Tea Tuesday

It’s beginning to look a lot like…

Well, you know how the song goes.

The tree is decorated, there’s snow on the ground, and it’s feeling pretty festive at The Beach House lately.

This morning I even drank a cup of Winter Delight — the loose leaf black tea that Katie and I bought in Sarajevo last Fall.

Winter Delight loose leaf black tea
Winter Delight loose leaf black tea

In order to best preserve their flavor, loose leaf teas should be stored at room temperature in an airtight container and kept away from light, heat, and moisture. I’m not as diligent about this as I ought to be, but I do own a number of tea tins, which are pretty as well as functional.

I bought one decorated with a painting by Gustav Klimt for my Winter Delight because he’s one of my favorite artists and I’d recently seen some of his work in Vienna.

Tea tin pictured here beside some of my many Christmas knick-knacks
Tea tin pictured here beside some of my many Christmas knick-knacks
labeltintree
Handwritten label with steeping instructions

I decided to try out a tea strainer I bought in India, which sits on the rim of the cup. I was worried it wouldn’t be deep enough and the leaves would sit above the water rather than be submerged, but it worked out perfectly. And when the tea was done steeping, I moved the strainer to its convenient silver holder.

Steeping (I used a Christmas mug, naturally)
Steeping (I used a Christmas mug, naturally)
Spent tea leaves
Spent tea leaves

Winter Delight is a flavored black tea — spicy but smooth and even malty. It has a prominent clove flavor, which isn’t overpowering, and exemplifies one of my favorite things about tea: It’s a subtle beverage. The flavors can be complex, but they’re rarely in your face.

Instead tea warms and heals and satisfies. And, for me, it makes a merry time of year even merrier.

micetinabove

knickknacksabove

mugwithtreehorizontal

Do you celebrate Christmas or another holiday this time of year? How’s your December going? Any plans for New Year’s yet?

Emma Holliday is well-traveled. After 5 years in Boston, she and her husband upended their lives to move to Berlin where she is currently writing a (funny) book about travel and grief and attempting to learn German.

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