Tea for you and me

Join me on my epic quest to find the best tea ever


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Regal Picturehouse

Regal Picturehouse, 2 Boroma Way, Henley-on-Thames, RG9 2BZ

Tea at the Regal Picturehouse

Tea at the Regal Picturehouse

The Regal Picturehouse is a cinema that serves drinks and tea and coffee in the upstairs bar. The large bay window and comfy seats are a nice way to say say goodbye to the sunshine before heading inside the darkened cinemas. The daffodils help too. The cinema’s pretty good as well!

The tea is okay, I just like the fact this cinema serves me tea.

Teapot? No.
Leaf tea? No.
Milk jug? Yes, a big one on the counter and you help yourself.
Price? £1.50.
Cake? Sadly no, but it does have the best popcorn ever.
Go again? Yes, next time I go to see a film.


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The Ritz

The Ritz London, 150 Piccadilly, London, W1J 9BR

It’s the big one. When people think of a traditional afternoon tea then it’s often the Ritz that springs to mind (though interestingly in the movies I’ve seen when people have afternoon tea, it’s the Dorchester they’re sitting in). The four of us had booked this months ago and we were anticipating great things. Previously in London I’ve been to the Dorchester and the Lanesborough for afternoon tea and I was interested to see how this would compare.

The Palm Court at The Ritz

The Palm Court at The Ritz

The key to the Ritz is the splendour. You aren’t allowed in for afternoon tea unless you’re smartly dressed. No jeans or sports shoes and a jacket and tie for the men. There are liveried doormen and every surface is guilded.

We were shown to our table and our waiter introduced himself. There is no tea menu but what we asked for they had: English Breakfast, Earl Grey, Assam and Darjeeling. No notepads or labels here – he remembered who ordered what and could tell all the teas apart by smell. The tea was loose leaf (naturally) and a bit stronger than I normally take it, but there was always a  jug of hot water so it wasn’t a problem. Our waiter was wonderful and was nothing but helpful when we explained there were three vegetarians and only one meat eater in our party. Later, when we asked for extra sandwiches from a different waiter he vanished before we could add the veggie request and we had to explain carefully when he came back exactly what we wanted. This was the only wrinkle in the whole experience.

We had a variety of sandwiches between us. As the only omnivore I had chicken, smoked salmon, ham, cucumber, cheese and egg with cress. The veggies had cucumber, cheese, egg with cress, humus and tomato salad. The sandwiches were unlimited and very moreish.

Afternoon tea at The Ritz

Afternoon tea at The Ritz

Then were the scones, they were apple or raisin and small and perfectly formed, with the obligatory clotted cream and strawberry jam (and I had to introduce controversy here but yes, the cream should go on first). The scones were also unlimited but as we’d got a bit over excited with the sandwiches we couldn’t manage any extras. The scone plate also had some slices of fruitcake which H and N declined as they were feeling full. E and I went ahead. The fruitcake was lighter than most and very moist, but it pushed us over the edge and E and I were full as well.

This posed a dilemma – we had six beautiful patisserie cakes on the top of our stand, literally the pinnacle of the meal. We couldn’t face them and yet to leave them went against all our afternoon tea beliefs. We bravely soldiered on. H chose the fruit tartlet with pistachio and berries. N took the macaroon as he hadn’t bought any from Ladurée. E had a boat with fruit in and I chose the chocolate cake. Top marks for all four. E and I shared the penultimate cake, a mound of – well, let’s be honest, it looked like a breast. We couldn’t work out what it was or what it was made of. There was sharp lemon cream stuff over a cake base with a middle of pink something, mousse perhaps. Tasted nice though. Answers on a postcard please (or just comment on this post).

There is a time limit of one hour and thirty minutes for tea at the Ritz as they have so many sittings. This didn’t prove the problem we thought it might as we were so full we couldn’t face another morsel.

