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-   -   Kids Want Afternoon Tea In London, Mom Freaks Out At Expense (https://www.fodors.com/community/europe/kids-want-afternoon-tea-in-london-mom-freaks-out-at-expense-725167/)

waring Aug 7th, 2007 06:31 AM

Audere, you could explain the biscuit game...I once witnessed an Etonian and a Wykehamist arguing, each claiming that their school invented it.....

Scone rhymes with "on" otherwise it sounds nancy.

RM67 Aug 7th, 2007 08:01 AM

'Is rhyming [scone] with "con" more posh?'

I thought 'con' was the posh way too, but according to head prefect/captain of the lacrosse team, Audere, it's the other way round.

audere_est_facere Aug 7th, 2007 08:22 AM

Scone rhymes with stone as far as I am concerned. "Sconn" is a northern monkeys thing i think.

Add to the mix the stone under the throne which is said the "Stone of Skoon."

The biscuit game is a myth as far as I am aware. Everyone claims it goes on elsewhere - we always thought that it was a Harrovian thing (and I wouldn't put anything past that lot). Mark Thatcher is a Harrovian.

I have no fair on my head - and what I have elsewhere is increasingly grey. I'm not sure what that means. I quite like malted milk too - and they've got a picture of cows on them.

The worst biscuit in the world? Garibaldis. Bloody awful.




fnarf999 Aug 7th, 2007 08:33 AM

> Mark Thatcher is a Harrovian.

Enough said.

Ironically, the closest thing to that sort of private school product in America is the current occupant of the White House, even though most of his few remaining fans regard him as a "rancher". Which is ludicrous.

The best biscuit, or "cookie" as they are called in the modern world, is Oreo's. Unbelievably great with coffee. Less so with tea, but still better than anything else.

Mucky Aug 7th, 2007 09:12 AM

Rancher or rancer?

:-)


Josser Aug 7th, 2007 09:13 AM


The best biscuit, or "cookie" as they are called in the modern world, is Oreo's.

What? They are absolutely revolting IMHO.
I also love Garibaldis or squashed fly biscuits.
Dark chocolate suggestives are excellent and you can't beat a good fig roll.

Mathieu Aug 7th, 2007 09:31 AM


...or a Marie biscuit.
Great for dipping into a cuppa.

And sometimes with butter sandwiched between two (but only as a kid in Irish boarding school. Now the thought's revolting.)



PatrickLondon Aug 7th, 2007 09:32 AM

>>grammar school just doesn't cut it with a Wkyehamist - they think Eton is common<<

So do a lot of grammar school people.

janisj Aug 7th, 2007 12:52 PM

Oh - for sure plain chocolate digestives are far, FAR superior to hobnobs of any sort. But here in N. Calif I take what I can get. I bring back 5 or 6 packets of digestives every trip to the UK - but most don't make it through the first week home. :)

NeoPatrick: &quot;<i>the Ritz ....... totally jammed in with hundreds of other tourists (many in large tour groups) snapping pictures of each other through the entire ordeal ....</i>&quot;

I've never seen anything like that at all. I've had tea in the Palm Court 10+ times over the years and never once seen a tour group. In fact the largest table I've ever seen was a group of 9 late 20's/early 30's English girls celebrating an engagement.

Most of the room is usually tables of 2's, 3' and 4's quietly enjoying a set tea - no bus ladies to be seen . . . .

annhig Aug 7th, 2007 01:18 PM

hi, audere,

welcome to the world of goblin. to enjoy the authentic teasmaid/made experience to the full, you should also purchase a small vacuum flask in which to keep the milk fresh overnight. then you don't need to stir from your bedroom to enjoy that morning cuppa.

regards, ann

audere_est_facere Aug 8th, 2007 12:53 AM

you can't beat a good fig roll.&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;

When I were a lad, fig rolls were called &quot;christian biscuits&quot; as the only time we got given them was when the sky-pilot came to talk to us about God. Which was rather too often for my liking.

As such I have a pavlovian aversion to fig rolls.

nona1 Aug 8th, 2007 02:45 AM

You can't beat a Rich Tea biscuit for dunking, although you have to be quick about it.

