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Tea Time Table Set Up

If you are going to enjoy a nice tasseography session, it helps to have a little treat to go with it! Why not have a full tea party along with it? This logic is flawless and basically what I do every time. Some are unsure of how to set up the table for tea, however, and wind up just throwing things together. Everything from time of day to who is coming to how formal it will be can change how you present your table and what all you put on it.

Salad Plate: The primary focus for the setting, the small salad, or luncheon plate, should sit one inch from the edge of the table.

Place Card: Place or name cards are a nice touch and should sit in the middle of the plate (optional)

Teacup and saucer: Teacup handle should point out to the right.

Small Napkin: 9” sized, not 12” dinner sized. Fold neatly into a rectangle or triangle depending on the time of day. Place utensils on top or place the napkin in a napkin ring.

Small Spreader: instead of knives, place small spreaders or butter knives on the right and point toward the table.

Fork: Place on the left.

Spoon: Place on the right, outside of the spreader.

Water Glass: Place on the right, just beyond the knife.

Small bowl: For waste, like used tea bags and lemon rinds, place to the left of the table setting.

Place teapot, serving dishes, sugar bowl, and creamer in the center where all your guests can easily access and pass around or decide who will pour the tea and place the teapot to the right of their knife.

Food options are numerous and can include cucumber, cream cheese, or tuna sandwiches, scones, buns, mini cakes and pastry puffs, clotted cream, jams, or fruit curds but what order to you present them? Do you just place everything out at once? Is there a method to the madness? As it turns out, yes there is! While the focus of a tea party is obviously the tea, there is no reason not to place emphasis and effort on the delicious treats that accompany it.

Tea towers are often seen with tea parties and if you want to try your own, it is important to know exactly how they stack. The bottom place is the largest and it will hold the main course. This is food in small amounts that will make up the meal to accompany your tea. The second level is something light that follows the main meal and the third plate level is the smallest, holding the dessert for the end of your meal. Granted, whenever I munch on my towers, I always eat from all 3 tiers at the same time. During this delicious time, I often have multiple cups of tea. Each time a cup is finished is the perfect time for an additional tea reading!

What do you like to put on your tea towers? Let me know in the comments!

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Tea Time- How to avoid getting thrown out

There is a lot of etiquette involved in a proper tea time. It would be a shame to be removed due to bad etiquette! Etiquette has been very important for millennia and only in the last 100 years or so have people become far more casual and comfortable with our interactions. Many high end tea houses still hold certain rules and you wouldn’t want to be rude! Here are just a few to help you out!

Keep your napkin folded diagonally in a triangle shape across your lap. Your napkin should never touch the table once you are seated. Always leave the napkins on your lap or on the chair if you must leave the table.

Never pour your tea to the brim. Pour the brewed tea to fill the cup only half way. You can then add milk, sugar, or lemon to your taste. Never add lemon and milk together in the same cup, the milk will curdle.

It is considered rude to swirl one’s tea in wide circular motions.  You must position the teaspoon at 6 o’ clock to begin. Any added liquid should be lightly folded towards 12 o’ clock, 2 or 3 times. Do not let your teaspoon touch the edge of your cup.

When you have finished your delicate swirling, don’t leave your teaspoon standing upright in your teacup. Under no circumstances should one ever sip from the spoon. Take the small spoon and place it on the right side of the tea saucer.

Control your fingers. While your aristocratic fingers may feel the need to extend your little finger, resist the urge and keep your little finger down. This type of extravagant behavior is actually considered improper. Use your thumb, index finger, and middle finger to grip the cup’s handle. Never grasp the bowl of the cup with one’s hand.

Unless assisted by maids or servers, there should be designated ‘pourers’ on duty to dispense tea. No one should pour more than 15-20 minutes. Do not pour your own tea.

One must sip, and not slurp, one’s tea.

One does not ‘dunk’ a biscuit. This would be considered primitive and rude. It would leave crumbs in the cup.

Never dig into your scone no matter how hungry you may be. Take your knife and split your scone in half. Butter is placed on one part of the scone, jam on the other. If you desire Devonshire cream, place a dollop on top of the jam.

Sandwiches should be eaten in small bites. Use the utensils to place them on your plate, and break off one bite size piece at a time. Never take large bites, and never speak with your mouth full.

