Thanks for this.

When I was in England last May with a study-abroad group from my college, we 
got to have afternoon tea one day.  It was a cool experience for me.

Becky
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Nicole Cooke" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; 
<RecipesAndMore@googlegroups.com>; <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Tuesday, January 30, 2007 5:22 PM
Subject: [RecipesAndMore] tea party ideas



A Brief History of Afternoon Tea Parties
Although the practice of tea-drinking has been around for many centuries, it 
has been mostly for medicinal purposes.
Anna, 7th Duchess of Bedford is credited with the creation of Afternoon Tea, 
the social event, in the 1840's. It began simply enough, as a 4:00 o'clock 
snack for her, to tide her over until the customary late supper. Friends 
joined her, and over the next few decades the practice became steeped in 
tradition, etiquette, accoutrements, and, no doubt, tea party recipes.
As it became the "national habit", tea houses and tea rooms sprang up over 
Britain like Starbucks in Seattle. Sadly, few are left, but tea parties are 
gaining momentum once again.

The Three Courses of Afternoon Tea Party Recipes
Traditionally, Full Afternoon Tea is served in three courses:
Tea Sandwiches, very small savory sandwiches ranging in flavor from cucumber 
to sardine. Appetizers are also appropriate.
Scones, or other tea breads such as (English) muffins or crumpets.
Tea Cakes, which may include most any pastry.
Light Afternoon Tea requires only scones and tea cakes to be served. Another 
version of Afternoon Tea is called Cream Tea. Serve only scones with clotted 
cream and jam.
Divide your tea party recipes, as we have. Serve something savory, then 
something sweet, and you can't go wrong. Serve a beverage, like punch or 
champagne, in addition to tea if the gathering is very large. Fruit and 
cheese are welcome additions to the basic tea party recipes.

Basic Fine Tea Guide


The one essential thing to serve with tea party recipes is tea.
Amazingly, all tea comes from the same basic plant, Camellia Sinensis. 
Depending upon the extent the leaves are fermented, all teas are either 
black (fully fermented), green (unfermented), or oolong (partially 
fermented). Some refer to this process as oxidation, rather than 
fermentation. It takes several hours at most.
Of course, there are many variations of these three teas based on growing 
area, climate, use of young leaves or older ones, blending, and so on. One 
such class uses only very young leaves that are processed so little they 
come practically in their natural state. They have their own classification 
now, White Teas.
Among Black Teas you will find Pekoe Teas, Assam, Darjeeling (considered the 
connoisseur's choice), Nilgiri, Ceylon, and Keemun. These are typically 
dark, rich and hearty teas, good hot or iced.
Green Teas include Gunpowder (actually very mild), Hyson, Imperial, Chun 
Mees, Sow Mees, and Matcha. They make a distinctive pale grey-green color 
tea which can be a little bitter, if allowed to steep too long. For brewing, 
the tea leaves are sometimes rolled into tiny balls resembling lead shot.
The pride of Oolong Teas is Formosa Oolong. It is outstanding, and 
expensive, as teas go. Pouchong Teas and Pu Erh also belong to this 
category. Oolong teas are often used in blending because they tend to 
enhance the flavors of the other teas, even cheaper ones.
White Teas like Silver Needles and White Peony are very fine and rare. They 
are a light color in the cup with a very delicate flavor.
Any variety of tea can be blended with another or with oils, herbs, spices, 
and other tastes to form a brand new tea flavor. But it takes finesse and 
practice to get it right, so most of us opt for tried-and-true commercially 
blended teas. Blended black and oolong teas are by far the most popular in 
the West, but green tea is gaining in popularity because of its healthful 
properties.
Blended Teas include old favorites like Earl Grey, English Breakfast, Irish 
Breakfast, Black Currant, Lady Londonberry, Lapsang Souchong, Russian 
Caravan, Jasmine, and Chai.
Beyond that, the history, naming, and curing of tea leaves can be tea-dious 
reading, forgive the pun. In the end your choice of tea is a simple matter 
of taste, anyway. Serve what you like.
But if you're interested, the most concise, yet informative piece we've 
found on the subject of tea is here .
Herbal teas are not considered real teas by themselves, if that matters to a 
nation born of rebellion. Many would have them stricken from the roster of 
possibilities, as with all teas in tea bags. Tea bags are the hot dogs of 
the tea world; you never really know what all's in them. But to avoid either 
one altogether is overreacting, and would deprive us of some wonderful 
tastes. Again, serve what you like.



How to Brew a Perfect Pot of Tea
Learn. Learn. Learn. Practice. Practice. Practice.

Taste is subjective, so even with detailed instructions for brewing fine 
tea, it takes practice to get it right for you. But in the end you have a 
great cup of tea and a new hobby.
The Basics: 6 Easy Steps to a Great Pot of Tea
Bring fresh, cold water almost to a boil in a tea kettle on the stove.
In the meantime, measure out the tea: 1 teaspoon tea leaves (or 1 teabag) 
per cup of water. Every tea is different, calling for some experimentation.
Preheat the teapot by rinsing it with very hot water before adding the 
leaves. This is more important than you may think; it maintains the 
temperature in the pot, preparing the tea leaves so that the tea releases 
its full flavor when the water is poured over the leaves.
Add the measured tea to the pre-warmed teapot. Smell the aroma already? 
That's good.
Pour the hot water over the tea. For black and oolong teas, let the water 
come to a full boil before pouring it into the teapot. Recommended brewing 
times:

Black Tea, 3 to 5 minutes.
Green Tea, 1 to 3 minutes.
White and Oolong Teas, 2 to 5 minutes.
Teabags, follow manufacturers directions or to taste, usually a short 
infusion time.
Remove the leaves and serve. Some tea leaves can be used again, just let 
them steep a little longer each time.
What To Serve in Tea:
Are you familiar with the old song lyrics, "If her daddy's rich take her out 
for a meal. If her daddy's poor just do what you feel"? Oddly, it's the same 
with tea. If the tea is fine, your options are limited. If the tea is poor, 
just do what you feel.
Though hotly debated, all the arguments for and against putting milk, cream, 
sugar, and lemon in your tea are laid to rest by this one point: Fine tea 
should be served without any additions (disguises), or why bother with fine 
tea? Naturally strong black teas are the exception, however. A small amount 
of milk may actually enhance the flavor of these.

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The important thing is that you enjoy the tea. So with a nod to tradition, 
to the Victorian ladies, to other cultures, to connoisseurs, and to Great 
Party Recipes, serve what you and your guests will enjoy most. Thankfully, 
the tea party recipes that go with tea are much less controversial than what 
goes in tea.




   Web   GreatPartyRecipes.com




--~--~---------~--~----~------------~-------~--~----~
Access the Recipes And More list archives at:

http://www.mail-archive.com/recipesandmore%40googlegroups.com/

Visit the group home page at:

http://groups.google.com/group/RecipesAndMore
-~----------~----~----~----~------~----~------~--~---

Reply via email to