Tuesday, June 7, 2016

The Original Long Island Iced Tea

I've always heard of "Long Island Iced Tea" as an alcoholic beverage, but the "Original Long Island Iced Tea" flavors I picked up at Ingles over the weekend were made with camellia sinensis instead. I had actually been looking for the Jimmy Buffett teas I like to sip in hot weather, but alas, they had none on the shelves. Happily, though, I found a new brand of bottled tea to try.

The mango flavor was quite a sweet treat and did indeed taste like mangoes. This tea boasts non-GMO ingredients and "a pinch of pure cane sugar."

The Diet Peach flavor was also good but had a hint of that tartness I sometimes find in diet teas, probably from the sucralose sweetener. I liked it, but I definitely preferred the mango flavor. I seem to drink bottled teas primarily when I'm on the road (such as when I'm on vacation or when I'm heading from my Dad's house back to Newnan). Do any of you drink bottled teas more often than that?

Monday, June 6, 2016

June Giveaway: Herbal teas and herbal tea book!


One thing I don't suppose I'll ever develop sales resistance against is books. I found several good book buys at Dollar Tree over the weekend, and I pretty much leaped upon this copy of "A Cozy Book of Herbal Teas" by Mindy Toomay. I already have this book, but to find a brand-new copy for only a dollar? Well, I couldn't just leave this for any old body to find when one of *you* might need it! So I decided I'd pair it with some herbal tea bags as this month's giveaway.

The book is a charming one, and I'm happy to have been reminded of it because I'm suddenly on a Blue Willow kick and realized Blue Willow teawares are on the cover. I actually reviewed this book back during my year of reviewing a tea book a week, and the review is here if you'd like more info.

I'm also including a little fabric pouch with a few herbal tea samples. Even if you don't like the teas, I think the bag is cute! So if you'd like to win, just leave an "Enter me" to this post between now and 7 a.m. EST this Friday, June 10, and you'll be entered to win. US and Canada only, please. Good luck!

Saturday, June 4, 2016

My Country, 'Tis of Tea — Michigan




I am a little nervous writing about Michigan's tea connections because the expert on all things tea in Michigan is my friend Phyllis of the Relevant Tea Leaf blog. In fact, I started to just post the link to her blog and say, "This." But that would be cheating, wouldn't it? So instead, here are my votes for three important things to know about tea and Michigan!

• You can't mention Michigan without thinking of the automobile industry there. Since my dad is retired from Ford Motor Company, I have a strong loyalty to Ford, and that's the only brand of car I've ever owned. (It helps that I've always gotten that nice family discount, but I would buy Fords even if I didn't.) I knew I remembered from reading Phyllis's blog that Clara Ford, the wife of Ford founder Henry Ford of Dearborn, Michigan, was a fan of teatime, and I found this picture of her online. This year marks the 150th anniversary of Clara's birth, and a number of anniversary teas and other events have been scheduled in honor of the occasion. In Ford R. Bryan's book "Clara: Mrs. Henry Ford," there are numerous references to Clara taking tea. She had tea with friends, she had tea before going to a concert, and in 1927, after she became president of the Woman's National Farm and Garden Association, she held a tea for 34 women at an inn. The most exciting tea tidbit I read in the book excerpt was that in April of 1928, Henry Ford was the guest of honor at a dinner given by the American Society in London, and "the Fords met King George and Queen Mary for tea at the home of Lady Astor the next day."  Here's a great blog post from Phyllis in which she writes more about Henry and Clara Ford.


• I wondered if anyone was currently growing tea in Michigan, and a search led me to the internet home page of Light of Day Organics in Traverse City. You may notice that it says at the top, "Michigan's Only Tea Farm." As I was looking over their website, I found a quote I absolutely loved about how they operate: "We wanted to make sure that taste wasn’t the only thing to feel good about. Ensuring the highest quality of tea for you and life for those who bring it to us is part of our mission. We honor all of those involved in bringing this extremely labor-intensive crop from the fields to our cup by paying everyone a proper living wage and encouraging the spiritual sacredness of the family unit and community with time off from work to recharge and to play in this beautiful area that we are blessed to call 'home.'" Loved reading how a mom named Angela (ahem!) started this company in 2003 and helps her customers make healthy lifestyle choices. You can click here to learn more about the tea farm.

