Do you really want it to be "high tea"? "High tea" is basically supper; the 'high' either means 'late' (as in "it's high time we had some supper") or refers to eating it at the high table, rather than having afternoon tea at low tables. It's a rather unpleasant Americanism to think that "high" in this context means high-class; i.e., fancy. I realize "Afternoon Tea & Sarsaparilla" doesn't have much of a ring to it, but maybe "Cream Tea & Sarsaparilla"?

On Nov 9, 2011, at 3:17 PM, Martha Edwards wrote:

Three days ago we learned that the good ladies of the Monday Club (who own
the building where we dance) don't like the word "Whiskey" in our
English/American dance weekend (High Tea & Whiskey), so we're changing the
name to

wait for it

High Tea & Sasparilla

M
E

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