The CFC OT Tea Thread

Barley water is still to this day a very popular drink in S Korea. You can buy it at every 7/11 as a soft-drink, oddly enough. I have had it and must say.. It's really quite good. old ladies and people on a diet drink it with hot water instead.

KR-206_Woongjin_Barley_Tea_16.9_oz._500ml_x700.jpg

You should try Kvass ;) If You ever have a chance that is ;) Not gonna say You gonna like it , but perhaps You will ? :)

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I've had supermarket Kvass before and also made Kvass at home (it was delicious). I prefer the beet version over the bread version though. Kvass is also relatively known here in Germany under a different name (Brottrunk, engl: Bread beverage).

beet-kvass-recipe-5.jpg
 
For me ti's kinda like a sweet beer without the % sting. I like it. As for the tea my favorite kind is earl grey. - I cannot understand English custom though to have a milk in it. Although one thing is for sure , never mix lemon with milk (imho). There's also a tea in Poland called "the Bavarian" - it's hot tea with milk , drinked mostly during cold season. I don't know why the name though ?
 
As for the tea my favorite kind is earl grey. - I cannot understand English custom though to have a milk in it.
That's because one shouldn't put milk in one's Earl Grey, only lemon.

And one should drink it with one's pinky-finger extended, in proper Royal style.

(I don't like Earl Grey very much, personally)
 
That's because one shouldn't put milk in one's Earl Grey, only lemon.

And one should drink it with one's pinky-finger extended, in proper Royal style.

(I don't like Earl Grey very much, personally)

Smells like air freshener too :vomit:
 
Love earl grey.
 
For me ti's kinda like a sweet beer without the % sting. I like it. As for the tea my favorite kind is earl grey. - I cannot understand English custom though to have a milk in it. Although one thing is for sure , never mix lemon with milk (imho). There's also a tea in Poland called "the Bavarian" - it's hot tea with milk , drinked mostly during cold season. I don't know why the name though ?

I have never, ever seen anything like that in Bavaria :D
 
That's because one shouldn't put milk in one's Earl Grey, only lemon.

And one should drink it with one's pinky-finger extended, in proper Royal style.

(I don't like Earl Grey very much, personally)

I see ....

340
 
 
I remember my first experience drinking tea. My grandmother had dragged me along on one of her visits to a friend, which meant everyone else there was two generations older.

Normally that wouldn't bother me, except at this place everyone was expected to drink tea. No matter that I asked for water, I was given a cup of tea, and my grandmother ordered me to drink it, as it would be rude not to.

To put this into perspective time-wise... I was 16. The only way I got that disgusting stuff down was to remember the anthropology book I'd read (I took anthropology in Grade 12, as one of my options). The book was by Colin Turnbull and described his experiences in Africa.
From the way this story was going I was expecting you to be in elementary school, not 16.
 
From the way this story was going I was expecting you to be in elementary school, not 16.
:huh:

That's unnecessarily rude.

Tea and my taste buds don't get along. Ditto coffee, but even moreso. It's hardly unique, as there are plenty of other people with similar dislikes.
 
It's a lesser known fact that Estonian people are actually more strong and ressiliant people than Polish ! ^^ ;)
Well, that chifir stuff belongs more to Russian prison subculture :)
the beet version
beet-kvass-recipe-5.jpg
In the name of prophets and apostles... what blasphemous liquid is this? :eek:
EDIT: Now I want to try this. Just don't call it kvass!
:huh:

That's unnecessarily rude.

Tea and my taste buds don't get along. Ditto coffee, but even moreso. It's hardly unique, as there are plenty of other people with similar dislikes.
There's nothing wrong with your preferences, but I admit I was similarly surprised as @thecrazyscot .
 
:huh:

That's unnecessarily rude.

Tea and my taste buds don't get along. Ditto coffee, but even moreso. It's hardly unique, as there are plenty of other people with similar dislikes.

If it means anything, I interpreted the comment to be surprise at the lack of autonomy shown to you by family at that age. Pretty typical "sit down shut up drink your tea" scenario for kids under... say, 12. Pretty abnormal for your preferences to be ignored so harshly at 16.
 
If it means anything, I interpreted the comment to be surprise at the lack of autonomy shown to you by family at that age. Pretty typical "sit down shut up drink your tea" scenario for kids under... say, 12. Pretty abnormal for your preferences to be ignored so harshly at 16.
Okay, I can forgive that interpretation, which hadn't occurred to me. It sounded like "you were acting like a child, just drink the damn tea."

My grandmother was 52 years older than me, and had some very definite ideas of some things that were socially appropriate and inappropriate once I was older than about 12. Those included drinking tea or coffee (she felt milk was only for children and chided me for being a lifelong milk drinker; explanations about calcium and osteoporosis went nowhere), playing "grownup" card games (she felt everyone should know how to play the 'grownup' versions of rummy - with bidding, trumps, bowers, and a bunch of other terms they tried to teach me and I never did learn); finally my dad taught me Canasta, and that put a stop to the grumbling because she decided that Canasta is a sufficiently grownup game that it would do... and her last big rule was that after I turned 13, it was inappropriate for my dad and me to hug.

After she died many years later, I told my dad that hugging was okay, and there were times when I really needed them - that had been my grandmother's rule, not mine.

Her point at this gathering, which she didn't exactly say but I understood (even if I didn't like it) was that when you're visiting someone else's home, you eat and drink what you're given, unless they ask your preference. My grandmother knew I didn't want tea, but told me I had to drink it anyway because it was rude not to.

At least I've got a valid excuse for stating preferences now. Medical issues dictate that I can no longer have certain foods or beverages, and it's fascinating how some people think that "just one glass/cup won't hurt."

Well, yeah, they will. That's why I avoid them. My dad was never the militant "eat/drink what I put in front of you" type but even he had trouble understanding that no, I really couldn't help him drink the dozen 2-litre bottles of grapefruit-flavored pop he'd bought, because I can't tolerate much in the way of citrus - even the fake stuff.

The last cup of tea I had was at the nursing home he lived in (and where he died). A few days after his death I had to go back to finish paperwork, the person doing it was busy, so they offered me a cup of tea in the dining room. I figured okay, I could tolerate that because otherwise I'd just sit in the lobby and fume... and it turned out that they were having a "high tea" - fancy teacups, cucumber sandwiches, and the works. They made a point of putting me at a table with women who were able to carry on a conversation (there was another table where they had the women who were like my dad - dementia, so conversing with them would have been difficult at best), and it actually wasn't bad.

Turns out that when someone dies there, they don't notify the residents, so the women at the table who knew my dad hadn't been told he had died. They hadn't seen him for awhile and assumed he was either in the hospital or eating in his room. They were appreciative that I'd told them, and I guess it must be frustrating when friends and acquaintances suddenly don't show up when expected and you're never told why.

The tea itself was okay (cranberry) and I had my first experience with cucumber sandwiches. They're okay as something to try, but they're not at all filling.
 
... There's also a tea in Poland called "the Bavarian" - it's hot tea with milk , drinked mostly during cold season. I don't know why the name though ?
Most likely it dates back to the Napoleonic invasion of Russia in 1812. In his army there were 100,000 Germans of whom 29,000 were from Bavaria. They were in the VI corps under General St. Cyr and spent most of the campaign in and around Vitebsk. So my theory is that those Bavarians taught the Poles how to drink tea! ;)
 
A lot of teas I have are Polish teas.

What kinds/brands ? I'll tell You if they're considered good here in motherland ;)
 
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