Most of the foods served at afternoon tea will be finger foods. At tea, there will be more savory items. Never use your fingers to eat these; now is the time to pick up your fork.

The scones and sandwiches were delicious and filling, but you were not able to finish your last cucumber and cress sandwich. Whatever food you don’t finish, leave it at the table. There are no doggie bags at afternoon or high tea.

Hopefully this will be of some help to you during your next tea party!

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Tasseography

Tea Leaf Reading

Tasseography is a form of divination that involves interpreting images in loose leaf tea leaves or dregs from a cup of coffee. The images are ‘read’ and then interpreted. Derived from the French word for teacup “tasse”, and the Greek suffixes “graph”, “logy”, and “mancy”. Tasseography, also called Tasseomancy, is a divination or fortune telling method that interprets patterns in tea leaves, coffee grounds, or wine sediments. It is a fairly modern style of divination and only a few centuries old. The idea is that your energy gets infused into the tea leaves, which can then form themselves into symbols in the cup to send messages. Divination attempts to gain insight into the natural world through intuitive interpretation of synchronistic events.

The practice of tea leaf reading is one of the easiest forms of divination to learn. The leaves at the bottom of the cup of tea can form symbols and images, much like the shapes we often see in cloud formations, which can be interpreted by the tea leaf reader.

Your readings are more effective when the seeker is sitting in front of you. The reader acts as a medium and, when the seeker sits in front of the reader and drinks from the cup, she passes her energy to the cup, its contents, and back to the reader. This process more fully stimulates the reader’s psychic abilities. Therefore, the physical presence of the seeker is key to a reading, aside from the questionable ethics involved in reading someone’s cup without their prior knowledge or permission.

To begin, choose the loose tea or ground coffee that you will use for your reading. You will also need a cup, saucer, spoon, and tea or coffee pot.

First, steep the tea with leaves directly in the water. Drink the tea. If there is a specific question you have for the tea leaves, keep it in your mind while drinking. when you are near the bottom Swirl the dregs around 3 times, tip the remaining tea into the saucer by flipping the cup upside down on the saucer to drain. Clear your mind. While the cup is upside down, turn the cup around in the saucer 3 times clockwise, count to 3 and then turn the cup back over to read the leaves.

This is where your intuition and personal style come in to play, because there is no right or wrong way to interpret tea leaf reading symbols. The longer you look, the more you will see. It is extremely personal. Much depends on your perspective as well as the situation you have asked the tea leaves for help with. The symbols won’t always be distinct. As always, go with what your intuition tells you. Many tea leaf readers use the bottom of the cup for the past, the middle for the present, and top for the future. If you are still unclear as to the tea leaves’ message, take some time to meditate on the symbols and the problem at hand. As with any method of divination, a little practice goes a long way. There are a couple of ways to interpret your cup as seen below:

After you have figured out which cup reading method you are going to use, you can then pour your tea/coffee/wine and begin. Look for symbols, pictures, or motifs that you recognize.

This is just a few images you might see but don’t let this limit your inner eye. The longer you look, the more images you will see. The longer you look, the easier it will be for you to discern images from the cup. If it helps, you could even create a tea cup worksheet so you can draw out your images and keep track of them over time to help you improve and look for patterns. I plan to make one for myself in the future and once I do, I will post it here. Good luck and happy seeing!

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Brewing a Witch’s Tea

With a teapot you have all 4 elements to work your magic. The pot is earth, the water is used to brew the tea, the heat is fire, and the aroma of the herbs from the tea is air. As you slowly sip your tea, visualize your desired outcome.

Witch Tip: The brewing of magical tea is an effective and ancient practice. With your next ritual or spell, make a brew of your own and experience the magical indulgence.

Stir your tea/coffee clockwise to empower it with energy, beauty, and healing properties. It will bring positivity.

Stir your tea/coffee anticlockwise to reduce anxiety, dispel negative energies, or for weight loss.

Then tap your cup 3 times to seal your intent. Inhaling the vapors is part of their magical properties.

Cat Tea- Because they are ALWAYS in the middle of everything

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Create lavender scented tea sachets

I was surfing Pinterest for some images to help with my tea posts and found a tea timing graph. It was pretty accurate and I had thought of a neat little craft I could make for my tea cabinet.

