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The tea cosy

posted Saturday, 12 January 2008

She’s a kitchen fuss

Every once in a while, I get hit with a haze of domesticated frenzy and all that matters is equipping my kitchen or kitchen activity with the right tools.

At one time it was getting the right apron, it took maybe three purchases to get one that was just right. Nice slip-on over the head and behind the neck, a good tie-around the back that would make a air-hostess envious of my life-jacket wearing abilities and two well-sized pockets for my oven-gloves.

Then, egg-timers, there are all sorts, I never really liked the digital ones, too fiddling, and by the time you worked out how to set one, you would be taking ashes out of the oven.

The digital timer on my deep-fryer was as inscrutable as being an emergency pilot in a dire situation where the best vehicle you have ever controlled is a pedal bicycle.

I found that a simple wind-round-and-set one was the best for my purposes as long as what I was cooking or baking did not take more than 60 minutes.

Earl Grey Smoked Out

Recently, I had taken to having Earl Grey or Smoky Earl Grey (Earl Grey with Lapsang Souchong) tea strained from my teapot on idle Saturday mornings when I am at home.

I happened upon Smoky Earl Grey tea by accident, I had visited Fortnum & Mason on the Piccadilly in London and picked up this can of tea which tasted quite different from my usual Earl Grey Tea – it was when I bought another can on another visit that I looked closely at the labels and found there was something added.

It took the assistant in the Simon Levelt (Dutch) coffee and tea shop at the Amsterdam Central Station to give this blend a name. After sniffing the aroma of 4 blends of Earl Grey tea from 10-gallon cans, I was about to swoon with tea delirium – such bliss.

For all the warmth in the world

My problem was, I took my time with tea that by the time I was ready for the second cuppa, the tea in the teapot was lukewarm. Now, only a tea-Philistine might be tempted to do the sacrilegious – put the teapot in the microwave oven – My heart stopped.

Besides, tea only really releases its best flavour with freshly boiled water, all that ceremony for another cup did not appeal to me.

I needed to get that old-fashioned English tea cosy, but what is it called in Dutch? My friends at work helped out there – thee-muts – that is what I should ask for at the shops, Blokker (Dutch), being the most likely one to stock it.

This morning before Polly put the kettle on, she went shopping for a tea-cosy (thee-muts), I doffed my hat as I asked the shop assistant with a mix of English and Dutch for a thee-muts.

She pointed to this thing, far above our heads, which did not look like my idea of a traditional tea-cosy which is usually a cap or balaclava thing fitting completely over a teapot; she got the steps and fetched it – it was like a padded doctor’s bag with an interlocking latch fastener - a sophisticated tea cosy with a handle.

By the time I had my second cup of tea; it was just as hot as I would have liked it.

Tea cosy

The tea cosy - thee-mutts in Dutch - the slideshow

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1. anonymous left...
Sunday, 13 January 2008 8:39 pm

The term "more English than the English" comes to mind... This post has a whole colonial subtext that I don't have the energy for.., perhaps its the vin blanc I swore off just before the New Year that I happily rediscovered last nite, and has set me free tonite! Happy New Year!


2. Akin Akintayo left...
Sunday, 13 January 2008 10:43 pm :: http://akin.blog-city.com/

You forget that I am in fact English.


3. anonymous left...
Sunday, 13 January 2008 11:45 pm

um...right, Mr Smith did you say your name was? puhleez Akin!


4. Akin Akintayo left...
Sunday, 13 January 2008 11:58 pm :: http://akin.blog-city.com/

I am sorry that I do not fit into your pre-conceived conceptions of what is English.

I will not however apologise for the fact that despite having Nigerian parentage my mother-tongue (as in language I could first speak) is English and my identity is both Nigerian and English.

I can neither be more Nigerian than Nigerians nor more English than the English - I belong in both worlds - colonial and colonised - to use your line of thought.


5. anonymous left...
Monday, 14 January 2008 12:27 am

Akin,

This is believe it or not, not a personal attack! And if you wanna be British/consider yourself British - I dash you.

Don't really give a rat's ass. My point really is that in the multicultural country of today from whence you hail, few people would know /care what you moaning about!

My mum's just returned from the UK and she's basically moaning about my brother's wife- her daughter-in-law's many crimes include not being to lay a tea tray right and yada yada...

And we're like, mum! into the new millennium please! the Brits themselves don't care! Nut obviously, we're wrong.

You and she should share a cuppa. Bonne Annee!


6. Akin Akintayo left...
Monday, 14 January 2008 12:44 am :: http://akin.blog-city.com/

I would very much like to share a cuppa with your mother - we would definitely find more agreeable things to talk about.

For the sake of being particular without being pedantic, whilst my passport groups me into the British net, I am English.


7. anonymous left...
Monday, 14 January 2008 12:47 pm

Just shared our exchange with mum.

She laughed then proceeded to extol the virtues of the tea cosy. she is absolutely faithful to hers, because she lives in a cold clime and tends to make her tea (leaves by the way) in a stainless tea teapot, and to keep the tea warm enough to enjoy two cups at a leisurely pace she has to use tea cosy.

She is definitely more British- er English than the English and even did her bit for the empire by delivering her (The Empire) an English son in the same year you were born. (Not psychic, its in your profile)

But enough already. Have a nice day enjoy yer tea- philistine that I am, I prefer a cup of joe.


8. Akin Akintayo left...
Tuesday, 15 January 2008 12:26 am :: http://akin.blog-city.com/

Reading all this about your mum and then reviewing my blog - we both extolled the virtues of the tea-cosy and the need for a second warm cup of tea.

Rather than this being old-fashioned or colonial, would you not agree that it is just plain common-sense?

Your mum is no doubt a lady after my own heart and if anything, the Englishman in me can accommodate the contrary and still end up finding a place to share a laugh.

Forgive me - What is a cup of joe?


9. anonymous left...
Tuesday, 15 January 2008 6:08 pm

My first instinct is to type "coffee" in answer to your question but then i realise you are yanking my chain... my yankee chain if i might add.


10. Tea-drinker left...
Saturday, 1 November 2008 12:37 am

Dear Akin,

I am looking for this "doctor's tea-cosy-bag" for a long time now : the tea cosy or the thee-mutts (in Dutch).

Not the kind of hat for the tea cup, but exactly the same bag as you show on your picture. I'd like to know where can I buy it, can you give me the address of the shop, it will be great !!!

Thank you very much


11. dsroscoe left...
Tuesday, 17 February 2009 10:15 am

I have looked for a tea cozy like this for years. An old friend I used to work with in Canada, (who was originally from England) used to make them and supply them to The Hudson Bay company. I moved away and she stopped making them soon after. The tea cozy you talk about, and show is similar to the ones she used to make. Please if you have any info on where to purchase them I would greatly appreiciate it.

Sincerely Donna Roscoe


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