I had no idea tea was so trendy

Dear Melinda, I dont think I'd like the cucumber sandwiches and doiley thing much at all. The place I told you about earlier Fandangos tea room, would be great! If the tea was good. I dont mind paying more for a good pot of tea served right. They have it going in the right direction, tho. I have given some teas of mine to the owner, but he cant afford the "better teas" and the clientele here in hot humid tropical south Texas is an Iced tea or tisanes lovers dream place. Or flavored hotgreens ect mango tea,oolong was weak and tasteless, no puer. BUt... its a start. and they are the only place on town that serves lose tea in glass teapots, ot looose tea at all. Even the Chinese rest have oolong or jasmine 3rd quality teabag on a large pot that holds too much water for the tea. You need 6 or more teabags for that! Now I heard of a gung fu place in the DC area that sounded like a dream come tru for chinese tea drinkers. Anyone else heard about it? Jenn

Reply to
Jenn
Loading thread data ...

I don't know of any such place. You have any other info?

--scott

Reply to
Scott Dorsey

That would probably be Ching Ching Cha in Georgetown. I wouldn't call it a dream come true, but it could be a lot worse. See for yourself, Scott!

/Lew

Reply to
Lewis Perin

Michael, you mean these Caucasians weren't cursing and spitting bones?

Reply to
teaismud

snipped-for-privacy@yahoo.com snipped-for-privacy@m79g2000cwm.googlegroups.com7/8/0

6 21: snipped-for-privacy@yahoo.com

Well, I've never been to China, but I know the table manners of the Japanese -- I speak strictly from the western POV -- leave a lot to be desired. (I take your comment to reflect more on other than the caucizoid; or is that a British thing?) Michael

Reply to
Michael Plant

DrinksForum website is not affiliated with any of the manufacturers or service providers discussed here. All logos and trade names are the property of their respective owners.