Thé – Tea in France. Tea and Tisanes and a Short History of Tea.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

  
Tea leaves

Tea in France
    
Tea in France is much like tea in the USA. The tea itself will be in a tea bag and offered plain or with lemon.  If you come from the UK and do not want to give up your usual strong cuppa, then you had best bring some of your favorite tea bags with you.  The French teas offered in most cafes, hotels, and restaurants are similar to the teas seen in the USA and not as strong as most English teas, though you may ask for two tea bags.
   
Tea on French Menus:
   
Thé - Tea –   Tea is regular black tea, usually without lemon or milk.
 
Thé au Citron(Le)Lemon tea.
 
Tea with milk - Thé au lait, pronounced tay-o-lay.
 
Thé au Lait (Le)– Tea with milk; not every café in France is used to the British tradition of cold milk with hot tea; certainly when you are outside the main cities. For a cup of tea with cold milk, as in Britain, order thé au lait froid. If you request milk on the side, you may be served tea with warm milk if you did not ask for cold milk. For tea with cold milk request thé avec lait froid, s’il vous plais, pronounced: tey avec lay frawh sil vous play. 
Froid is pronounced frawh and means cold, and the s’il vous plais means please.

Thé au Lait Froid – Tea with cold milk.
   
An English tea set.
English, Chelsea, circa 1760
   Thé nature. Tea without milk or lemon –
 
Thé vert – Japanese green tea; ocha in Japanese.
    
A cream tea
An afternoon tea that originated in Devon and Cornwall and includes scones, hopefully, clotted cream, and jam.

   
Infusions or Tisanes
Fruit and Herbal Teas on menus in France
   
Infusions or Tisanes are the French words used for fruit and or herbal teas; they are a popular beverage. There will be a variety of fruit and herbal teas available in most cafés and restaurants. Additionally, homeopathic medicine is very popular in France and supported by the French National Health Service  and fruit or herbal tisanes are considered healthy.
    
Tisanes.
   
There are nearly as many homeopathic pharmacies as there are regular pharmacies in France.   In a French homeopathic pharmacy, you may ask for an infusion (a fruit or herbal tea) to sooth your jet lag or any other feeling that makes you feel less than 100%, and they will be able to help in most cases. They will also advise you on the benefits of your favorite fruit or herbal tea without payment.
   
A homeopathic pharmacy in France.
Pharmacie homéopathique
flightlog
Édulcorant.
Artificial sweeteners 
    
Not every small French café will have artificial sweeteners, so take some with you.  Sweet and Low, NutraSweet and similar French sweeteners are available in all French supermarkets.
 
Sucre –Sugar
   
Mariage Frères
The place to go for tea in Paris
Photograph courtesy of ACJ10
     
Mariage Frères –. Apart from marketing teas, the Mariage Frères are France’s and Paris’s most famous tea houses and tea emporiums. On my last check, Mariage Frères had three teahouses in Paris; these are not large establishments, but they are the place to go for a nice cuppa, a cake and a bit of history. These are one of the places where elegant French ladies dress up and go to see as well as be seen. The Mariage Frères teahouses offer their very elegantly clothed Parisian clientele 400 different teas and infusions from Tuesday through Thursday from 12:30 pm through 7.00 pm. (Madame does not rise earlier than 11.00 a.m. so Mariage Frères  has no reason to open before 12:30 p.m.). Also, I apologize, but there is no 4 o’clock tea at these establishments. Mariage Frères is French and the French do not have 4 o'clock tea. I have my ideas why they are not open on Monday, Tuesday. Friday, Saturday, and Sunday, but those ideas I shall keep to myself.
  
I have, in this blog, refrained from naming or recommending any of France's very special cafes or restaurants in this book,  Too many changes occur quickly and today’s very special restaurant may have a different chef and disaster tomorrow.   Mariage Frères; however, has been doing the same thing for the last one hundred and seventy years or so and that is long enough to see that they may be relied upon not to change their recipes or bring in cheap imports when my back is turned
  
A very short history of tea.
  
