Unknown's avatar

Prague Winter

Prague Castle

I have just returned from a tea trade symposium in the Czech Republic – a trip which, given my recent positive experiences in Slovenia, I was anticipating rather keenly. Sadly, the reality did not match my expectations.

The symposium itself took place in the conference facilities of the splendidly appointed Prague Hilton but, alas, my budget did not quite stretch to affording accomodation there. Instead, I was billeted five minutes walk away on the other side of a grafitti-spattered underpass in a characterful establishment called The Embassy.

Several other conference attendees were also staying there and one of them, a wiry Scot called Ben, observed that it felt a bit like a brothel. I must bow to his superior knowledge on that front, but there was certainly something rather ripe about the busty bottle-blonde who checked me in. She was either in her 40s and trying to look 25, or in her twenties and pursuing an excessively dissolute lifestyle.

As she leaned across the reception desk to hand me my key-card I actually felt a slight breeze from the fluttering of her extravagant false eyelashes, carrying on it a faint scent of vodka fumes laced with juniper.

Hilton, Prague

Hilton, Prague

One might imagine that a recently-issued TripAdvisor ‘Certificate of Excellence’ (like the one prominently displayed next to The Embassy’s lift) would indicate that the establishment to which it has been awarded offers a reasonably good standard of facilities and services. It would seem, however, that this is not the case – as indicated by the following catalogue of shortcomings:

• No in-room tea-making facilities (I was, as always, prepared for this possiblity – but it should be provided by default in any hotel room, like the Corby trouser press and Gideon bible.)

• Inadequate hot-water supply – the shower was either an intermittent scalding trickle or a torrent of glacial meltwater with nothing in between, and filling the bath to a depth sufficient for wetting more than one’s buttocks and the soles of one’s feet took several hours.

• Blast-furnace heating – the radiator was so hot that one could not approach within 3 feet of it without the skin beginning to blister, and there was no way to turn it off short of crimping the pipe with a plumber’s wrench. One night I left a pair of socks on it to dry, and in the morning no trace of them remained save for a dark smear on the wall above where they had been.

• DIY room service – after a particularly gruelling day of listening to the Russian and Chinese delegations sniping at each other I decided to spend a quiet evening in my room rather than going out on the town with the other ‘tea-heads’. I ordered a delicious-sounding risotto from the room service menu and was surprised to learn that I would have to go down to reception to fetch it – something of an inconvenience as by then I had already changed into my dressing-gown and night time support briefs.

• Inconsistent breakfast provision – the one constant feature of the cooked breakfast offerings was lengths of chewy sausage like chunks of fat pepperami still in the plastic sheath. On the first day this was accompanied by a rather delicious offering of lightly sautéed potatoes in a creamy, herb-infused sauce. I sought out this tasty treat on the second day only to find that it had been replaced with penne in spicy tomato paste, then mushy vegetable rice, and on day four, mystifyingly, bread pudding. The ‘orange juice’ was of the same quality and freshness that astronauts on the first manned trip to Mars will be enjoying and the tea came out of a Liptons assortment box in which the most palatable option was, yes, Yellow Label.

Lobby, Embassy Hotel, Prague

Lobby, Embassy Hotel, Prague

Bitter experience has taught me that breakfast tea in mid-priced continental hotels (aside from those in Germany) will seldom amount to anything worthwhile so, while I was disappointed by The Embassy’s efforts, I was hardly surprised. What did surprise me was the poor fist that the Hilton had made of providing tea for the 130 or so trade representatives attending the symposium. Where one might have expected – as is usual at this sort of event – a selection of fine leaves from the world’s most celebrated tea gardens served in bone china pots, there was instead a shallow basket of assorted sachets, many containing tealess herbal infusions, alongside a large Burco-style urn of thoroughly deoxygenated hot water. The tea, (what little there was) was German in origin, but of the rather second-rate Eilles brand whose marketing people were clearly of the opinion that any kind of black tea can be given a quality makeover by labelling it as ‘English’.

