America's best teahouses
Experts pick the top tea spots in the land
Taking tea is about socializing and relaxing. It’s about delicate china in a vintage European setting or around a Zen water fountain. It’s about scones and pastries or dumplings and steamed tofu. Taking tea means getting together or getting away. It has health, history and social benefits. But while taking tea can be about many things, a great tea room has to be about one thing: great tea.
To an outsider, the tea industry can seem overwhelming. It’s growing exponentially in America and carries as much mystery and nuance as wines and coffees. But according to our panel of tea experts, finding America’s best tea rooms is rather simple:
“I’m not a tea snob,” says Bruce Richardson, arguably America’s leading tea expert, “but I look for a tea room that pays attention to tea.”
Richardson—who lectures frequently on tea and wrote “Great Tea Rooms of America” as well as “Great Tea Rooms of Britain,” and other titles—looks for a well-chosen tea offerings, a well-brewed and properly poured cup, and an experience that creates a lasting impression.
The Tea Room in Savannah, Ga., fits the bill for Richardson, who says owner Elizabeth Ruby created an interesting space in the model of Scottish architect Rennie Macintosh, known for designing respected Glasgow tea rooms. Ruby can usually be found on hand, making sure her green, oolong and black teas are steeped to perfection, and cultivating a creative menu to accompany them.
“Elizabeth always has a chef that incorporates Low Country cuisine into a traditional afternoon tea,” Richardson says. Tea in Britain without a cucumber sandwich would leave guests disappointed, but he says that "America is such a melting pot of cuisine; we’re free to mix it up.”
Like their tea fare, Richardson points out the British are generally loyal to select teas: Earl Grey and English breakfast teas. “That’s what they were raised on and that’s what they will always drink,” he says. Whereas Americans, “always want to know what’s new.”
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“The concept of a tea room is changing dramatically,” says Joseph Simrany, president of the Tea Council of the U.S.A. “It’s as varied as coffeehouses.”
Simrany says he appreciates the Vintage Tea Leaf in Long Beach, Calif., which embraces the “old fashion, but applies new marketing techniques. ”Enter into a showroom of tea collectibles from loose leaves to china and lotions and hats before entering the tea room decked out in marble floors and crystal chandeliers." Updated selling practices like these made Vintage Tea Leaf successful before the tea boom. The tea industry can also thank the coffee, cheese and wine industries for paving a path for tea in America. But unlike fine wines, “the most expensive tea in the world is affordable to everyone,” Simrany says.
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Teavana Though not a conventional tea room, our experts couldn't overlook Teavana, now located in 25 states and Mexico. Teaologists help guests select and enjoy teas from their list of 110, including white, green, black, scented and blooming or even Pu-Erh and organic teas. |
Many different cultures and rituals are connected with tea drinking, explains Elizabeth Knight, author of three tea books, including “Tea in the City: New York.” And tea is as individual as the culture from which it’s produced. Knight summed it up with a line she once read: “It’s not just a beverage; it’s a social lubricant that’s caught on for centuries.”
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Knight says it reminded her of tea rooms she visited in China. Jung, a Korean native who studied under a Chinese tea master, was impressed with the attention to detail and knowledgeable staff eager to answer questions. “Tea is very sophisticated,” Jung says. “If someone [serving tea] is not trained, it’s like being served soda.”
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Ching Ching Cha The Ching Ching Cha, is an authentic Chinese tea room in D.C.'s Georgetown neighborhood. Enjoy an impressive list of 70 teas, traditional service and serene setting. Platform seating on pillows under skylights keep the space airy and comfortable. |
“Tea is the antithesis of what our culture is all about,” Richardson explains after his fourth cup one morning. “Tea is a beverage and ritual that makes us slow down. People are looking for that kind of respite and retreat in the world.”
Keeping that in mind, we've compiled a list of America’s best tea retreats—for your sipping pleasure.
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