Tuesday, January 7, 2020

National Hot Tea month

Hot Tea in Dead Winter tea party

Come and join me to celebrate National Hot Tea month

January is National Hot Tea Month. As many of you know my heart does the happy dance. I love hot tea. I thought I would share some interesting facts I have discovered about the precious teacup. So sit back and have a cuppa with me.
Mo

Copied from the website.

It's time to set the record straight so the poets, painters, and musicians among us can begin our immortalization of the teacup!

- If standing, you must lift the saucer with the teacup when drinking.
If seated, you can simply pick up the cup.

- Pinkies should not be extended (despite what everyone wants to believe.)

- A teacup is not held with both hands. Rather you slip your index finger through the handle and placing your thumb on the top of the handle.

- Do not lift a tea cup while wearing gloves.

- No making music! Gently swish your spoon back and forth in the middle of the cup.

- Do not leave your spoon in the cup, but place it on the saucer behind the cup, preferably with the handle of the spoon facing the same direction as the hand of the cup.

- Do not swirl the tea in your cup.

- A cup of tea is not meant to be a thirst quencher or a means to wash down bites of food; it is to be sipped. (This can prove difficult if you've been served a very dry scone!)

- No looking at others over your teacup. Look into the cup as you drink.

- Fill teacups only 3/4 full.

- If you've been given a tea bag and not a small plate or saucer to put your used tea bag upon, it is appropriate to ask for one. Putting wet tea bag on your saucer will only cause you troublesome dripping a few moments down the road.

- Regarding the milk or tea first controversy - according to current American etiquette - it's the tea.

- Use milk sparingly at the tea table, or as Victorian mothers were said to admonish their daughters, "You might be taken for the daughter of a dairy maid."

- And lastly! When toasting, one does not actually clink the teacups (or any glasses for that matter). This was done in the Middle Ages to spill a bit of what had been poured into your cup into another's so you could be sure you were not being poisoned. Unless you find yourself at a surreal Agatha Christie murder mystery/tea, no clinking of cups!

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