• When I started collecting recipes from famous department stores years ago, I was happy to learn about Detroit's J. L. Hudson Department Store, which was known for its Mezzanine Tea Room and other eateries. And then I was beside myself to learn that the great Diana Ross once worked in the basement cafeteria at Hudson's and was, in fact, the first black bus girl there. That was actually quite fitting, since Detroit is also the home of Motown, the legendary record company founded by Berry Gordy Jr. in 1959, where Diana Ross would soon find a recording home. Frankly, if you don't love Diana Ross and the Supremes, I'm not sure we can be friends. "Stop! In the Name of Love" and "Where Did Our Love Go," "Baby Love" and "Come See About Me" still take me to a happy place inside my head. Now one of Hudson's signature recipes was their famous Maurice Salad. And while I haven't found any evidence that Diana Ross ever enjoyed a Maurice Salad (and neither can I say that she didn't), I can tell you that I've made these simple and delicious salads myself, and they are quite delicious.  I suggest eating one while you listen to Diana Ross and the Supremes on Pandora. Here's the recipe if you care to look it o-o-ver.

Friday, June 3, 2016

Freeman's Sweet Tea & Lemon Peel-Away Clay Mask

If I were a braver woman, I would have taken a selfie to show you what I looked like wearing my Sweet Tea & Lemon Peel-Away Clay Mask from Freeman this week. Alas, no. Just no.

I found this for a dollar and some change, I believe, at an Ingles Market a few weeks ago and just got around to trying it this week. I was happy to see that camellia sinensis leaf extract was indeed listed as one of the ingredients. When I opened the packet, I squeezed out goo the color of Thousand Island dressing and the consistency of glue. And yes, I smeared it across my face. I have always loved peel-off masks because I like the idea of "peeling off" impurities. (An old friend who was a sales rep for a well-known brand of department-store cosmetics heard me say this once and was horrified because she said I was stripping off a layer of my skin. Whatever.) And after just 10 minutes, I was able to peel off my mask (yes, I still had some skin underneath) and my face felt wonderfully smooth. I'll be buying this mask again!

Thursday, June 2, 2016

June Coweta Shopper Column: The Charleston Tea Plantation

Planning a trip this summer? If you're anywhere near Charleston, South Carolina, I highly recommend a trip to the Charleston Tea Plantation, the topic of my tea column this month in The Coweta Shopper. If you don't live within the local readership area, you can find it online here.

Wednesday, June 1, 2016

How to drink more green tea

If you're like me, I always *intend* to drink more green tea for the health benefits, but I usually just don't like the taste as much as I do black teas or fruity teas. Thanks to a recent $1 find at Dollar Tree, I think I've found the perfect solution to this dilemma!

Years ago I received one of these infuser tumblers from some marketing company, but the infuser part didn't fasten securely, so I ended up tossing the tumbler. When I saw this one at Dollar Tree, I took the lid off, unscrewed the infuser, and it screwed back on just tight as a tick. So I took my tumbler home, cold-brewed some green tea, and popped a nice large slice of orange inside the infuser basket. The result is a delightfully citrusy iced green tea, and I could (and will) drink this stuff all day long!

The straw is nice and sturdy, too, so I don't think this will wear out anytime soon. Just in case, though, I plan on picking up another of these great tumblers the next time I'm in Dollar Tree!

Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Thrifting over the Memorial Day weekend

Lately I've been on a cleaning-out binge, tossing away, giving away, and putting away all kinds of books, magazines, and bric-a-brac. I've got my dad's blessing to bring some junk to his basement so my sister and I can be ready for the town yard sale there this fall. I don't care if I sell the stuff or not, I just want it gone. So I really, really think twice about bringing new stuff into my house (and my rule regarding teacups is that for any new one I bring in, I have to give one away, so expect some giveaways in the future, ha!). One area where I bend the rules, though, is when I come across something that's been on my "wish list," and Saturday at the Salvation Army in Carrollton, my aunt and I were shopping when I found a full-size cottage teapot like I've been wanting! Since it was just $1.50 and was in great shape, this definitely met a need.

It wasn't marked except for a sticker saying Made in Phillipines. I don't recall ever having teawares from the Phillipines before, do you?

The night before I hit the Salvation Army, I was talking to someone who wants me to help her with a big private tea on her property this fall. As I stood there pondering this fifty-cent handled dish, all I could think was, "Yes, and you'll be wishing you had this for lemon curd and cream come fall, won't you?" Since fall-colored teawares aren't that easy to come by, this got the nod as well.

