Tea a trend or a way of life?
#1
Posted 02 February 2011 - 04:10 PM
Here's a brief quote: Tea, after all, is the perfect drink for frenzied New Yorkers with a big caffeine habit but very little peace of mind. Tea promotes harmony and balance of life, Tam says. The experience is not rushed. Its refined and grounding. Drinking tea is an art of living.
#2
Posted 03 February 2011 - 07:27 AM
-overheard from a 105 year old man
"The only time to eat diet food is while waiting for the steak to cook" - Julia Child
#3
Posted 03 February 2011 - 08:24 AM
There are a lot of people with too much money and too much time that want to buy into a pre made life style. Tea is as good as anything else I guess. People write articles like that about foot wear too.
#4
Posted 03 February 2011 - 09:15 AM
Next week's report: "Bread: are you cool enough?"
#5
Posted 03 February 2011 - 09:40 AM
#6
Posted 03 February 2011 - 10:19 AM
I don't know if I would say tea is a "way of life" for me or not. I drink tea everyday, and have since I was a small kid. It's a coffee-soda-juice alternative, jolt of caffeine in the morning, post-meal digestive - there's lots of reasons for drinking it. It's part of my daily life. But it doesn't mean I'm buying into the harmony/balance thing whenever I take a sip of my Ti Kuan Yin oolong.
On the other hand, I do like that tea is getting more attention, trend or not.
#7
Posted 03 February 2011 - 12:19 PM
In the mid-to-late '80s and early '90s more people began learning about and drinking tea and there were discussion about tea on user groups (CompuServe was my first-and most expensive) and later message boards on Prodigy and Genie and still later AOL(not for long, I hated it).
As the "secrets" of tea were revealed and various mail order sources were shared, more and more people discovered that tea could be a lot more than the ubiquitous Lipton, Red Rose and etc.
With the advent of the WW internet and ISPs that were a lot cheaper than CompuServe, the community of tea drinkers expanded exponentially and continues to do so to date.
Some tea ideas are "trendy" and for some people it is a way of life because they like it. For most people it is an enjoyable drink that can be enjoyed at any time of the day or evening. Decaf teas and the herbal infusions are tastier than decaf coffees IMHO.
I have been a Teamail subscriber since it began in '98 - there had previously been a tea discussion group whose members migrated to TeaMail.
As others have noted, in other parts of the world tea is simply the everyday beverage of choice.
Only in America will one see an article about tea being "fashionable" or "trendy."
My blog:Books,Cooks,Gadgets&Gardening
#8
Posted 03 February 2011 - 01:22 PM
#9
Posted 03 February 2011 - 01:41 PM
Tea can be a great beverage, sometimes the only one that seems right for a given moment, and a I know heaps of people who favour tea, but I don't know any who consider it 'a way of life' or any sort of 'lifestyle' thing... that just sounds odd. 'Trend' seems odd too... a bit like describing socks as a trend/way of life.
#10
Posted 04 February 2011 - 04:53 AM
#11
Posted 04 February 2011 - 07:06 AM
#12
Posted 04 February 2011 - 07:35 AM
I agree it's silly-- but maybe if it catches on, we'll finally be able to get decent tea in more restaurants. I hate going to a good restauarant, enjoying an excellent meal, and then finding that the only tea on offer is Lipton.
#13
Posted 04 February 2011 - 11:56 AM
I agree it's silly-- but maybe if it catches on, we'll finally be able to get decent tea in more restaurants. I hate going to a good restauarant, enjoying an excellent meal, and then finding that the only tea on offer is Lipton.Not ONLY that it's only Lipton, but that the water is nowhere nearly hot enough and may taste somewhat like coffee.
Far too many times it isn't even Lipton. It is some generic thing sold at restaurant supply places that is made from "sweepings" of tea dust. God only knows how long it has been since it was packaged.
When I was still working, our office (3 doctors 15 employees) had a "coffee & tea service" that supplied everything, including tea bags and herbal tea bags with no brand name on any, only the name of the service. The black tea was pretty bad but the green tea was horrible and smelled like it had been under a cat box for some years. None of us ever drank the stuff, we brought our own and I finally insisted that they stopped stocking it and adjust the cost. The rep told me that they didn't charge for the tea at all because it was so cheap!
My blog:Books,Cooks,Gadgets&Gardening
#14
Posted 04 February 2011 - 03:00 PM
And shall I mention the coffee shops where they give you only one tea bag no matter the size of the cup you've ordered? But, they cheerfully tell you, you can get a refill of the lukewarm water! And resteep the sad, overworked little teabag!
I read a thread from a while back here lamenting bad tea in restaurants. Apparently it's too expensive to offer? What with the china walking off and all? I'm not sure I buy it-- personally, I'd be fine with someone bringing me a prepared cup of tea, no teapot, no strainer, if it were well made. (You know, like they do with coffee).
Maybe if tea became a "way of life" for more Americans, they'd find a way to make it work.
#15
Posted 04 October 2011 - 06:07 PM









