In 1941, England found itself in an all-out-war with Nazi Germany. It
had sustained severe damage when the Nazis unleashed the Blitz on 16
English cities between September 1940 and May 1941. Despite the heavy
toll, there was only one thing for most Brits to do – to keep calm and carry on and
preserve small moments of normalcy when possible. Of course, that meant
drinking tea and not just any tea, but good tea.
Above we present Tea Making Tips,
a short 1941 film created by the Empire Tea Bureau, that outlines the
golden rules for making tea worthy of its name. The narrator reminds the
viewers, “Tea is not a manufactured article which can be made, bottled
up and served at will. It must be prepared every time it is acquired,
and it’s success or failure depends entirely upon the attention you pay
to the six golden rules.” If you watch the 10-minute film, you’ll
actually count 10 rules (if not more), many of which are still
presumably
relevant to a tea drinker today. They are as follows:
1) In general, store tea leaves in an airtight container, preferably
away from cheese, soap, spices and other items with strong aromas.
2) Also keep the tea off of the ground and away from walls.
3) Always use a good quality tea. You’ll spend a little more money, but you’ll actually get more bang for your pound.
4) Use fresh water. Stale water makes stale tea, which no one needs, especially in wartime.
5) Make sure you warm your teapot before adding hot water and tea leaves.
6) Use the right ratio of tea leaves to water.
7) Steep the tea in water that’s neither under-boiled nor over-boiled.
8) Let the tea infuse for the right amount of time. 3-5 minutes should cover most kinds of tea. Other kinds will need more time.
9) Use tea pots made of china, earthenware, and stainless steel. Avoid ones made of enamel or tin.
10) Don’t add milk to the tea too soon. Wait for the last possible minute.
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