The backstamp says Mitterteich, Bavaria, Germany. I found a page regarding Mitterteich backstamps here, and I gather this piece was made sometime after 1920. Fun finds at the thrift store!

Saturday, May 28, 2016

My Country, 'Tis of Tea — Massachusetts


While I never seem to make it out of the South very often, Boston, Massachusetts, has long been on my bucket list of places to visit. As much as I love American history, I think a tour of New England really needs to figure into my future before too many more years pass!


• Without a doubt, the Boston Tea Party would have to top any list of the most significant tea events not only in Massachusetts but also in the entire country. How do we sum that up succinctly, considering all that most of us now know about the event? I'll let History.com do the talking: "This famed act of American colonial defiance served as a protest against taxation. Seeking to boost the troubled East India Company, British Parliament adjusted import duties with the passage of the Tea Act in 1773. While consignees in Charleston, New York, and Philadelphia rejected tea shipments, merchants in Boston refused to concede to Patriot pressure. On the night of December 16, 1773, Samuel Adams and the Sons of Liberty boarded three ships in the Boston harbor and threw 342 chests of tea overboard." Of course, since my early grade-school lessons about the Boston Tea Party, I've learned there were quite a few other such tea-tax protests along the East Coast, but Boston's remains the most famous, and I think it's fair to rank this the number one tea event of all time in America. (Do you agree?)


• Oh, the fun of exploring the digital archives of the New York Public Library. That's where I came across this old but undated stereoscope image from the Oriental Tea Co.'s Store, located at 85, 87 and 89 Court Street in Boston. Can you just imagine wearing your long gown and fancy hat as you shopped for tea in such a store? Wow!


• A couple of years ago, tea friend Jenn in Massachusetts was kind enough to send me a gorgeous little 1904 cookbook that was originally published by her Daughters of the American Revolution chapter there. Titled "A Book of Beverages," the book includes (fittingly) a recipe for Boston Punch, which I was delighted to see lists tea as an ingredient. Last week I was thinking about "Lady Baltimore Cake" during my focus on Maryland, and this week, it's "Boston Punch." Wouldn't it be fun to research all the recipes named after cities in the US? 

Friday, May 27, 2016

Gardenias in a Tea Room Vase

I don't often pick flowers to display in my Tea Room Depression glass vase, but this week the gardenias are in bloom, so I couldn't resist! These are especially prized flowers to me this year since, two years ago, this plant froze during an ice storm and was not expected to come back, but as you can see, it certainly did! And I think these flowers are worthy of displaying in my favorite vase.


An Art Deco pattern, Tea Room Depression glass was actually used in tea rooms of the Depression era, but much of it was chipped because of the great number of corner angles. This pattern also shows a lot of "straw marks," which you'll notice in the second tier from the bottom. It looks like a crack in the vase but is not. It's simply a flaw that frequently occurred with this pattern. I haven't found any new Tea Room glassware lately, but the gardenias may have just inspired me to look!

Thursday, May 26, 2016

Shanghai's Willow Tea House

One of the treasures I found on the New York Public Library's website this week was this old postcard of the Willow Tea House in Shanghai. The "Willow Tea House" seems to be its nickname, though, as the "Huxinting Teahouse" is how I find it listed on travel sites today. I was intrigued to learn that it was built in the middle of a pond and is accessed by a zigzag bridge that was believed to keep evil spirits away. (Here's a website with lots of other images of the tea house, along with quotes from those who visited.)

And of course what fascinated me most was learning that this pagoda-style tea house is said by some to have inspired the Blue Willow pattern, a saucer of which I've shown here. I may be the very last one in Tea Land to know this, but I had no idea an actual tea house was said to be the inspiration for the Blue Willow pattern!


Wednesday, May 25, 2016

My experiment in tea blending


I enjoy sampling new teas like the ones Adagio was recently kind enough to send me, and when the tea is a loose tea, I also enjoy simply observing what the tea leaves look like. Can you guess what kind of black tea this is? I'll give you a hint and say the color and bits of fruit are significant.

It's Peach Tea from Adagio, and I greatly enjoyed it! A good peach tea is a perennial favorite with me, and this one was full of the peach flavor I so enjoy.

And what about this tea? Can you guess what type it is? Note the little white bits, because they are pieces of …

Coconut in the Coconut Black Tea! This was an almost creamy tasting tea, which I believe would make this an excellent dessert tea.

