Milk vs Cream in Tea

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 6 вер 2024
  • The history of putting milk into tea is rather fascinating. Tea was extremely expensive in Britain when it was first introduced to the public in the mid-1600’s and remained that way for more than a century. In 1785 the duty on tea was slashed by the government because local tea merchants saw profits drop as people purchased tea on the black market. From its first days of import, the British government had a very high tax on tea that made it too expensive for most of the country. At first the tax was levied on the beverage itself, the coffee house would make it in the morning, pay the tax collector and then sell it throughout the day. So the customer buying the tea in the afternoon was getting a beverage that was brewed that morning and then reheated. Tea oxidizes once brewed, so that afternoon cup was dark and bitter. Thus began the use of sugar in the tea.
    Loose leaf tea was also available to purchase at the time, but again, was taxed heavily so the buyers were only the wealthy. Wealthy women enjoyed tea at home, as it was not considered appropriate for a woman to spend time in the local coffee house. This paved the way for the afternoon tea party and high demand for fine porcelain cups. Porcelain originally came from China, hence why Europeans and Americans refer to porcelain plates and cups as fine china. The first porcelain cups produced in England where made in 1742 after the British got hold of the instructions on how to make porcelain that were written by a French Jesuit Father Francois Zavier d’Entrecolles about the techniques he saw porcelain producers using in China use to craft their wares. Those letters made their way all over Europe and allowed for the creation of porcelain locally, dropping the price of tea cups and fine dishes down to a range that was affordable by more than just the aristocracy. Interestingly, there was a time when it was believed that milk was added to the tea cup to protect it from the boiling tea water because the cups had a nasty habit of cracking if boiling water was poured directly on the cup. (A true porcelain cup would never crack when boiling water was put it in). It is quite possible that a cracking tea cup was a problem at the time. Porcelain made locally was a soft paste porcelain, meaning it was fired at a lower temperature than the Chinese porcelain. If it was made to look as thin as the Chinese porcelain, which would have been what was demanded at the time, boiling water would have cracked the tea cup. It took the British some time before they perfected true porcelain in the late 1700’s, and even then those who perfected it kept it a secret as they had the advantage of matching the Chinese in quality allowing them higher prices in the market. So milk protected the low quality porcelain tea cup.
    Cream is put into tea by those of us in the US. Cream has a lot more butterfat than whole milk, making the mouth feel much fuller.
    ***** Dominion Tea Across the Web *****
    Dominion Tea - www.DominionTe...
    Tea Blog - blog.DominionTe...
    Facebook - / dominiontea
    Instagram - / dominiontea
    Twitter - / dominiontea

КОМЕНТАРІ • 6

  • @markroberts6322
    @markroberts6322 Рік тому +4

    Interesting stuff. I generally brew black tea. Milk for me, as I don't like the greasy feeling that cream leaves with tea. My wife, on the other hand, rarely drinks tea, but when she does, it's always cream added. Great videos!

  • @mseym24
    @mseym24 2 роки тому

    Very interesting! When I used to own a tearoom, I would have guests ask for cream and I had a hard time giving them cream instead of milk! :)

  • @MysteryASMR777
    @MysteryASMR777 2 роки тому

    Great vid. Thanks

  • @vectorfako9933
    @vectorfako9933 10 місяців тому

    I can also use pigi tea or any tea that is in the store, I don't know, please advise ?

  • @MysteryASMR777
    @MysteryASMR777 2 роки тому

    Great vid. Thanks

  • @MysteryASMR777
    @MysteryASMR777 2 роки тому

    Great vid. Thanks