I can't believe I threw my teasmaid away a few years ago ....
and it did live by the bed. in winter the milk was ok and in summer I used to nick some of those little UHT milk pots from the local MacDs.

I don't think you can understand the British affinity for tea as an outsider. Mr N has lived here for 10 years and still doesn't get it, although he drinks loads of tea himself. He doesn't appreciate its magical powers and entirely fails to rush up to me with a nice cup of tea when I'm wet/tired/upset/emotional/poorly.

RM67 Aug 8th, 2007 02:57 AM

'You can't beat a Rich Tea biscuit for dunking'

Isn't it about time there was some sort of dunkability index on the packets?

Gingernuts are lovely but would only rate about a 2. Custard creams would be a 3-4. Vile Garibaldis etc would be right up at 10.

Are you beginning to see a pattern? High dunkability = low palatability.

Carrybean Aug 8th, 2007 03:05 AM

I'm thinking Jaffa cakes might be one of those things you have to grow up with to appreciate. More about nostalgia than taste. Love Gingernuts &amp; Hobnobs.

I can't imagine the Ritz jammed with large tour groups. The idea is ridiculous but I too think there are better options regardless of price for tea.

MissPrism Aug 8th, 2007 03:15 AM

Yes, every crisis from birth to death is greeted by &quot;I'll put the kettle on&quot;

BTW, when I was in the US, I managed to find an electric kettle and a proper brown betty tea-pot.
When we left, the kettle was passed on to an eager Canadian.

audere_est_facere Aug 8th, 2007 03:44 AM

My Dad used to make Gunfire tea - ie tea as the army makes. This is staggeringly strong and thickened by condensed milk (battlefields being somewhat difficult place to get milk on) and &quot;enhanced&quot; with rum stolen from the navy.

It's much nicer than it sounds.

barbarajo Aug 8th, 2007 04:19 AM

Any transport cafe will serve tea and scones for about 2 quid. Plus you will see real Brits... Or is that not pretencious enough for you!!Get a grip people,some of you complain about expensive flights and hotels and then fork out 30-40 pounds on what you call hight tea!!Sheesh!!

EnglishOne Aug 8th, 2007 04:24 AM

lol, yes that is so right! 'Ill put the kettle on' makes a Brit feel immediately relaxed. Its a very therapeutic phrase :-)
(PS, well said, Barbarajo... I really dont understand this obsession with tea jeeves and wooster style, ie. a relic of a ritual done by few posh nobs from the distant past?)

audere_est_facere Aug 8th, 2007 04:33 AM

Any transport cafe will serve tea and scones for about 2 quid.&gt;&gt;&gt;&gt;

Have transport caffs had a makeover or something? Have they come out? Transport caffs sell bacon butties, mugs of tea and fried egg sarnies (brown sauce optional). They don't sell scones! (Well they probably do in brighton, but not in general)

NeoPatrick Aug 8th, 2007 04:58 AM

Yes, the idea of large tour groups for tea at the Ritz IS ridiculous, but it is also TRUE. It's been a few years, but we arrived at our scheduled time and left when we saw mobs of a huge tour group waiting. They were being seated in groups of 6 or so -- there were probably about 50 of them in all. I was once called a &quot;racist&quot; here for bringing this up, when I mentioned they were Japanese because of the camera incident. If you've ever been around a large Japanese tour group all with cameras in a &quot;special&quot; place, then you know what I mean about all the flashes going off. Nothing against the Japanese, but to think that Japanese tourists don't take an amazing amount of pictures suggests a person has never been near a large Japanese tour group. The camera flashes at tea in the Ritz that day were overwhelming. Each person had to take a picture of the room, several pictures of different groups of friends, pictures of the tea service, pictures of the plates of goodies. . .

I'm sorry. I did not mean to imply that this happens at the Ritz every day -- but it was my one and only experience of &quot;almost&quot; doing tea at the Ritz. We returned instead to tea at the tiny lounge at the Duke's Hotel where we were treated like royalty in a setting of calm and elegance. I think it cost a little more than the Ritz did then, but was so worth it.


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