Having enjoyed these two samples, I decided I'd pretend to be a tea blender and mix a bit of each for a Peachy Coconut Tea (or maybe a Coconutty Peach Tea?). Aristotle is quoted as having said, "The whole is greater than the sum of its parts," but I must tell you that was not true of my blend, because the "whole" blend was a blah-tasting tea in which I enjoyed neither the peach nor the coconut. Guess I'll let the experts at Adagio stick to the tea-blending from now on!


Tuesday, May 24, 2016

Atman Tea: for the mind and body

Recently I was contacted by Atman Tea Co. about trying some of their organic and natural tea that was said to relax the mind and body. Goodness knows my mind and body could use some relaxation, so I said sure, I'll try it!

A package soon arrived in the mail, and inside was this packet with the Atman Tea Co. logo. I liked the look, but I wasn't at all sure what to expect inside.

Now this is quite a different tea than I am used to sampling. The silken tea sachets were lovely, and the tea inside looked intriguing. It's a blend of jasmine green tea and ashwagandha, said to be an ancient exotic herb from India and "especially useful for those who are exhausted, agitated, or drained by stress. It is also one of the most renowned anti-aging and rejuvenating herbs in Ayurvedic medicine." Now while I'm not exactly "drained by stress," I have been burning the candle at both ends lately, keeping up with all of my freelance writing and editing work while, perhaps ambitiously, keeping to my 1,000-words-a-day writing goal in order to finish my second cozy mystery—when I really ought to be editing the first! When I opened this packet of tea, my first thought was of Coppertone suntan oil. Even a whiff of that little coconut smell sends me back to the Florida beaches of childhood summer vacations, which is always a pleasant image. That's not *exactly* the right scent, as there was a spicy quality I can't quite define, but the Coppertone whiff comes close. This tea has a unique taste, sort of a zestier version of jasmine tea, and I rather liked it. This is not the sort of thing I'd want to guzzle by the gallon, but I sensed I was having a "spa" type tea, and that was a good thing. (I did read on the package that women who are pregnant or are on medications should check with a doctor, so please be advised of that if you're interested in trying this tea.) For more information, you may visit Atman Tea Co. here.

Monday, May 23, 2016

The winner of the "Time for Tea" wall stickers is ...

Misty! I've just sent an email to the address you provided, and hopefully these will be headed your way soon. Thanks for entering, and congrats, Misty!

Best door prize ever!

Over the weekend, Alex and I were in North Carolina to attend the annual party (a weekend-long event) of the small press where I edit fiction. We attended for the first time last year and had such a great time, we were eager to attend this year's festivities as well. I so enjoy meeting my fellow editors and some of the authors I've worked with, and one of the highlights of the weekend is the delicious dinner we all share on Saturday night. Afterward, bags of door prizes are given to every single person attending the party, and this year, we earned tickets by answering trivia questions throughout the night. As our ticket numbers were chosen, we got to go choose a gift. Lucky for me, my name was drawn second, so I had my pick of most everything, and I chose a bag with a company T-shirt, mug, and other goodies, but what closed the deal for me was this package of Novel Teas from Bag Ladies Tea! (And yes, I learned the owner of the company had hoped I would win it, which I thought was quite touching!)

I've heard the C.S. Lewis quote before, but I had not heard the Henry Ward Beecher quote, "Where is human nature so weak as in a bookstore?" Isn't that the truth! 


Each Ceylon tea bag (which makes a nice, brisk cup of black tea, by the way) has a quote attached, and I also liked this one by Jorges Luis Borges: "I have always imagined that Paradise will be kind of a library." (We book lovers can only anticipate what we'll be reading in Heaven one day!) So there are door prizes, and there are door prizes, and I must say I was thrilled with mine this year!

Saturday, May 21, 2016

My Country, 'Tis of Tea — Maryland


Maryland is one of the original thirteen colonies, and I find it notable that it's considered the birthplace of religious freedom in our country. Maryland also assisted in the founding of Washington, DC by donating the land. (And I'll let you decide whether that was a good thing or not, ha!) And in tea history …



• Baltimore, Maryland, was the home of the famous Hochschild Kohn and Company department store, and this 1921 menu from the store's tea room can be found in the digital collections of the New York Public Library. I love knowing what foods this old Baltimore tea room once served, especially the desserts! Boston Cream Pie, Fresh Strawberry Whip, and Peach Meringue? Yes, please!


