The deal was, it seemed to me at the time, that she made a pot of it (she was the only person I'd ever seen make tea in an actual pot outside of restaurants) and we couldn't end our visit until the pot was empty. She would ask if my mother would like something, maybe some tea, and Mom would say no but never all that insistently because Eva would be up and out of her chair on the way to the stove to grab the kettle (not the same as the pot, I learned) before the first syllable was out of her mouth. Somewhere between Want and Some, the kettle would be filled, the burner would be lit, and any protestations my mother would make wouldn't actually change Eva's movements at all, so she didn't really bother.
Her kettle didn't whistle, but you could hear the water boiling halfway across the apartment.
I like tea because of Eva's tea; no tea tasted like hers. She was an O'Hara, and while her son (my father) claims no relationship to her Irish heritage, preferring to think of himself as German, I've been drinking sweet, milky, buttery tea since I was seven or eight. The German part of me didn't have a prayer against that kind of genetic weight, bound solid with a plea to a child's sweet tooth.
After Eva died (this was years and years ago) I went looking for tea that tasted like that, but nothing I found came close.
Before last Christmas, when I knew I would be moving to Massachusetts, Mom asked me if there was anything from my family's kitchen I wanted to take with me.
I wanted their set of these:
When I unwrapped them on Christmas Eve, I remembered to ask Mom what kind of tea Eva drank.
Turns out, it was Lipton's. Just Lipton's. Nothing fancy, nothing smuggled from the old country in the bottoms of suitcases, just generic tea that, as my mother told me, Eva would load down with cream. In my adult life, I'd only ever had it with milk.
I keep cream in the fridge. If in my writing here I ever call cream a staple, a necessity, a thing never-to-be-without, that's why - because sometimes I want to have a cup of tea with my Grandmother, and when I do milk just won't cut it.
2 comments:
My grandparents are tea-from-the-pot people, and they always use loose tea from Germany. Lovely stuff. In recent years, they've taken to drinking from Turkish tea glasses (very pretty) and using a strainer when pouring to catch the leaves that don't stay in the bottom of the pot. I used to take my tea all sugary-milky, but then I started to appreciate it all on its own. Yum.
My hesitance towards black tea I think has something to do with a distaste for bitterness, which is weird because I drink black coffee. Different kind of bitter? I'm not sure.
It's also a little weird because I don't have much of a sweet tooth these days apart from the occasional scoop of ice cream, but sweet tea I can drink all day long.
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