Tuesday, 22 December 2009
Tea Appreciation Society share the love...
Friday, 4 December 2009
Jane Pettigrew Blog feature
Wow, we can't believe December is upon us already and another year nearly over. It's been a busy couple of months at ATTIC, with various preparations and projects, and we were recently lucky enough to be visited by Jane Pettigrew - tea guru and all round lovely lady!
Friday, 2 October 2009
Silver Needle - reviewed by Teatunes
Wednesday, 9 September 2009
Beatles day!
Happy Beatles day! We're celebrating the fab four in our own special way on twitter by coming up with various Beatles themed tea-puns! Join in the fun at #beatlestea for classics such as 'Loose-tea in the Sky with Diamonds' and 'Dig a (white) Peony'...... no cringing!
Tuesday, 1 September 2009
It's a good day...
Wednesday, 19 August 2009
ATTIC at The Big Chill
When the lovely folks from The East Room asked if we’d like to serve our tea in their ‘Green Room’ at The Big Chill festival earlier this month, we’d packed up the ATTIC-mobile, popped on our wellies and went driving up to Herefordshire before you could say “Basement Jaxx”…
Once we’d worked our way through the fields and past some bizzarely placed Chesterfield sofas we arrived in the VIP area to find our “tea tent”, which was a beautiful Mongolian Yurt, lavishly decorated with cushions, rugs, beanbags, beds and sofas which created an atmosphere that more than lived up to the festival’s namesake.
We took our ‘One Leaf, Many Lives’ range of teas to serve, consisting of our pick of the finest teas representing each category of White, Scented, Green, Oolong, Pu-erh and Black teas, allowing visitors to sample the full spectrum of flavours. Promoting the teas by their ‘sensations’, we were able to generate a lot of excitement about our teas. The way that tea makes you feel has always been an important factor to us, so it was great to see other people starting to view tea in this way!
~Our 'One Leaf, Many Lives' menu~
Our Tea-makers also came into their own in the festival environment, providing delicious drinks easily and endlessly with no mess and very little waste – no teabags, and the leftover leaves create the perfect compost for plants!
We had a fantastic time at the festival, and was a wonderful opportunity for us to spread the tea-love with some great creative minds, who discovered how tea could accompany them in their moments of contemplation, fuel conversations and feed moments of genius.
We’ll be listening out for some tea-themed new-releases in the coming months!
New Look, New Shop
Saturday, 25 July 2009
ATTIC Manifesto
At ATTIC, we've been having a good hard think about the things that matter to us; what we love, what we believe.
Monday, 6 July 2009
Tea of the Week: Ti Guan Yin / Iron Goddess of Mercy
Ti Guan Yin, meaning ‘Iron Goddess of Mercy’, is one China’s most famous and special Oolong teas.
Legend has it that a poor farmer who maintained a dilapidated old temple to the bodhisattva of compassion, Quan Yin, saw her in a dream where she directed him where to look for his reward, which he was to share with the whole community. In the directed location, there stood a solitary tea sprout, which the farmer nurtured like a gift from heaven. Since then the whole region has prospered from the production of this tea.
Traditionally, Ti Guan Yin is served gongfu style (a fine art to tea serving, where the smallest details are carefully monitored to extract the best possible taste from the tea leaves), steeping the tea in a fist sized pot and drinking it from small ‘shot’ cups, often made from fine pottery. When served in this way, it becomes one of the strongest teas available, but still retains its incredible delicacy.
Oolong teas are semi-fermented, sitting between green and black teas in terms of strength and flavour. Because of this, they are amongst the most diverse and complex-tasting teas, ranging from refreshing and delicate emerald greens, to the strong and roasted flavours of near ebony leaves.
Sitting at the greener end of Oolongs, Ti Guan Yin is a fine example of the many levels of flavour this group of tea offers. Its tightly rolled leaves unfurl to a vast volume, allowing them to be re-used several times with little dilution of flavour.
It's one of the teas we frequently fall back on when we need a 'pick me up' during the day, with its rich, strong and refreshing taste, we hope you'll see why it’s considered a gift from the heavens!
Tuesday, 30 June 2009
Dragonwell Drawings
Wednesday, 24 June 2009
Birthday!