Tea; the beverage and the quintessential English meal, afternoon tea.   Tea, the plant that produces the leaves that will produce, with the addition of hot water the drink called tea is unique.   Fruits and herbs and their leaves do not make teas, though they are often, incorrectly, called fruit teas; fruits and herbs may make infusions but not tea and in France they make tisanes.

  
England may be famous for its love of tea but the drink only really became popular in England at the beginning of the 18th century, that was about fifty years after it had become popular in the tea houses and the tea gardens all over Europe. Today the English drink more tea per capita than any other European nation; despite that,  the rest of Europe including France were into tea and tea houses long before.  Nevertheless, the drink of choice in the morning for the average Frenchman or French woman is a very milky coffee. 
   
Manor House Tea Garden
A reminder of what was.

    
The tea industry.
   
The vast Indian tea industry that would later spread to Ceylon, Africa and elsewhere, is all down to an Englishman called Robert Fortune (1812-1880).  Fortune was a botanist and an amateur explorer, but he is better remembered for buying, begging, stealing, or otherwise procuring the first tea plants from China; those plants created the Indian Tea Industry under the British Raj.

The three types of tea.
   
Black, Green, and Oolong are the three most important types of tea that we see in the stores or may be offered in a café or restaurant:

Black tea
 
Black tea comes from tea leaves that have been fermented before being dried and from these are chosen the teas most popular in the west. The names of many of these teas cover specific areas; others are just brand names.  Earl Grey was named after the British Prime Minister of the time and this black tea is flavored with the peel of the bergamot orange, which gives it its distinctive aroma.
  
Black tea
 
 
Oolong tea

Oolong tea comes from leaves that are only slightly fermented before being dried, and so its taste is somewhere between black and green teas.
    
Oolong tea

   
Green tea

Green tea is produced from steamed leaves that are dried but not fermented, and this is the tea preferred by the Chinese and Japanese. The Japanese green tea and its unique and mild flavor has been taken to heart by some French chefs. The use of thé vert, green tea, or ocha, which is its Japanese name, may be noted on some French menus.
   
Green tea
https://www.flickr.com/photos/psd/60782636/
  
My teatime experiences outside France.
 
England.
 
Quite a few years ago I was wandering around that awe-inspiring English food emporium Fortnum and Mason, Piccadilly, London.  I checked various brands of ant's knees in chocolate and smoked salmon wafers in 24-karat gold wrappers but decided to pass. Then I looked for my favorite English tea which is a very plebeian blend.
 
 I walked up to the tea counter and asked if they stocked XXX PG Tips.  The answer I received was very clear: “I hope not, sir.”   This learned man with the audacious but clear answer changed my appreciation of tea forever. Then and there I listened to a Fortnum and Mason tea scholar.  I learned the differences between the best Indian black teas prepared from tea leaves in a teapot and the poor ersatz copies made with cheap African leaves and sweepings.  The scholar gave me, and an equally enthralled group oteaphilewho gathered around us, an introduction to the history and preparation of tea. 
   
Tea on sale at Fortnum and Mason’s.
www.flickr.com/photos/mcfarlandmo/8259663662/
 
This learned man changed my appreciation of tea forever. I walked out of Fortnum’s with an assortment of their Breakfast and Afternoon Tea blends. That was a few years ago, and out of sight, out of mind, I have slipped into my old and familiar ways. I have returned to tea bags and XXX PG tips.

China
 
China is the birthplace of the worldwide tea industry, and my work has taken me to China on numerous occasions.  There quite a number of business meetings, in Southern China, began with the owner or a senior member of the company preparing for tea for all.  I will not describe the methods and their history as that would require too much space but suffice to say that the tea most often served was black tea.  The preparation of the tea served may be formalized, but the choice of the tea used varied significantly.  During the meetings, our cups were topped up again and again.

