Coffee is ubiquitous in London, but you'll probably only find the instant variety and a hot pot in your room. Room service would be your best option.
Try Starbuck's for iced tea. It'll be close to what you're use to. Cafe Nero is good place for coffee. I would also advise a stop at Fortnum & Mason to purchse both tea and coffee. They have the best selections anywhere. Also The Tea House on Neal Street ( Covent Gardens).
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Old Apr 4th, 2004, 03:41 PM
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If you're served proper tea--loose leaves in a pot instead of a tea bag and cup--you should be given a little strainer to use when pouring the tea.

Sometimes you will be asked whether you prefer China (milder) or Indian tea(usually stronger in flavor). In a few upmarket spots we were given a list of teas from which to choose, and my favorite Assam was usually available.
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Old Apr 4th, 2004, 03:47 PM
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When you get proper tea--brewed in a teapot with tea leaves--you will see a small strainer for use when pouring. Very handy.

In some places you will be asked whether you prefer China or Indian tea, and occasionally there will be a list of teas from which to choose. I immediately look for my favorite, Assam, and it's usually available.
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Old Apr 4th, 2004, 05:24 PM
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You will also receive a small pitcher of cream with your tea. If you want lemon instead, you'll need to let your server know. I've never been asked which I prefer, as drinking hot tea with cream/milk is the preferred way in the U.K.
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Old Apr 4th, 2004, 07:36 PM
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Properly, you would NOT get cream w/ tea. You get milk for tea and cream for coffee. Also white sugar w/ tea, demerara sugar w/ coffee.

bballmama: In your room you will likely have an electric kettle, cups, tea bags and instant coffee packets.

One thing you might be in the habit of saying at home is "Hot tea" when ordering a cup of tea, and "iced" or "sweet tea" when ordering iced tea. If tea (hot) is what you want - just ask for TEA. "Hot" tea sounds sorta silly since tepid tea would be a real no no.

A very few trendy places do have iced tea - but normally it would just be fresh brewed tea poured over ice. It would not usually be presweetened. Bottled/canned Iced tea in snack bars etc would be sweet - but also pretty awful.
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Old Apr 4th, 2004, 07:43 PM
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Hmmm....I didn't realize demarara was more for coffee than tea. We got in the habit of drinking it with our tea, and now don't like white sugar in tea -- the demarara seems to have more flavor, instead of just sweetness.
And we thought we were being oh so native by choosing demarara!!
oh well.....
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Old Apr 4th, 2004, 08:19 PM
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demerara is certainly yummy - but "just not done" with proper tea.

Some places D. sugar is actually called coffee sugar.

And to "look native", did you put the milk and sugar in the cup BEFORE the tea, but the cream and sugar AFTER the coffee???
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Old Apr 5th, 2004, 03:26 AM
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Oh this is going to run and run.

Never mind Gulliver and his Bigendians/Littlendians, the battle between people who put the milk in tea first or last is never-ending; but I think both would agree you would never put the sugar in before the tea. Not everyone takes sugar, after all.

Personally, I put the milk in after the tea, but I don't look down on the MIFs (unlike some people).

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Old Apr 5th, 2004, 05:01 AM
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Ah yes -- the never-ending debate!
We are MIF's, even if we transgress on the sugar issue.
The real issue now becomes PG Tips vs Yorkshire Gold!
Annette
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Old Apr 5th, 2004, 05:07 AM
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A lot depends on the water of course. I'm not sure Yorkshire Gold works in hard-water areas like London..

But then I long ago destroyed my palate by going for trot-a-mouse strengths of tea. Nowadays I have Fairtrade brands anyway.
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Old Apr 5th, 2004, 05:11 AM
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I am one of those barbarians that HAS to have coffee the second I wake up. Also, I really do not like instant coffee. I buy Maxwell house coffee bags (just like tea bags). They always are in my luggage, just in case. Its not the greatest but it is better than instant. So? One reasonable cup and THEN I have the strength to go find a real cuppa. (I carry these with me even when I visit friends here in the US...some of them cannot manage to make at least 1 cup of coffee!)
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Old Apr 5th, 2004, 05:14 AM
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Re "Demerara is certainly yummy - but 'just not done' with proper tea," I would respectfully disagree. It's been my experience in London and surrounds that demerara ("brown" sugar) is almost exclusively served anywhere tea is served ... from places like The Dorchester to department store restaurants. In fact,there's usually always both types of sugar available: brown and white.

And bballmama, the trick isn't really going to be finding sweet tea ... the trick is going to be finding any bloody ice!!


Tea Lover Denise, a Southerner (Charleston, SC) living in London
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Old Apr 5th, 2004, 05:16 AM
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Whether MIF or MIL, don't put lemon and milk in the tea. The milk curdles.

IIRC Winnie-ther-Pooh preferred his bread with butter *and* honey, when having tea.
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Old Apr 5th, 2004, 06:30 AM
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As an American, I guess I'll bite and enter into the debate. My "French Mom" was actually an Englishwoman from Hull who had married a Frenchman, and Sunday Tea was LAW at our house. My question is, are there perhaps regional differences that enter into it? Is tea done differently based on socio-economic-geographic factors in England?

At home "en famille", the sugar bowl always had both kinds of sugar. More for convenience than anything else, I believe. We had Breakfast tea to start the day served in the ordinary brown bean-pot style pot and it always had milk (wasn't awake enough to notice or care wether the milk went in before or after the tea), and coffee after the main midday meal.

Now when we had guests specifically for "tea", on the other hand, there was only cubed white sugar with tongs (which nobody up to now has mentioned as a requirement along with the beautiful silver leaf strainer and accompanying holder, but which in my mind is) and she always had both tea slices and milk to offer (either/or, as Ira pointed out). She always served a mix of looseleaf black tea and Earl Grey for these occasions and it was served in the most delicate white with little blue flowered English Bone China.

It was my understanding that no self-respecting tea-drinker would use tea bags, or ever cut corners by not following the proper ritual...preheating tea pot, using tea cosy etc. She would do the milk (not cream) and sugar before the tea and had the most elegant way of holding the demi-tasse spoon and swishing the tea gently, to-and-fro, to-and-fro (versus my American grandfather's agressive circular, vortex- producing churning, followed by the god-awful tap of the spoon on the lip of the cup. I wonder how may chips my grandmother's china had from that)

Maybe it's my imagination, but the ritual, type of indredients do make for a quality cup of tea...I'm not convinced the order of the tea/milk/sugar has any bearing. What is the rationale involved in that???

Thanks to all the experts who share their opinions
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Old Apr 5th, 2004, 06:34 AM
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PatrickLondon and anntettetx, what a fun & cheerful post!
My husband and I were MIF's but have been corrupted by American tea habits, but he still puts my sugar in first! Knowing that I like all things Sweet! even the coffee~
Is there the same catagory for tea drinkers who use bags vs loose leaf?
What would they be labeled?
In that catagory-I am non-partisan, I take my tea in whatever form it comes in
Cheers~
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Old Apr 5th, 2004, 07:18 AM
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Yorkshire Gold actually sends different blends to different parts of the country to suit the water. London will get the blend for hard water.
 


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