English Ceylon

To be honest, I could not understand how or why the Hilton had screwed things up so badly until I learned that the Russian organizers had arrived a few days early and blown almost the entire refreshment budget on Czech hookers. Typical.

As for the symposium itself, I did take a few notes but there was nothing of sufficent intrest to merit reporting here.

This is probably my last post before the festive season begins in earnest, so I’d like to offer all my readers a generous slice of seasonal good cheer washed down with a steaming mug of M&S Winter Spiced Tea. Pip-pip!

Unknown's avatar

Eastern Promise

© Google Maps

© Google Maps

Back in the 1970s when I was learning Geography at school there were only nine countries in mainland Europe – France, Germany, Holland, Belgium, Switzerland, Austria, Spain, Italy and Luxembourg. Each had its own easily-recognisable national characteristic – smelly cheese, clogs, chocolates, cuckoo-clocks, genocide and so on – with the exception of Luxembourg. No-one even knew where Luxembourg was, although it was generally imagined to be quite distant judging by the feebleness of the signal from its one and only radio station.

Nowadays there’s an ever-growing multitude of European nations – more than a hundred if the Eurovision Song Contest is anything to go by – and I freely admit that I had to reach for my gazetteer when I received an unexpected tip-off from a reader in Slovenia. (It’s just south of Austria, if you’re curious.) The young border town of Nova Gorica was the location, and I was was surprised to discover that half of it lies in Italy, where it’s called Gorizia. Readers of my report from Sanremo earlier in the year will understand why this set more than a few alarm bells ringing. Mere proximity, however, is no reason to tar the good people of Slovenia with the Italian brush so, with a weekend in hand, I packed my valise and headed east.

Nova Gorica

Nova Gorica – A sort of Slavic Peterborough

The first thing one notices about Nova Gorica is that there’s a casino on virtually every street corner, but that’s where the similarities with Las Vegas end. Nondescript residential and business zones, clusters of Soviet-era housing blocks and a Brutalist shopping centre complete a provincial townscape conspicuously lacking in glamour or razzamatazz. Most of the casinos look like somewhere you’d go to get your car serviced, but the Perla Hotel and Casino, situated in the centre of the town, exudes a modest degree of swank, with entrances done out in an exuberant nautical style, perhaps to give punters the impression that they are boarding an exotic cruise liner.  This, unlikely as it seemed, was the destination to which my correspondent had sent me – and there, to the right of the lobby, lurking behind a row of glass cases filled with gaudy souvenirs just as he had described, I found the Kaffè Dolce Vita.

Kaffè Dolce Vita (it's usually busier than this)

It’s usually busier than this

Nestled in a crescent-shaped space hugging the outer wall of the hotel, the café has a moderately cosy atmosphere despite a preponderance of glass and stainless steel, and as I entered I was welcomed by a winning smile from a statuesque blonde waitress with a slight stoop and an interesting nose. I always start with a pot of English Breakfast Tea when breaking new ground. It’s not a mathematically precise standard, but there are certain boxes that should be ticked – robust, earthy flavour; rich, dark colour, and plenty of Assam in the blend. It’s surprising how far short of these benchmarks some ‘English Breakfast’ varieties fall. On a visit to Connecticut last year I was confounded by a brew composed entirely of smoked Chinese leaves – the only connection with English breakfast I could discern was that it smelled like kippers and after just one mouthful I had to gargle with grapefruit juice to get rid of the taste. Fortunately, there were no doubts about the quality of the tea at the Dolce Vita as it was supplied by Ronnefeldt, a German importer and blender with impeccable credentials. The question was, would the waitress do it justice? I watched with some satisfaction as she confidently spooned a measure of loose leaf into a mesh basket, dropped it into a pre-heated porcelain pot and sluiced the contents with demonstrably boiling water. I forgave her for offering me a choice of milk or lemon (only people with severe lactose intolerance issues should consider taking EBT without milk) and carefully carried the small oval silver tray to my table.