Walking through the tea market in Shanghai is an enjoyable experience, but walking into a specialist tea shop is more intense, and it is the way to enjoy, taste and learn about China's teas.

When work was finished for the day, in a number of China’s small cities, those with less than 5 million people and considered too small for specialized tea markets, there are many shops selling tea.  Some of these shops may also sell tea bags, but they are kept under the counter.  In the windows and on the shelves these shops are showing black and green teas. Most of the teas are named after the area where they originated, though some are branded. These specialized shops allow you to taste different teas and if you have the time you may relax and try four or five over an hour or so, no pressure is applied.  I had enjoyed a tea that was offered in tea bags in my hotel and went to one of these specialist shops with samples in hand to find out more.  The shop manager opened a tea bag and smelled the tea and produced a small barrel of tea leaves with the identical smell.  Then, I learned how the leaf tea and the tea bag differed in taste; the leaf tea was noticeably smoother.
   

A tea shop in China.
www.flickr.com/photos/logatfer/6575173051/


The teas sold come in whole leaves in large canisters, barrels or round cakes. Teas are also aged and acquire different tastes associated with the aging process. The best and most expensive teas have whole leaves, then came teas with broken leaves, but none of the tea bags had tea dust like those seen in most Western tea bags.
     
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What Happened When I Ordered Eggs for Breakfast in France

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Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010, 2016, 2018.
  

Regions - On the 1st of January 2016 Many of France's Mainland Administrative Regions and Their Borders Changed. Keep This List With Your GPS and Map.

from
Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 


  
The 22 regions of France until 31-12-2015.
Photograph courtesy of cefi.org
   



The new administrative regions of mainland France since 1-1-2016.
 There are now thirteen administrative regions.
Photograph courtesy of  www.France-pub.com
  
The internal borders, on the mainland map of France, are changing. There is some possibility of confusion where old maps and or guide books are used; however, that should not seriously affect the visitor.  When traveling around France and looking for addresses the names of France’s departments are more important, and they remain unchanged.


What is a French Administrative Region?

 From 1st January 2016 from 22 departments in mainland France, including the island of Corsica, the number of regions has been reduced to 13. These 13 are France's new super regions. In certain administrative and geographic forms, a French region is similar to a US State or UK County, and the reduction will diminish the number of officials with their separate bureaucracies.  Hopefully, this will create savings for the French taxpayer and reduce the government’s bureaucratic contact with its citizens.  

In this post are the new mainland region’s names and the names of the old regions they include.  I have also used the names they have chosen, and they will be confirmed by the central government by the end of October 2016; I do not expect any changes.  The borders of the other six mainland departments and France’s five overseas departments are unchanged.

Until last week all my posts in this blog and in my book used the old names.  It will take quite a while to go through all those posts and make changes in the book as well, but it will be done.
 
The old regions:                                The new region's names:
 
Alsace, Champagne-Ardenne, and Lorraine become:                       Grande Est    
Strasbourg in the department of Bas-Rhin is the regional
capital.
   
The meaning of the Grande Est is the “Great East.” 
Grande is a reference to the region’s importance
and East to its position in the North-East of France.
   

The new super-region of the Grande Est.
Photograph courtesy of latribune.fr
   
Nord-Pas-de-Calais and Picardie become:                                 Hauts de France 
Lille in the department of Nord and is the regional capital.
The meaning of Haute de France is
 "The Heights of France." A reference to the region’s
 importance and position in the North of France.


The new super region of the Hauts-de-France.
Photograph courtesy of leparisien.fr
   
Haute Normandie and  Basse Normandie become:                         Normandie                 
Rouen in the department of Seine-Maritime is the 
regional capital.
Most visitors will hardly notice this change, the two regions of
Haute Normandie and Bass Normandie have become one.