So I used a piece of paper to make a larger than normal tea bag shape. I used a couple pieces of fabric and some shiny rough thread to create a tea bag with a string hanging off of it. Each of the bags were stuffed with lavender buds and each one smelled amazing. Using some thick gold card stock paper, I cut out the tag shape twice for each tea bag. Then I glued them together so there was gold on both sides with the rough thread in between them. Since all of my fabrics were different, I thought it better to tie them all together with matching tags. I also didn’t realize until later that the tag shape is upside down compared to the picture until I had securely glued each one. Oh well…… maybe next time!

I made 6 bags with 6 tags. Each thread was the same length as that in the tea timing graph.

Afterwards, on one side of the gold card stock, I wrote the tea type.

And on the backside, I wrote the ideal brewing temperature and steeping time.

Finally, I tied up 2 pretty ribbons and added a sea shell for decoration! I love it and how wonderful it smells! I now have it displayed in my tea cabinet and the lavender sachets make the cabinet smell really wonderful.

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How do I know what kind of tea I am drinking?

Tea is traditionally classified based on the techniques from which it is produced and processed. There is white tea, yellow tea, green tea, oolong tea, black tea, and post fermented tea among others such as herbal blend.

White: Wilted and unoxidized
Yellow: Unwilted and unoxidized, but allowed to yellow
Green: unwilted and unoxidized
Oolong: wilted, bruised, and partially oxidized
Black: wilted, sometimes crushed, and fully oxidized
Post-fermented: green tea that has been allowed to ferment/ compost

Witch Tip: The amount of loose leaf tea necessary for brewing varies from tea to tea. Shoot for 1 ½ to 2 teaspoons of leaves per 8 ounces of water unless otherwise directed. Some loose leaf tea can even be re-steeped to make multiple cups of tea. Typically, green and black teas re-steep the best.

Witch Tip: Black teas should be steeped in boiling water, while green, white, and oolong need it a bit cooler. Boiling water can actually burn green tea. You can boil the water, and then let it sit a few minutes before pouring over the tea leaves.

Witch Tip: Milk proteins bind with the polyphenols (antioxidants) in tea, meaning even just a little splash can reduce the amount of active antioxidants in that cup.

Witch Tip: Adding lemon increases tea’s antioxidant potential. The vitamin C in any citrus juice, like lemon, orange, or grapefruit, can help our bodies better absorb antioxidants we consume in food or drink.

Witch Tip: If you are steeping a blend, follow the time and temperature of the most delicate tea in your mix.

While there are all sorts of guidelines for tea making, it’s really all about preference. Make each cup to your liking by drinking it black, adding sweetener, pouring it over ice, or even spiking it with vodka. Adding milk may reduce the number of benefits you can reap from tea’s antioxidants, but if adding milk makes your cup of tea more enjoyable, go for it.

White Tea
Examples: Pai Mu Tan/ Bai Mu Dan (White Peony), Yi Zhen Bai Hao (Silver Needle), Gongmei (Tribute Eyebrow), Shou Mei (Noble, Long Life Eyebrow) and Fujian New Craft (DaBaiCha or DaHoaCha)
Health Benefits: Treats cold symptoms, reduces the risk of arthritis, beneficial for stress and wrinkles, antioxidants help fight colon cancer, stimulates liver function, aids in weight loss and detoxification
Magical Benefits: Cleansing, protection
Best Time to Drink: Anytime!
Flavor: Light and subtle
Caffeine: Yes: 32-37mg (1-2% of the amount in a cup of coffee)
Steep Teabag for: 30-90 seconds
Steep loose tea for: 4-5 minutes
White tea contains more potent anticancer properties than processed teas. Studies show that white tea can thin the blood and improve artery function. It helps lower high blood pressure and maintain a healthy BP. Whole tea contains small amounts of fluoride and other nutrients which keeps the teeth strong and healthy. It also kills the bacteria which causes plaque, tooth decay, and bad breath. White tea helps strengthen the immune system and prevent bacterial infection.

Yellow Tea
Examples: Jun Shan Yin Zhen (bud tea), Meng Ding Huang Ya (bud tea) and Huo Shan Huang Ya (small and large leaf tea)
Caffeine: Yes
Yellow tea is much rarer and undergoes a rolling and drying process which gives it its distinct color and taste.