• One of the newer companies on the tea scene today, and one whose teas I have sampled and enjoyed, is Capital Teas. This company is based in Annapolis, the capital of Maryland, and I was pleased to read that the company has a rich tea history, as co-founder Manelle Martino is the great-great-grandson of Francis Van Reyk, "a tea entrepreneur who planted and oversaw some of the first Ceylon Tea estates (in what is now Sri Lanka) starting in the 1870s." If you haven't tried their teas, you may want to visit http://www.capitalteas.com.



• This vintage photograph from Greenbelt, Maryland, is another I found from the Library of Congress website. (Okay, so Washington doesn't mess up *everything* it touches, I guess.) It's from the Farm Security Administration - Office of War Information. The photo from February 1938 is titled "Serving tea in one of the one-room apartments. Greenbelt, Maryland." I'm intrigued that the "Office of War Information" photographed something related to teatime, so now I have yet another mystery to investigate, thanks to Maryland!

Friday, May 20, 2016

More teatime coloring fun

May has been a crazy busy month for me, as I gather it is for many people at this time of year. With lots of social obligations, a huge editing project, and more, I feel I've had little "me" time, so I've been multitasking by coloring my way through the morning and evening news shows lately. These designs are all from the new coloring book I wrote about here last month.

I've still got lots of pictures left to color, fortunately, but I was wondering what I'll do when I've colored that last tea page. Turns out, there are quite a few tea-themed coloring books on the market these days, including:



and


This weekend I'm off on a road trip to the annual party of the publishing house I work for, and I'm definitely hoping to get in a few hours of coloring and relaxation along the way!

Thursday, May 19, 2016

Fun with tea-themed gift baskets

You'd think I would have done this before, but only this year have I started assembling tea-themed gift baskets. I'd seen other authors give away gift packages to promote their books, so when I published my "Teatime Tales" earlier this year, I decided that donating some tea baskets with a signed copy of my book to local charities I'm involved with might be a good idea. This is my third and latest gift basket this year (all destined for silent auctions), and it's one of my favorites yet. In addition to my book, this Tommy Bahama basket contains a tea towel, peach and other teas, a green tea candle, a white teapot, and two teacups.

This gift basket is for a fundraiser for our local community foundation, whose logo features a peach, so I thought this "Thanks, You're a Peach" tea would be a perfect item for some supporter to win. (At least I hope they do, as this event hasn't been held yet!)

The basket also includes two 222 Fifth teacups. These are more contemporary teawares than my style, but this is aimed at a younger, hipper crowd, so I hope I guessed correctly about their tastes.

Earlier this year, I donated this gift basket to another local nonprofit, and again it included a signed book, tea towels, a teapot, and two teacups.

Now these were two teacups I absolutely adored, and if I'd seen one more, I would have gotten it for myself, but alas, that T.J. Maxx had only the two! But isn't this design lovely? I especially liked the scalloped shape of the teacups.

Whether or not donating such items ever works as a "marketing tool" for book sales, I must say I have enjoyed finding and packaging these baskets while supporting local nonprofits. (And I failed to get a picture of the last basket, but it was different too. I don't think any two will ever be just alike.) So I've learned that a plain teapot, two teacups, and some teas is a great basis for a tea-themed gift basket. I'm thinking an "adult coloring" basket with a tea theme might be fun later on. Do you have any ideas for tea-themed gift baskets?




Wednesday, May 18, 2016

About those Twinings tea samples …

Well, I hardly know what to say about this! Some weeks ago, I shared here a link to an offer I'd seen online to request three free samples of Twinings teas. I'd done so before with happy results, and I was eager to claim three more freebies. But in what is surely a first for this blog (and, I hope, a last), I didn't like any of them! Why?

The Pumpkin Spice Chai tasted musty and old. I'm used to a brisk, robust pumpkin flavor like the Harney and Sons Pumpkin Spice Tea, and this Twinings blend isn't even in the competition. I wondered if it was just an old tea bag.

The Jasmine Green Tea would surely be better. Meh. It was just a so-so green tea, drinkable, but with scant jasmine flavor. Nope.

Finally, surely, surely I would like the Organic Camomile with Mint and Lemon, right? But no, this just tasted like plain old chamomile tea, with maybe a teeny tiny bit of mint but no lemon flavor. And I had expected I'd love this one!

Are my tastebuds off? I think not, because I drank other teas that day that I enjoyed (including tea from a fresh box of a Twinings berry blend), just not any of these samples. Have any of you received yours? Did they taste old? I don't think I've ever said a negative word about Twinings, but I have to say these new samples left me wanting!