I’m glad we tried it. I would recommend it if you only get one chance to go for afternoon tea, as long as you pace yourself! There’s not much time to pace yourself though, so I’m still going to carry on searching for somewhere that lets you sit for longer.

Teapot? Yes.
Leaf tea? Yes.
Milk jug? Yes.
Price? An eye watering £37 each (not including tip).
Cake? Yes, and scones.
Go again? Yes, but not for a while.


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Ladurée

71-72 Burlington Arcade, London, W1J 0QX   0207 491 9155

Macaroons at Laduree

Macaroons at Laduree

There are four of us (E, H and N) who meet up regularly to have afternoon tea. Ladurée was our stop for tea on the way to the Ritz. H and I had read about it in various things, it was listed in Vogue as one of the best places to go in London for tea and macaroons.

The Burlington Arcade is full of very expensive jewellery shops and so covering the shop in gold doesn’t seem so pretentious, more just trying to fit in. The whole shop is tiny, about the size of a train buffet car. The tables and chairs only appear in good weather and are outside the shop, but you can get take away tea at other times.

Vogue recommended the Marie Antoinette tea but they didn’t have that listed on the menu, so I chose ‘Thé Mélange Spécial: Ladurée blend tea scented with orange, rose, vanilla and cinammon’. It was lightly scented and delicate and perfect. E let me taste her Earl Grey and it was very delicate and smooth.

Tea at Laduree

Tea at Laduree

We bought macaroons to take away so we didn’t spoil our trip to the Ritz. If you can afford it they come in thick gold embossed boxes, or in a paper bag if you’re me. I’ve eaten macaroons before – almond lumpy things that normally burn on the bottom but still taste good. These macaroons were something else – smooth and heavenly and definitely worth paying £1.25 each. I had Red Fruits flavour but you could choose from lots more, including orange-blossom, chocolate, raspberry, vanilla, coffee, liquorice and lemon.

And it’s not just Vogue that thinks they are the place to be, while we were there David Walliams had a pot of tea too.

Teapot? Yes.
Leaf tea? Yes, leaf tea in a muslin tea bag.
Milk jug? No! This is French tea!
Price? £2.85 per pot and worth every penny.
Cake? Macaroons in all the colours of the rainbow.
Go again? Tomorrow if I could afford it.


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C’est Bon!

8 Victoria Rd, Surbiton, KT6 4JU. 020 83906660

This is a relatively new cafe in Surbiton, opposite the train station and surrounded by the usual chain coffee shops. It is light and airy and has mosaic tables and big sofas. As well as selling handbags and birthday cards. The handbags weren’t to my taste, but that night I did have a great dream where I owned a handbag shop and got to buy lots of them, so it gets bonus points for that.

My mum and I had a pot of tea each and a baked potato each. The service was fast and friendly and the food was good. The tea was strong, but there was a lot of it, I got five cups out of my pot.

Teapot? Yes.
Leaf tea? Two tea bags.
Milk jug? Yes, one each.
Price? Can’t remember, but it was reasonable.
Cake? Not much on display, pastries mostly.
Go again? Yes.


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Escape

16, The Parade, Claygate, Esher, Surrey KT10 0NU  01372 479880

Escape used to be a DVD rental shop with a few chairs and then it morphed into half chairs and half DVDs and now it’s found it’s true calling as lots of black leather armchairs and coffee tables and one wall of DVDs.

The day we went bright sunshine was coming through the windows and the cafe was warm and the tea was hot and the carrot cake was sweet. Though the tea wasn’t up to much this is still a good plae to go to if you want to relax.

Teapot? No.
Leaf tea? No.
Milk jug? No, it came with milk.
Price? £1.50ish.
Cake? Carrot, chocolate, victoria sponge and chocolate cookies. Also serves bagels and paninis.
Go again? Yes.