Dolce Vita Tea

Satisfaction guaranteed

After such conscientious preparation the tea was hardly going to disappoint, and sure enough it set my taste-buds dancing and singing with delight from the very first sip. The truly remarkable discovery came when I went to pay for it and found that the total bill, including a generous slice of apple strudel, came to only €3.60 – about the same as you’d pay for a cardboard bucket of swill and soggy flapjack at the Upper Crust concession on Paddington Station. Realising that my tea budget would go significantly further than I had anticipated I greedily scanned the dozen or so other varieties on offer behind the counter and picked out a fine Darjeeling for my next pot – this time with a wedge of lemon.

With two days to fill I had planned sight-seeing trips to the Karst caves and Triglav National Park, but after the fourth pot I was feeling excessively relaxed and the weather was dreadful so, taking a necessary break from my libations, I wandered into the gaming area of the Casino. The customers, as far as I could tell, were predominantly Italian and mostly over 50, although there were quite a few young men with bouffant hair and unfeasibly tight trousers gliding up and down between the banks of slot machines, probably on the lookout for lonely widows having a flutter with the life insurance payout. The agents of fortune were on my side that day, and after half an hour of pulling levers and pressing buttons I had increased my original modest stake tenfold. Feeling flush, I graduated to the roulette tables where, in fairly short order, I bagged enough moolah to cover the entire cost of my Slovenian jaunt. That seemed like a good point at which to count my chickens, so I cashed my chips and returned to the Dolce Vita for a celebratory pot of sweet-smelling Ceylon. I was there again when the doors opened on the morrow and while the rain lashed down outside I spent a gloriously lazy day filling myself with tea and pastries and reading my hardback copy of The Hydrogen Sonata. It’s hardly the stuff that travelogues are made of, but by the time I retired to bed I felt as if I had lived the life of Bacchus.

A big hvala then, to Mr Marius Kovska for drawing my attention to this exemplary establishment. It’s clear that Slovenia has much to offer for the curious traveller and I fully intend to return for a longer stay when the weather has improved so that I can discover more about this overlooked corner of the new Europe.

Perla Hotel and Casino

I’ll be back…

Unknown's avatar

Chilling in Seville

Green tea in Seville

English Breakfast Tea – Seville Style

One thing that can never be said of the international tea business is that it’s dull or predictable. For several months now, I’ve been intimately involved with a couple of hush-hush BTC trade missions that have taken me from the snow-capped mountain fastnesses of Switzerland to the steamy vice-dens of Macau – with a few touches of Bond-style intrigue thrown in along the way. Contractual and legal restrictions prevent me from giving any further details at present, except to say that by the end of it all I was sorely in need of a break.

Those familiar with my views on Spain will be agog at the news that my chosen leisure destination was Seville. This was not the random act of masochism that it might at first seem, for I had been tipped off about a little place of particular interest in the city’s Macarena district (from whence, one imagines, the eponymous floor-filling disco-dance hit originated). It’s a depressing fact that throughout Spain – and particularly in the south – genuine tea enthusiasts are forced into a way of life reminiscent of Jewish Conversos during the Inquisition. In public they dutifully swill thick coffee, corrosive sherry and cheap beer along with their friends and countrymen, but behind closed doors the bone-china pots and fragrant single-estate Darjeeling emerge from hidden compartments under the floorboards and tea is taken with thin-cut crustless sandwiches, buttered scones and malted milk biscuits.

Douchka

An oasis in the wilderness

The Salón De Té Douchka, on the calle San Luis is one of a tiny handful of semi-underground places where these defiant té-pistas can conduct their rituals and indulge their passions in public, among their own kind and, for the most part, without fear of violence. It was something I had to experience.