Wednesday, 17 June 2009
Tea of the Week: Rosie Lee (summer tea) blend
Named after its creator, our very own sunny Aussie girl, Rosie, this blend has proved popular during the warmer months for its crisp, clean and refreshing taste.
A white tea base of Silver Needle provides a gentle foundation for the sharper flavours of juniper berries and lemon balm to come alive, this is a tea with a sophisticated balance of flavours.
Both juniper berries and lemon balm are praised for their relaxing properties, and have often been used as medicinal herbs in a variety of cultures to treat digestive issues and fight infection.
White tea is the purest, least processed type of tea, Silver Needle specifically being picked within the first 48 hours the buds open, giving them their silvery down, making it the purest of all the teas. They are then gently steamed and dried in the sun, giving it a fresh, delicate flavour.
White teas have been hailed as “the pinnacle of refinement”, and with the grown-up flavours of Juniper, you really can enjoy the long, summer evenings in style!
Tuesday, 9 June 2009
Tea of the Week: Tranquility Blend
One of the things we love about tea is its calmness. The process of preparing and drinking should be taken time over, allowing it as a way to quiet and the mind and focus on the present. It is important to embrace these pockets of calm whenever we can, shielding away the distractions that the busy world outside relentlessly fires at us.
Whether Bristol has an extremely high number of people embracing Zen philosophies, journeying along the path to inner calm - or just some very stressed ones, the popularity of our ‘Tranquillity’ green tea blend clearly offers a rather appealing promise!
Using a combination of herbs; spearmint, lemon balm and lemongrass, known for their calming effects on the body, with our Organic Mao Jian green tea we think we’ve created a little cup of calmness…
Spearmint helps cool the body and is often used to calm the stomach, whilst both lemongrass and lemon balm have traditionally been used in herbal medicine for its antibacterial properties and as a sedative for the muscles and mind.
Mao Jian is a lovely, light green tea, making it a good base for blends. As with all green teas, it is high in antioxidants, helping your body fight off natural and chemical toxins and combined with these herbs, it is a wonderfully restorative tea.
And if all this goodness wasn’t enough to make you feel more at ease, it also tastes deliciously refreshing, and tastes just as good a little cooler, so you don’t need to worry about taking your time!
So come in at 2.30pm any day this week to see what a difference indulging in a little moment ‘tranquillity’ can make to your day!
Tea & Me
One of the few things we love more than Tea at ATTIC, is when you love it too!
We will be running an ongoing feature on our Blog called ‘Tea & Me’, where we will be asking you to contribute your thoughts on tea, and why it’s special to you. Whether it’s a praising paragraph to Phoenix Pearls, a story about Dungeons and Dragonwell, a sonnet to Sencha, or even a mural for Mao Jian, we’d love to hear from you and we’ll share your thoughts and contributions on here.
If you want to participate, please e-mail us at attictea@gmail.com, with “Tea & Me” in the subject line, attaching your contribution.
Alternatively, post your entries to us at: ATTIC Tea, 115 Coldharbour Rd, Redland, Bristol, BS6 7SD
...or drop them by in the shop!
We look forward to hearing from you!
Monday, 1 June 2009
Tea of The Week: Jasmine Phoenix Pearls
Probably the most commonly known of Chinese teas, the sweet and refreshing taste of Jasmine teas have proved popular in the Western world. Most people are likely to have enjoyed a cup at some point in their lives, whether it was following some delicious Dim Sum, enjoyed at home with the Sunday paper and of course here at ATTIC, where the Jasmine Teaball still remains our best seller.
However, it would be a great injustice to interpret Jasmine’s prevalence for it being an ‘ordinary’ tea. In fact, if it wasn’t for the Ming Dynasty (1368 – 1644) scented teas would still only be a luxury that emperors and noblemen could afford. Prior to this, teas were scented with pure essential oils, which were extremely expensive. The Ming Dynasty, thanks to its obsession with all things floral, started to use flowers as a cheaper method to scent teas, enabling a greater number of people to enjoy their sweet, delicate flavour.
At ATTIC, we offer two Jasmine scented teas: our visually stunning Jasmine Teaball and our ‘Tea of the Week’, Jasmine Phoenix Pearls.