Green Tea
Examples: Sencha, gyuokuo, tencha, matcha, funmatsucha, konacho, shincha, fukamushicha, kukicha, bancha
Magical Benefits: Energy, cleansing
Best time to drink: Mid-morning
Flavor: Clean, sweet, earthy
Caffeine: Yes: 24-39mg
Steep Teabag for: 1-2 minutes
Steep Loose Tea for: 2-3 minutesGreen tea has some of the highest levels of antioxidants of all teas. It has been found to improve cholesterol levels, protect against heart disease, speeds metabolism to help lose weight, reduces plaque and bacteria in your mouth, prevent dementia, fight multiple types of cancer, and is full of antioxidants.
Antioxidants can lower risk of breast, bladder, stomach, and colon cancers. Antioxidants interfere with growth of bladder, breast, lung, stomach, pancreatic, and colorectal cancers. It can prevent clogging of the arteries and improve cholesterol. Green tea can also reduce risk of stroke as well as reduce risk of neurological disorders. It protects against cognitive decline like Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases.
Green tea contains an amino acid known as L-theanine which may increase sleep efficiency and boost time spent in REM sleep cycles. Green tea is rich in health promoting flavonoids. 1 cup of green tea supplies 20-35mg of EGCG (pepper increases EGCG availability).

Oolong Tea
Health Benefits: Increases metabolism and helps reduce body fat, alleviates skin conditions, increased brain function, helps with focus and meditation, boosts metabolism, promotes weight loss
Magical Benefits: None
Best time to drink: Before meals
Flavor: Full bodies, sweet
Caffeine: Yes: 29-53mg
Steep Teabag for: 2-5 minutes
Steep Loose Tea for: 5-7 minutes
Oolong teas fall on a range between black and green tea and should follow the chart for the type they are closest to. It has been shown to help with weight loss in many studies by decreasing abdominal fat. Polyphenols in slimming tea are believed to increase energy expenditure translating to a 35%-43% increase in fat burning.
It has been found to help keep blood sugar in check and can help lower cholesterol. It has been shown to help people with diabetes keep blood sugar levels in line. Drinking oolong tea 15minutes before eating carbs helps to reduce the insulin spike you would normally experience after eating carbs.
Oolong tea promotes metabolism, healthy skin, and helps maintain healthy bones. A new study from the Department of Dentistry in Japan’s Osaka University shows the regular consumption of oolong strengthens teeth and helps prevent tooth decay by significantly inhibiting plaque buildup. Oolong naturally contains fluoride which can help lower the risk of cavities. Researchers from Japan’s Shiga University of Medical Science found that drinking oolong tea daily clears up skin within as few as 30 days of acne.
It has been found to have anti-cancer properties and aid in stress management. Oolong tea significantly reduces free radicals in the body and helps slow down and even reverse signs of aging. Drinking this tea boosts mental alertness and increases energy. A recent study showed the increase energy expenditures after drinking green tea was only 4% where oolong tea had an increase of over 10%. Oolong tea helps you concentrate more and improves mood and productivity because of the presence of L-Theanine and a small amount of naturally occurring caffeine. Oolong tea contains the polyphenol EGCG which can help improve brain function and memory.
Test subjects who consumed oolong were found to have stronger immune systems and significantly lower risk for infections such as the common cold.
Oolong tea can help decrease inflammation in the body. This lowers the risk of many diseases.

Black Tea
Examples: Darjeeling, Ceylon, Earl Grey, English Breakfast, Masala Chai
Black tea is a type of tea that is more oxidized than oolong, yellow, white and green teas. Black tea is generally stronger in flavor than other teas. While green tea usually loses its flavor within a year, black tea retains its flavor for several years. For this reason, it has long been an article of trade, and compressed bricks of black tea even served as a form of de facto currency in Mongolia, Tibet and Siberia into the 19th century.
Health Benefits: Improved energy and focus, freshens breath, protects skin from UV rays, an antioxidant boost, lowers blood pressure and the risk of diabetes and kidney stones, helps reduce anxiety and headaches, as well as aiding in weight loss,
Magical Benefits: Repels negativity, strength
Best time to drink: morning (high in caffeine), Afternoon
Flavor: strong, sometimes bitter
Caffeine: Yes: 64-112mg
Steep Teabag for: 1-2 minutes
Steep Loose Tea for: 3-4 minutes
Black tea contains more caffeine than any other type of tea which is still half the caffeine of a standard cup of coffee (95-200mg).
Black tea can help to improve cardiovascular health. Black tea has been found to protect lungs from damage caused by exposure to cigarette smoke. Black tea Contains theophylline which increases blood flow in the capillaries and helps the body maintain a normal blood pressure which can reduce the risk of stroke. This tea can also expand the airways, making breathing easier for asthmatics