My flight landed too late to seek out this shrine to the true leaf on the day of arrival, so I busied myself setting up my travelling tea-station in the hotel room and perusing a pocket guide to other local attractions. The hotel itself was enchanting, occupying a warren of ancient houses arranged around sunken inner courtyards linked by underground passageways. Fittingly, this had once been the last secret holdout of the Sevillian Jewish community in the dark days of the 16th century, before they were slaughtered or assimilated. I sampled the house tea in the WiFi lounge before retiring to bed, and was predictably underwhelmed.

Las Casas de la Juderia

Which way to breakfast?

The tea on offer in the subterranean breakfast room the following morning was no better – significantly worse in fact – and I elected not to soil my palate with it before setting off to investigate the anticipated pleasures lying in wait for me at the Douchka. Imagine, then, my disappointment on finding the establishment closed. I was not immediately alarmed. Spanish opening hours are a complete mystery to me and I assumed that I had simply got my timing wrong. I unfolded my list of non-tea-related things to do and strolled through the sunlit cobbled streets of the old town, making my way to the Cathedral. I was eager to see its famous central altarpiece, a spectacular gothic retablo carved with numerous intricately detailed bible scenes and dripping with Conquistador gold – but once again, disappointment reared its head. The entire edifice was shrouded with plastic tarpaulins, and although the signs claimed it was being restored, I learned from an unofficial source that the gold is being stripped out to pay off the Germans, and will be replaced with metallic car paint.

The Douchka was still shuttered and dark when I returned that afternoon, and again the following day. While I was peering forlornly through the dusty slats an elderly couple emerged from the building next door and turned in my direction. “Buena tarde, señor y señora.” I offered in my best Google Spanish.  “¿Cuándo es el salón de té abierto?”

At least, I think that’s what I said, but their reaction suggested that I might have accidentally offered to gut them with a filleting knife and hang them by their entrails from the Torre de los Perdegones. The old man pointed a trembling finger in my direction, croaked something that sounded like “¡No hay té!” and dragged his wife (as I assumed the lady to be) back inside before I could reassure them. I tried asking the same question in local shops and bars, where reactions ranged from surly incomprehension to outright hostility, and I’m sorry to report that the Douchka remained resolutely barred and bolted for the remainder of my stay.

It would be ridiculous to conclude from such scant evidence that the Douchka’s proprietor has been dragged away in the dead of night and tossed into a dungeon under the Alcazar Palace where he’s being ‘persuaded’ to renounce the way of tea by men in pointed white hoods. He’s probably just on holiday or something – I’m sure that’s all it is – but this is Spain and old habits die hard, so if any readers find themselves in Seville during the coming months, please take a stroll down the calle San Luis and let me know if there are any signs of activity at No. 46.

Despite this setback the trip was not entirely wasted. While wandering aimlessly through the Casco antiguo district on my final day, I stumbled across something rather extraordinary  nestled amongst the tapas bars and tourist boutiques. The sign above the heavily reinforced door said Pasión por el Té and, remarkably, it was open for business. As I stepped inside I was filled with a sense of awe and wonder that had been conspicuously absent during my trip to the cathedral. Here was a tea shop with breathtaking purity and clarity of purpose. Shelf after shelf of neatly hand-labelled foil packets containing rare treasures from the world’s most celebrated tea gardens lined the walls, gleaming in the soft light. I’m not ashamed to admit that I was quite overcome. The owner, a personable young fellow called Ignacio with a decent grasp on the English language, was kind enough to offer me a chair, and when I had recovered my composure we traded tea-stories for a pleasant half-hour or so while a Holy Day procession snaked noisily by outside. Before I left, laden down with truly self-indulgent quantities of fine leaf, I commended him for his dedication and bravery. With a wry chuckle he told me that he wasn’t so brave and showed me the panic room behind the counter.

