|
A modern-day English Afternoon Tea |
English Tea
by Regency Historical Romance Author, Donna Hatch
As an author of Regency Historical Romances, I often delve into fun customs of those who lived in England in the early 1800's during the time of Jane Austen. I always learn something fun. This newest quest sent me off in search of the customs of afternoon tea.
Tea is a time-honored tradition, and to this
American, nothing says British Custom like afternoon tea. While most of us may think of
High Tea as an upper class tradition dating back hundreds of years, I discovered something else entirely.
Tea in the afternoon didn't actually become common until the 1700's. By the Regency Era, the custom had long-since caught on and the upper class
had afternoon tea about four o’clock, which was before the
fashionable time to promenade in Hyde Park if one was in London. Afternoon tea included, of course,
tea served hot. Also served with tea, one would find small finger sandwiches
(thin and crustless, thank you), biscuits (which the Americans call cookies), scones
with jam and clotted cream, and small cakes—not petite fours, at least, not
during Regency but small cakes sometimes called fairly cakes with butter icing,
which, from what I’ve been able to tell, were probably not much bigger than mini
cupcakes.
Food with tea probably evolved because
they ate dinner at the fashionable time of about eight o’clock at night, and
since the upper classes weren’t all quite in the habit of eating lunch or
luncheon or nuncheon yet, they probably needed that small meal in the middle of
the day. Personally, I like a small meal in the afternoon even though I do eat lunch. I would have made a great hobbit with elevensies and lunch and afternoon tea, etc. But I digress.
“High Tea” developed during the
Victorian era. Some accounts say that high tea, served later in the day at
about five or six o’clock, originated with the lower classes but I don’t
understand how they could come home from work for high tea and then return to work for a few hours and then go home again for dinner. *shrug*
At any
rate, high tea is a more filling meal than afternoon tea. High tea usually comes with white
and brown bread, meats such as roast pork, fish like salmon, scones, an
assortment of sweets such as cake pie, trifle, lemon-cheese tarts, sponge cake,
walnut cake, chocolate roll, pound cake, currant teacake, curd tart, macaroons,
a variety of cheeses, jellies, as well as butter or clotted cream.
According to Laura Boyl in her article "Tea Time" on the Jane Austen website, the different
names are derived from the height of the tables where the meals were served.
Low tea is served on a table, which in the United States would be called “coffee
tables.” High tea is served on the dinner table.
Because the characters in my Regency romance novels all hail from
the upper class, or end up there eventually, I will focus on afternoon tea because that's what they do every day, unless they are fighting pirates or running for their lives or battling villains, of course.
Most sandwiches in the UK are
traditionally made with a very thin white bread, generously buttered with potted
paste. The potted paste could similar to deviled ham, but
also could be a fish paste--salmon, for instance, very thinly spread. I guess they
liked their pleasures small, thin, and bite-sized.
Tea was (and still is) served in a china
or silver pot accompanied by slices of lemon or milk. They never put cream in
their tea or it would ruin the flavor. According to
Regency researcher and author, Kathryn Kane, tea leaves used during the Regency were chopped much more
coarsely than those used today. The large size required that the tea be steeped
for a longer period, but it also made it easier to strain the used leaves from
the tea after it had been steeped. There was a special implement included in many tea services used to clear the strainer at the base
of the spout of the tea pot, or to strain the used leaves out of each cup
before it was served. You can find more
detail at: http://regencyredingote.wordpress.com/2013/11/08/the-mote-skimmer-a-specialty-tea-accessory/
However, Regency
author Grace Kone, who is British, told me that if it's done correctly,
the tea leaves stay on the bottom, with just enough pouring out to make a
scattering of leaves for fortune-telling. It sounds very Harry Potter, doesn't it? Grace said she has never in her life strained
leaf tea. Other British friends
such as author Janis Susan May Patterson use something called a tea ball,
which is small metal case into which she places the tea leaves. These are also
known as 'tea eggs.' Other friends pour
their tea into their cups through a silver tea strainer, like the one in this
picture:
Here is a recipe, courtesy
Regency author, Miranda Neville, for cucumber
sandwiches:
Very
thinly sliced white bread (or whole wheat if you insist on being healthy but
really, why bother?). I use Pepperidge Farm Very Thin
Good
quality unsalted butter
English
cucumbers (about† one and a half per loaf of bread)
Salt
1.
Slice the cucumbers very thin. Put them in a colander mixed up with some† salt,
weigh them down with a plate, and leave them in the sink to drain for an hour
or two.
2.
Wash the salt off and pat dryish with a dish towel.
3.
Butter the bread.
4.
Put two layers of cucumber slices in each sandwich and press flat with your
hand so it all sticks together, preferably without becoming totally squashed.
5.
Cut off the crusts (very important). With a big sharp knife cut each sandwich
into four – triangles, squares, or strips, your preference.
And from
“The Royal Pavilion at Brighton a booklet A Choice Selection of Regency
Recipes you can now make at Home” here is a receipt for macaroons.
Macaroons Makes about 12
1 large egg white
2 oz ( 55 g) ground almonds
2 oz (55) g caster sugar
a few drops rose water
1-2 drops almond essence
about 12 slivered almonds
=-optional.
Heat the oven to 160C/325F/gas3
Line as baking sheet with baking parchment paper. Whisk egg white until
stiff. Using a large metal spoon, fold in the ground almonds,
sugar, rosewater, and almond essence. Mix until blended into a
smooth thick paste.
Using a teaspoon, put blobs of the mixture on the lined baking sheet,
leaving space between them to allow for expansion during cooking. Flatten with
the back of a spoon. If you like you can top each with a sliver of
almond. Bake for about 20 minutes until light golden brown. Transfer to
wire rack and leave to cool.
Sounds yummy, doesn't it? I think for my next book launch I will have afternoon tea. I’m
not a tea drinker, so I may deviate from tradition and have herbal tea in my
cup, but the rest of it looks like great fun. Last week, I attended a Jane Austen tea in Salt Lake City, UT with some of my Jane Austen geeky friends such as Sarah M. Eden. We had high tea so we had lots of food including fruit and veggies, and we ate at small dinner tables with chairs. We all dressed up and we even had some period entertainment such as a poetry reading, a soloist, and a flutist. It was so fun!
Have you ever had afternoon tea?