Herbal Tea
Examples: Chamomile, lavender, peppermint, hibiscus, rose,
Health Benefits: Different herbal teas have varying health benefits such as reducing stress and aiding in weight loss
Magical Benefits: Depends on the herb
Best time to drink: Anytime (no caffeine)
Flavor: Different herbal teas have different flavors. The flavor will depend on the herbs and spices used in the blend.
Caffeine: No
Steep Teabag for: 4-7 minutes
Steep Loose Tea for: 4-7 minutes
Herbal teas are generally made from dried fruits, herbs, or flowers

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Afternoon Tea vs. High Tea

If there is one thing I love as a witch, it is tea. There are so many different types of tea to take between social teas and magical and herbal remedy teas. Here we are going to focus on the social tea before I delve in deeper to the magical and herbal remedy teas!

English high tea was considered the pinnacle of elegant and aristocratic dining but has now made a popular comeback into everyday modern life. Laughter and conversation flow easily around the table when people are enjoying a well-planned tea party. If you are thinking of hosting such a gathering, be sure to know which type of tea party you plan to host, be it an afternoon tea or a high tea. Though these terms are often used interchangeably, they are actually distinctly different.

Legend has it that afternoon tea was started in the mid-1800s by the Duchess of Bedford. Around this time, kerosene lamps were introduced in wealthier homes, and eating a late dinner (around 8 or 9 p.m.) became fashionable. This increasingly late dinner was one of only two meals each day, the other was a mid-morning, breakfast-like meal.

The story goes that the Duchess found herself with a “sinking feeling.” This was likely fatigue from hunger during the long wait between meals. She decided to invite friends over for assorted snacks and tea, which was a very fashionable drink at the time.

The idea of an afternoon tea gathering spread across high society and became a favorite pastime of ladies of leisure. Later, it spread beyond the highest echelons of society and became more accessible for other socioeconomic groups.

Afternoon Tea/ Low Tea
A Classy Affair
Served between: 2pm and 5pm

When we think about a deluxe British tea with all the fancy fixings, this is probably what we’re thinking of. Afternoon tea traces its social-event origins to the 1830s or 1840s. It is believed that a duchess named Anna Maria Russell sparked the trend because she grew hungry between the light noon lunch traditionally enjoyed by well-heeled Brits and dinner, which wasn’t usually served until at least 7:30 p.m. She began to take tea and a snack to get her through the long afternoon and was soon joined by her friends, who then spread the habit throughout the aristocracy. Sometimes called “low tea” because it was enjoyed while sitting in low-slung armchairs, afternoon tea has never been a lowly affair.

It is a British culinary tradition of sitting down for a mid-day treat of tea, sandwiches, and cake. It is served at a low table and is generally considered to be a ladies’ social occasion. This tea is reserved for the upper class. It is a formal occasion and social gathering with fine china, dainty finger foods, and treats. It consists of savories, tea sandwiches, scones, and sweets. Afternoon tea is a light meal composed of three courses of tea sandwiches and savories, followed by scones with clotted cream and jam, and ending with sweet pastries. Everything is bite-sized and eaten with fingers.

Afternoon tea time is served between lunch and dinner. The light meal is not meant to replace dinner but instead to tide you over until dinner which was usually around 8PM for the upper class.

Afternoon tea, also known as ‘low tea,’ is what most people think of when they hear ‘high tea.’ It involves things like manners, lace, and dainty foods. it was never intended to replace dinner but rather to fill in the long gap between lunch and dinner at a time when dinner was served as late as 8 p.m. Lifestyles have changed since those times and afternoon tea is now a treat, rather than a stop-gap.

An afternoon tea menu is light and focuses on scones, finger sandwiches. Marmalade, lemon curds, and herbed butter may also be included. Favorite teas for afternoon tea include black teas like Earl Grey and Assam as well as herbal teas like chamomile and mint.