Pasion Por El Te

The Pasión and the Glory

It’s shameful that an honest trader has to take such extreme measures to protect his life and livelihood in what is supposed to be a modern democratic country, and I have written a stiff letter expressing my concerns about the matter to Nils Muižnieks, the European Commisioner for Human Rights. I urge all my readers to do the same.

It belatedly occurs to me, as I sit at home writing these words and enjoying a pot of finest Pasión por el Té Chamray Nilgiri, that I should have asked Ignacio about the Douchka. The té-pistas of Seville are a very close-knit community and if anyone was going to know what had really gone down, he was the hombre.

Unknown's avatar

The Italian Job

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As a general rule, the further south one travels in Europe, the less rosy the tea prospects become. I would never go to Spain, for example, without packing a full brewing kit, as I have learned through bitter experience that hotel rooms there often lack even basic water-heating apparatus. There are, of course, isolated British-occupied enclaves where this is not the case, but away from the cosy Costas the tea situation is as arid as the parched hills around Madrid.

It pains me to report that the situation is even worse in Italy if the evidence of my recent visit to the northern coastal resort of Sanremo is anything to go by. Having hired a spacious charabanc at Nice airport, I proceeded along the old Riviera coast road through Monte Carlo (which was bustling with preparations for the Grand Prix – I was thrilled to find myself suddenly swinging around the iconic ‘Loews Hairpin’ corner, the scene of Lewis Hamilton’s climactic tussle with Felipe Massa in the 2011 event, but I digress…).

Half a kilometre from the Italian border I stopped off for a quick refresher at what is probably the Riviera’s least pretentious café, where I enjoyed a simple baguette and a pot of the ubiquitous Lipton’s Yellow Label. It was serviceable enough by French standards, and I would have cherished it a great deal more had I any inkling of the ordeal that awaited me on the other side of the border.

There is a distinct change as one passes from the French to the Italian Riviera. The new buildings are uglier, the old buildings grubbier and more dilapidated, the palm trees less healthy.

Battling my way through cantankerous and unpredictable traffic, I missed the concealed turn-off to the Sanremo Hotel Nazionale and found myself negotiating a tangled maze of steep, narrow back-streets. Judiciously pulling over to let a bullish delivery truck pass, I neatly sheared the front number-plate off an Audi that was protruding somewhat from its parking bay at the base of a run-down apartment block. The alarm went off and a hairy woman with flailing arms appeared on the fifth floor balcony; shortly thereafter, she emerged onto the pavement with her spouse, a Hungarian immigrant whose Italian was no better than mine and English non-existent. I’m not one of those misguided souls who expect every Johnny Foreigner to understand the Queen’s English, but under these multi-lingual circumstances our respective French and Italian accident forms took an unfeasibly long time to complete.

As you may imagine, this stressful experience left me in dire, almost pathological need of a restorative cup of tea, so when I arrived, finally, at my hotel room I was heartily relieved to find that a kettle had been provided, along with an assortment of what looked like fairly standard one-cup tea sachets. On closer inspection, however, it turned out that only two of the varieties on offer actually contained tea, contaminated beyond use in both cases with various additives. I know that Earl Grey has its apologists, but if I wanted to drink tea that tastes like suntan lotion, I could brew up a cup of Tesco Value and squirt some Ambre Solaire into it.

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I had, of course, packed my own supply and was soon calming my nerves with a delicious serving of M&S Luxury Gold.

The first indication that I had stumbled into hostile territory came a little later when I was taking dinner in the hotel restaurant. I had chosen the reasonably priced and rather moreish ‘Tourista’ set menu, which included a cup of c*ffee as standard. As is my custom in these situations, I politely requested that the default offering be substituted with a pot of tea. The waiter flared his nostrils disdainfully, and with a toss of the head frostily informed me that it was c*ffee or nothing before mincing away to serve another table.

Suffice it to say that I did not leave a generous tip.

