Saturday, February 18, 2006

The Only Teapot in North America


To misquote entirely the great Daffyd Thomas: "Mine is the only teapot in the village". In fact, it may be worse than that. It may be that mine is the only teapot in North America.

In the six months I have now lived in the US, I have seen only one teapot, and it's the one that sailed across the Atlantic with the rest of our belongings a few weeks before we arrived.

Now, you might think that it doesn't really matter how many teapots there are in North America. You might think that it's perfectly acceptable for the world's only superpower to be populated by non-tea drinkers, or at best people who think making tea involves dangling a tiny bag of Lipton's Yellow Label on the end of a string in the vicinity of a cup of hot water. Shame on you.

Consider this. The very existence of this country as an independent entity, the very gathering together of the collection of states which remains by far the most influential nation on the planet, was of course instigated by an argument with the British - about tea. Every American school child learns the story, and knows how it sparked a chain of events which led to the War of Independence. Why, then, do none of them have any idea how to make tea, or how to drink it?

Lest you think I'm exaggerating, a couple of examples from my highly scientific survery conducted over the past six months.

Whenever one asks for "tea" or, heaven forbid, "a cup of tea" from someone in the beverage service industry here, I can guarantee you that there will only be one of two reactions. The first is "Huh?", in which case one repeats the question until one arrives at the second possible reaction, which is "Hot tea"?

Now, I can't tell you how many times I've longed to say: "No, I'd like you to make it with stone-cold water, please, because I'm going to warm it up later by straining it numerous times through my rancid socks".

Needless to say, I don't say that. I say something more along the lines of "Yes, hot tea, please".

OK, I know there is such a thing as iced tea. But that's not the same thing as "'tea", is it? If I wanted iced tea, which I sometimes do, I'd ask for it by name.

Example number two requires me to brief against myself, as political types say. My wife claims to have spotted a second teapot in North America. But, in mitigation, I would point out that (i) I didn't see it myself, so it might not be true, & (ii) it was apparently a small Chinese type of pot, therefore not really the same thing.

Anyway, the mother of one of the classmates of one of my children invited my wife round for "tea". She had clearly gone out of her way to think about the invitation, including by dredging her kitchen cupboards for a "teapot" which had probably not seen active service for a very long time, if ever. This was an effort at reaching out to her new European neighbo(u)r in a spirit of cultural relevance, and all credit to her for that.

Anyway, having boiled the stove-top kettle - (the electric kettle hasn't made it into the New World either - don't get me started on that) - she proceeded to mix hot water and tea bags (with strings) together in the pot, along with - this is true - milk and sugar. After stirring all four ingredients for some time, she emerged from the kitchen and sheepishly asked my wife whether this was how it was done.

Independence, anyone?

1 comment:

steve said...

we laughed so much at the story of the wife at the neighbours house - reminded us of so many times in Holland where we had to keep our face straight while our foriegn cousins made an attempt to make us feel at home - good funnt qwriting style by the way - keep posting - greetings to all