Today, afternoon tea, generally served around 3 or 4 p.m., features finger sandwiches and delicate scones, cakes, macaroons and treats — in addition, of course, to tea. But you shouldn’t scarf them down too enthusiastically. Manners are important in afternoon tea: Show restraint, put your napkin on your lap, and stir your tea gently.

Although many Americans think of afternoon tea as having a set menu, there are many variations on this tea-centric meal.

The simplest form of afternoon tea is cream tea — a meal of tea, scones, and cream. Add fresh strawberries to cream tea and you have ​strawberry tea.

If you add more sweets to cream tea, you get light tea.

Add savory foods, like finger sandwiches to light tea and you get full tea, which is the elaborate meal most Americans think of when they hear the phrase ‘afternoon tea.’

Some hotels and tea rooms also offer other variations on afternoon tea, such as champagne tea, also called royal tea (afternoon tea served with a glass of champagne) and teddy bear tea (a children’s afternoon tea party featuring dolls and teddy bears).

High Tea/Meat Tea
Served between: 5pm and 7pm

High tea is not a fancy tea, as many people assume. Delectable scones, tea sandwiches, and cakes are the hallmark of an afternoon tea, which is served in midafternoon. Contrary to the haughty images stirred by its lofty moniker, high tea is actually a lot more relaxed than afternoon tea. (The “high” part refers to the fact that one traditionally enjoys it while seated at an actual dinner table, rather than on a low armchair or couch.)

Outside of the United Kingdom, many people refer to afternoon tea as ‘high tea.’ Although the idea that high tea is a meal of foods like scones and finger sandwiches is common, it is not actually correct in a traditional or historical sense. High tea was much more of a working-class family meal than it was an elite social gathering.

Its origins can be found in the lower classes, who compensated for the lack of a lunch break in their workdays by taking tea — along with cold cuts, cheeses, pies and hearty hot dishes — immediately after work. It was an informal occasion for those who were hungry after a long, laborious day of work. Instead of small crustless finger sandwiches, a high tea menu consisted of a much more substantial fair such as meat dishes, fish, bread, egg dishes, potatoes, baked beans, and other heavy dishes and desserts. It was meant to nourish the after a long day at work. Think of it as a light supper served with tea.

A typical high tea meal starts with a hot dish and is followed by cakes and bread with butter and jam.  Working class families, as well as middle-to upper-class children, finish their day with high tea.

In Scotland, high tea takes on further differentiation. A Scottish high tea is not unlike an afternoon tea but will include some hot food, such as a cheese on toast or other savory goodies.

SO WHY IN THE WORLD DO PEOPLE STILL CALL IT HIGH TEA IF THAT IS WRONG?

Because they think it sounds fancier. And establishments that offer afternoon tea sometimes call it high tea to market to people who don’t know better. Even in England where afternoon tea originated, you may see luxury hotels offering high tea to attract tourists.

Now you know the difference and can engage your tea parties properly! Why my sudden onset of tea related posts? Coming soon: Tea leaf reading!

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The history of tea

Legend has it that in 2737B.C. tea was discovered by the Chinese Emperor Shen Nong. He had been sitting beneath a tree waiting for his water to boil when tea leaves fell into his pot. In 59B.C. Wang Bao wrote the first known book with instructions on buying and preparing tea. Famed physician and surgeon Hua Tuo wrote Shin Lun in 22C.E. in which he describes tea’s ability to improve mental functions.

From 400-600C.E. the demand for tea rose steadily. Rather than harvest leaves from wild trees, farmers began to develop ways to cultivate tea and in 479, Turkish traders bartered for tea on the Mongolian border.

From 589-618C.E. during the Sui Dynasty, tea was introduced to Japan by Buddhist monks. Around this time, from about 618-906C.E. during the Tang Dynasty, powdered tea was produced; Caravans carried tea on the Silk Road, trading with India, Turkey, and Russia.

Poet Lu Yu is regarded in China as the tea saint. He was born around 733 and was abandoned by his parents at a temple when he was about 3 years old. The monks adopted him and taught him to make and appreciate tea. They wanted him to become a Buddhist monk, but he rebelled and ran away at the age of 12. He traveled eastern China to study tea and eventually settled in Hu Zhou, where he found his favorite tea, Purple Bamboo Shoot. He spent a couple of decades writing the first tea book in history, Cha Jing, and in it he explained how to grow and process tea, and how to prepare and drink it.