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Breakfast was hardly an improvement. The setting was glorious – an al fresco rooftop terrace overlooking the town – but the tea on offer was criminally lacking. The kitchen staff were plainly aware that there is a drink called tea that involves dipping dried leaves in hot water, and that some guests might want to enjoy a cup of this mysterious beverage with their potato omelettes and cured ham, but that’s where their understanding stopped. The quality of the leaf was dismal, and the hot water was the wrong side of 80ºC by a significant margin. The resulting tepid slop cried out to be tossed over the balcony into the streets below, and I was forced to return to my room where I brewed a fine cup of piping hot Bewlay’s Irish Breakfast with which to resume my seat on the terrace.

I’m glad that I did, for it was to be my last taste of tea for a gruelling thirteen hours…

I had a number of promotional duties to perform on behalf of my funding body, The British Tea Council, which started with handing out sample packs of selected British blends to a locally sourced distribution team. As soon as Roberto, Luigi, Stefano and Dirk had been dispatched with their precious offerings, I embarked on a tour of local businesses to espouse the benefits of making tea available in the workplace. Every establishment I went to seemed to have a wheezing, chrome-plated monstrosity capable of retching up a dozen different types of c*ffee, but no kettle, and I was kicking myself for not having taken my trusty Russell Hobbs with me. Rookie error, frankly. By mid afternoon, having drunk only water since leaving the hotel, I was starting to feel discommoded and slightly fretful. In desperation I darted into a grocery store between appointments, intending to purchase several litres of bottled ‘Iced Tea’ (my usual fallback when the fresh option is unavailable). All they had was a solitary, dust shrouded 50cl bottle of Liptons Peach Flavoured, which is a poor option at the best of times as it tends to make your tongue feel like a woollen sports-sock. This particular specimen was more than two years past its best before date and had little thready things floating around in it so, with heavy heart I returned it to the back of the shelf. Things were not quite that bad – yet.

The rest of the afternoon remained resolutely tealess and the only thing that kept me going was the thought of the personal treasures waiting for me by the kettle in my hotel room. But first there was one more duty to fulfil – I had arranged to take Roberto and my other distributors to dinner as a gesture of thanks for their hard work. We retired to a pleasant-seeming restaurant in a side street to the left of the Casino dí Sanremo where my guests ordered huge quantities of food, mainly slabs of extremely rare steak served on a thin bed of lettuce leaves. I raced my way through a lightly-topped pizza, brushed aside the dessert menu and with great anticipation asked the friendly and attractive waitress for a pot of tea. She laughed in my face. Not a cruel laugh, not derisive, just a peal of simple merriment at the sheer ridiculousness of my request.

I suppose it was one of those ‘not in Kansas anymore’ moments. I stood up in a sort of daze, made my excuses, bade my farewells, settled the surprisingly large bill and staggered out into the night.

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The rest of my stay in Sanremo is something of a blur, shrouded in a trauma-induced mental fog that did not lift until I ordered a cup of tea in the departures lounge at Nice airport and was treated like a normal human being – but not before enduring one final slap in the face. On my last morning in that godforsaken Italian hole I took a brisk walk along the esplanade that runs westward out of the town centre and discovered the entire stock of samples that I had entrusted to Roberto and his cohorts piled up in a builder’s skip.

I sincerely hope that my experiences in Sanremo are not symptomatic of the state of tea in Italy as a whole, but until I have conducted further investigations I must advise British visitors to that country to proceed with extreme caution – or even better, to go somewhere else entirely. Germany, perhaps.

Unknown's avatar

Release the Leaf

Release the Leaf

When did you last see a television advertisement for loose tea? If you’re under 45, the answer is probably never. The multinationals behind our mass-market brands are eager to promote the bagged variety – which allows them to charge more for less, both in terms of quantity and quality – and they’ve laboured hard to convince us all that the loose option is somehow ‘difficult’, ‘messy’ and ‘fetishistic’.