The new super-region of Normandie.
Photograph courtesy of linkparis.co
    
Languedoc-Roussillon and Midi-Pyrénées become:                              Occitanie 
Toulouse in the department of Haute-Garonne is the 
regional capital.

The name Occitanie points to the historical country of Occitania
and the language of Occitan. When the French Kings
searched for a single language to unite France, there
were two languages in contention D’oc and its
dialects and D'oï and its dialects.  D’oc indicated the language of Occitan
and D’ouil indicated the language of Paris and the areas round about.  
D’oil, the language of Paris won out but still today there are 
millions of Frenchmen and Frenchwomen who know or speak
some Occitan or where Occitan is the language behind 
their local dialect. Provencal is an example of a dialect of Occitan.
Clearly, a single language is vital to rule a country.  A the time of the
French revolution only 50% of the population spoke 
French. By 1914 most of the population understood French
even if at home they spoke one of over 50 local languages
and dialects. Today every high school graduate speak excellent French.
In one or two generations most of the local languages and 
dialects will be restricted to those who have studied them 
in the universities. Many groups are working to keep the old 
languages alive but their's is not an easy task.
   

The new super-region of Occitanie
Photograph courtesy of francebleu

Aquitaine, Limousin and Poitou-Charentes become:            Nouvelle Aquitaine
Bordeaux in the department of Gironde is the
regional capital.


The new super-region of Nouvelle Aquitaine.
Photograph courtesy of France-pub.cpm
 
Auvergne  and the Rhone Alps become:                          Auvergne- Rhône-Alpes 
Lyon in the department of Rhône is the regional capital.  
   

The new super region of Auvergne-Rhone Alps.
Photograph courtesy of chrisodile.eu

Bourgogne and Franche-Comte become:                   BourgogneFranche-Comte
Dijon in the department of Côte-d'Or is the
regional capital.
                                            


The new super-region of Bourgogne-Franche-Comté.
Photograph courtesy of lpe-asso.org

The Unchanged Regions:
 
Bretagne (Brittany).
Rennes in the department of Ille-et-Vilaine is the
regional capital.
   
Centre- Val de Loire  (This department did not change its borders, 
it just changed  its name from Centre to Centre -Val de Loire
Orleans in the department of Loiret is the
regional capital.
    
Corse (Corsica). 
Ajacio in the department of Corse-du-Sud is the
regional capital.
    
Île-de-France
Paris is  both a department and a city and 
is, obviously,  the regional capital.
  
Pays de la Loire 
Nantes in the department of Loire-Atlantique is
the regional capital.
   
Marseilles in the department of Bouches-du-Rhône 
is the regional capital.
  
France’s overseas regions/departments are unchanged.

   
Guyane   (French Guiana ) 
On the Atlantic coast of South America just above Brazil.          
Cayenne is the regional capital.
  
Guadeloupe  a group of islands in the Caribbean.
Basse-Terre is the regional capital.
 
Martinique an island the Caribbean
Fort-de-France is the regional capital.
  
Mayotte is composed of  two islands in the Indian Ocean
Mamoudzou is the regional capital.
   
Réunion is an Island in the Indian Ocean.
Saint-Denis is the regional capital.

What are the French “Regions”

France administers the lives of its citizens both directly and indirectly through its “regions.” Regions can be thought of Countrywide geographical divisions dividing the country in a somewhat similar way to States in the USA and Counties in the UK.  Each French Region administers its own area through "departments."  While certain regions on the map of mainland are France changing, the names of France’s departments have not changed. On maps and websites departments are more important, they are more likely to tell you where you.
 
What are the French departments

France’s regions are divided into 101 Departments.  Departments and regions were created during the revolution in the 1790’s to break up unmanageable areas, or huge landholdings called provinces. Only a few changes have been made since then. The departments are managed by the regions.


 
  

 
 

Behind the French Menu
by
Bryan G. Newman

 

behindthefrenchmenu@gmail.com

 

Copyright 2010,2016.


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