Often overshadowed by the spectacular visual theatrics of the Teaball, the Jasmine Pearl is very much a butterfly under the guise of a moth.
Underneath its humble appearance, lies a peerless beauty in fragrance and taste. The metamorphosis from green tea to jasmine pearl, should be noted, is of equal splendour.
The finest teas are produced by using green tea leaves harvested “before-the-rains” (early April to late May) which are then steamed to improve the absorbency of the leaves ready for the scenting process. The leaves are then stored until August, when the jasmine flowers come into bloom. The flowers are picked at around midday, when they are still tightly closed, and as the temperature begins to cool in the evening they begin to burst open (some claim to even hear a faint popping sound when this occurs!) and the scenting process can begin. Using twice as much jasmine to tea, the two components are mixed together, with the heat and humidity carefully regulated. This is usually repeated two or three times, but the finest Jasmine teas are the result of five or six repetitions, using fresh flowers each time. The tea is then re-fired to remove the moisture from the flowers, which can lead to moulding. On occasion, the odd dried flower can be found amongst the tea, adding a charming reminder of this long but loving process.
Due to its lengthy process, many commercial jasmine teas are often sprayed with scent, but it is this labour-of-love production that makes real Jasmine tea an almost artisan product. Jasmine Pearls are even more limited in their production, as the fired leaves are then skilfully hand-rolled into little ‘pearls’ of tea that “unfurl to release clouds of perfume in your cup”. None of us here at ATTIC can resist a sniff of the steamy scent released by the remaining leaves in our tea-makers!
Due to its intensity of scent, it can also be re-flushed several times without losing too much flavour, and one initial serving has been known to keep us supplied with tea all day!
So, please make our new batch of pearls feel welcome by giving them and let them reward you with their sweet, uplifting taste!
Wednesday, 27 May 2009
One Leaf, Many Lives
One of the things we love at ATTIC, is when people suddenly after years, decades even, of living in a world of standard teabags, get really excited about tea.
As if opening the pantry cupboard to suddenly discover a portal into a magical new world, where tea leaves come in various shades of green, black, brown and golden. Where they are not ground to dust, but are free to roam, unfurl and expand without the restraints of mesh bags and bits of string that keep falling into them, singing and dancing happily…
By setting up a tea business, it’s clear that tea is quite important to us, but it was special enough for us to want to allow it to shape our livelihood, and essentially, our lives.
Tea is a vast and exciting world, (even if the singing and dancing is only metaphorical), and that’s what we love about it at ATTIC. There’s always more to learn and discover, and we want to share this enthusiasm and excitement with the world!
Over the next few months, we’ll be publishing a series of blog posts called ‘One Leaf, Many Lives’, about what we feel makes tea so special, and how it forms an integral part of our lives in ways we may not have ever considered, or given credit to.
Look out for our first post at the beginning of June to coincide with our Newsletter, where we’ll be looking at the health benefits of tea, not just for the body, but also the mind and soul.
We hope you enjoy them!
Tuesday, 26 May 2009
Tea of the Week: Silver Needle
White Teas are produced by only picking the youngest leaves and buds, which are then steamed and dried. The tea goes through no other process, such as rolling or firing, making it the purest form of tea available.
Silver Needle is the purest of the White Teas, with the buds being picked within the first 48 hours of opening, which is what gives the leaves their silvery down. As there is no chlorophyll, it lacks the astringent, slightly ‘grassy’ taste of Green Tea, and therefore many people find it easier to drink.'
Monday, 18 May 2009
Tea of the Week: Imperial Garden
The base tea in this blend is our Special Aged 15yr Pu-erh. Pu-erh tea has its own imperial background, with the Emperor of China exporting it for the first time as a gift to the King of England in 1806.
Since then, Pu-erh tea has gained popularity outside of China, and has become well known recently for its health benefits, including helping to lower cholesterol and as a digestive aid.
Pu-erh tea on its own has a very distinct, earthy flavour due to the fermentation process it goes through where it is buried underground. Needless to say, it’s quite an acquired taste!
We’ve added orange pieces and cornflower to help sweeten and soften this distinctive tea, and think it’s the perfect way of easing yourself into discovering one of China’s most unique teas!
So, pop in at 2.30 everyday this week to try our regal blend!