For a generation reared entirely on tea wrapped in modified nappy liners the prospect of ‘going commando’ can be daunting, but with a little forethought and the right equipment, making the switch from bagged to loose tea can be as easy, liberating and hassle-free as switching from PC to Mac.

The first principle of loose tea management is to store it in an appropriate container, ideally one with a wide opening for easy access. Attempting to spoon it into the pot directly from a crumpled foil packet will invariably have you reaching for the dustpan and brush.

While the kettle is coming to the boil, you may want to decant the desired quantity of leaf into a separate vessel – a small tumbler or the like – so that it can be tipped into the pot without fuss or prevarication. This will be an essential step if you have a medical condition that causes significant hand tremors.

Give the tea a brisk stir, let it stand, then stir again before pouring – through a fine mesh strainer if you prefer your brew without the juicy bits.

Now comes the best part: drinking the tea. Let’s take a moment or two to enjoy that full, rich, unfettered flavour…

Great Cuppa

Ahh! Tea as it is meant to be. I think there’s a drop more in the pot. Let’s do that again…

Great Cuppa

Splendid. Where were we? Oh yes…

The issue of disposal is where many novice ‘leafers come unstuck. Attempting to scoop out the warm, soggy residue with your fingers will not take you to a pleasant place, and washing it down the sink will invariably have you reaching for the plunger. A better solution is to simply use your strainer as illustrated below.

Leaf disposal

Douse the used leaves with tap water and pour in short bursts, tipping the pot back and forth to prevent the leaves from settling and clogging the spout. Then simply tap the contents of the strainer into the green plastic basket (or similar) that your local council has provided for food waste, and you’re good to go.

Even if you like it quick’n’dirty (as we all do from time to time), loose leaf can easily trump lobbing a dust-filled bag into a soiled mug. Simply load up a one-cup infuser with M&S Extra Strong, slop some hot water and UHT milk over it, and I guarantee you’ll feel sleazy for hours.

The Tea Caddy

Unknown's avatar

Brewed in Berlin

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It’s a sad fact that Britain’s reputation as a nation of tea-drinkers is founded more on the quantity of our consumption than on the quality. Restauants and cafes tend to select their teas on the basis of whatever’s discounted at the local cash’n’carry, and the resulting slop is generally served without care or finesse. Even those establishments that aspire to offer something more than just a generic cuppa seldom look beyond the ubiquitous Twinings variety pak. We have lost our race memory of just how special and revered a place tea used to have in our lives.

Germany boasts Europe’s third highest tea consumption rate per capita, so one might imagine that German tea drinkers are just as blasé as Brits about the quality of their brew, but on a recent fact-finding trip to Berlin I discovered that this was not the case. Tea has not been commoditised to the same extent as it has in the UK, and  the customary German efficiency and attention to detail pretty much guarantees a satisfactory tea-drinking experience, wherever it’s served.

British visitors are likely to marvel at the sheer magnitude of German tea-bags. They are typically the size of gym socks and attached to a cardboard tag that slips over the handle of the pot so that the bag can be removed when the desired strength has been attained. The voluminous nature of the bags means that they yeild a brew equal in quality to loose-leaf tea. Even the much-vaunted PG tips pyramid bag is little better than a second hand Vauxhall Corsa in comparison to Fritz’s V-12 Mercedes AMG. Germany, therefore, is an excellent destination for jaded British tea-drinkers who wish to rediscover their love and respect for our ‘national drink’.

The Tea Caddy says ‘well done, Jerry’.

Unknown's avatar

Who, what and why.

Hello and welcome to The Tea Caddy’s inaugural blog, brought to you by the original Mr Tea (est. 1984).

I hope you’ll join me here often for a heady brew of tea news & reviews, tea lore and occasional non-tea-related digressions as I travel the world in search of the perfect cuppa.

You can find out more about my mission to promote excellence in all things tea-related on The Tea Caddy web site.