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Oldrids

Oldrids Department Store, 11 Strait Bargate, Boston, Lincolnshire,
PE21 6UF

Tea at Oldrids

Tea at Oldrids

Oldrids is an idependent department store in Boston, Lincolnshire and it has two cafes. One downstairs in a brave colour scheme of red and grey and one upstairs which is more normal. We headed upstairs for some tea.

Teapot? Yes.
Leaf tea? No.
Milk jug? Plastic pots again.
Price? £1.20 ish.
Cake? Some.
Go again? Yes.


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The Clock Restaurant

3, 4 & 5 Sandbeck Arcade, Skegness, Lincolnshire, PE25 3DY.

Tea at the Clock Restaurant

Tea at the Clock Restaurant

I love the seaside. Ice cream and tea and fish and chips and sand and sea and fresh air: what’s not to love? I hadn’t been to the seaside for a while and BF very kindly let me drag him to Skeggy on New Year’s eve. After a walk on the beach and a nostalgic visit to Woolworths we tracked down the most promising fish and chip restaurant.

The Clock Restaurant is a traditional fish and chip restaurant with proper tables and a view of the sea (sort of, if you look round the roundabout). They also had the fantastic invention of a winter menu, so we got fish, chips, peas, bread and butter and a huge pot of tea for £6 instead of £9 something. Yummy.

Teapot? Yes.
Leaf tea? No.
Milk jug? Yes.
Price? £6 each for big meal and tea included.
Cake? No, but pudding and ice cream instead.
Go again? Yes.


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Tee advent kalender

An advent calendar with tea!

An advent calendar with tea!

This is not a cafe review, but it’s too good to miss. While I was in Cologne we went to a health food shop and I found an advent calendar with tea instead of chocolate. The idea is simple but genius: open the bottom and pull out a tea bag. Each tea bag contains different tea and is numbered according to the day of the month you should drink it on. I love it!

If only they made these in the UK!


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Bruxelles Midi train station cafe

Two teas from a cafe in Bruxelles Midi train station

Two teas from a cafe in Bruxelles Midi train station

I have to admit I can’t remember the name of this cafe in Brussels train station. I do apologise. If you want to go, it’s the only cafe/bar beyond the passport check points if you are heading for the Eurostar train.

The tea here was much needed and there was no queue to get it, it was a standard cup of tea. I wouldn’t have bothered to blog about it if it hadn’t been for the way the barman arranged my tray. It’s symmetrical and precise and shows care and attention I appreciate when dealing with tea.

Teapot? No.
Leaf tea? A tea bag.
Milk jug? No, little pots of milk.
Price? 4 something euros for two teas.
Cake? No, but we did get a tiny biscuit.
Go again? If I was in Bruxelles Midi beyond passport control.


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Karstadt, Cologne

Poppy seed cake and tea in Karstadt, Cologne

Poppy seed cake and tea in Karstadt, Cologne

Karstadt, Breite Straße 103-135,
50667 Köln

The Karstadt department store in Cologne was great. The department store restaurant was big with fresh food and many chefs. There were 8 varieties of smoothie, 4 varities of soup, fresh meat that you picked and they cooked for you, 10 varieties of vegetable side dish, fresh veg they stir fried for you, 4 varieties of potato, fresh fruit and puddings (fill a bowl for 3 euros) and at least 12 varieties of cake all for under 3 euros a slice. The tea was loose leaf and in a mini chest of drawers. Each drawer had a different variety and you filled up your ‘tea egg’ with it and away you go. We came here twice and each time the cake was beautiful and the tea good too. This photo is from our visit on our last day in Cologne. The cake is poppy seed and it’s thick and filling and tasty and not as sweet as our cakes which makes it all the more satisfying.

Teapot? No.
Leaf tea? Yes, from a selection of 9. I had black tea with orange flowers and it was beautiful.
Milk jug? No, but fresh milk available from a dispenser.
Price? 1.80 euros.
Cake? Oh, the cake! So much delectable cake.
Go again? Yes.