Lu Yu’s book had tremendous impact on the tea industry, both by teaching producers to make better tea and by introducing tea to the common people. He wrote the first book of tea in 780C., making him a living saint, patronized by the Emperor himself. The book described methods of cultivation and preparation.  By 1200-1300C.E. during the Yuan Dynasty, tea became an ordinary drink enjoyed by all, never regaining the high status it once enjoyed in China. Marco Polo was not even introduced to tea when he visited.

During the 1400s, the Japanese tea ceremony was created by a Zen priest named Murata Shuko, who had devoted his life to tea. The ceremony is called Cha No Yu, which means hot water for tea.

Tea had arrived in Europe by the 17th century via Dutch and Portuguese sailors, trading dried sage in exchange. The first tea samples reached England between 1552 and 1654. Tea was first sold in England in 1657 at Garway’s Coffee House in London. In 1662, Queen Catherine of Breganza married Charles III. The Portuguese Catherine grew up drinking tea and brought her favorite dink with her to England. They both drank tea, creating a fashion for it. Its popularity among the aristocracy caused alcoholic beverages to fall from favor.

In 1657, tea was introduced to the English public in coffee houses as a medicinal drink. For ladies, tea was generally consumed in the bedchamber or during a female gathering. During the 18th century, tea gardens became popular among the upper class. At this time, tea arrived in Northern America. The earliest tea service dates from the early 1700s when Queen Anne first used a large silver teapot. Around this time, traders with 300 camels traveled 11,000 miles to China and back in order to supply Russia’s demand. The trip took a total of 16 months.

16 December, 1773, was the day of the “Boston Tea Party” which was a political protest against the British government and the monopolistic control of high taxes on the colonies. Under cover of night, colonists dressed as Native Americans, boarded the East India Trading Company ships in Boston Harbor. They opened chests of tea and dumped their contents into the water. This was repeated in other less known instances up and down the coast. The Boston Tea Party was a key event in the growth of the American Revolution.

In 1776 England sent the first opium to China. Opium addiction in China funded the escalating demand for tea in England. Cash trade for the drug increased until the opium wars began in 1839. An Imperial Edict from the Chinese Emperor closed all Chinese ports to foreign vessels until the end of the First Opium War.

The tradition of high tea did not develop among the upper class. It was originally a middle and lower class tradition during the early 1800s to substitute for dinner. The name high tea came from the high tables the tea was served in.

During the 1830s, Anna, the Duchess of Bedford, adopted the European tea services format and would invite her friends over for a small afternoon meal. The meal centered around small cakes and sandwiches. This idea was copied by many other hostesses during this era and tea time was born. In the 1880s the tradition of tea time was brought to luxury hotels as a form of entertainment and socialization around 4pm.

The beginning of the 20th century saw a significant rise in tea consumption which resulted from the appearance of tea bags, the inventor of tea bags, a New York tea merchant by the name of Thomas Sullivan. He sent tea to clients in silk bags which they began to mistakenly steep without opening. F

Today, the top 5 tea consuming countries in the world are Turkey, Ireland, UK, Iran, and Morocco.

Witch Tip: In Tibet, tea is served mixed with salt and butter.

Witch Tip: In Myanmar, formerly Burma, pickled tea, known as lahpet, is eaten.

The “Vessel Boiling Electric” or “BV” for boiling vessel was an innovation at the very end of World War II, when the Centurion tank was introduced with the device fitted inside the turret. Previously, British tank crews had disembarked when they wanted to “brew-up” (make tea), using a petrol cooker improvised from empty fuel cans called a “Benghazi burner”. Use of the BV enabled the crew to stay safely inside the tank and reduced the time taken for breaks. A boiling vessel is a water heating system fitted to British armored fighting vehicles that permits the crew to heat water and cook food by drawing power from the vehicle electrical supply. It is often referred to by crew members (not entirely in jest) as the most important piece of equipment in a British armored vehicle. A vehicle with a defective BV is declared unfit for purpose. 

From our altar to yours, with love from the sea,

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