In my adolescent years I was given to the wild excesses of Twinings Earl Grey, an imported box of which cost half my monthly allowance in Cape Town. So when I came across the original Twinings shop on Fleet Street recently while scouting the area for a local history adventure trail I was designing for kids visiting Dr Johnson's House, I found myself eagerly crossing the threshold…
Tea may be seen as quintessentially British
- the ideal accompaniment to any social occasion and the first port of call in
dealing with crisis - but until the late 17th century it was a
beverage largely unknown in Europe. Nestled in Fleet Street, Twinings Tea Shop
boasts a long and colourful history: a history visually announced by the
languorous sculptures of two ‘Chinamen’ (rather cringeworthy by postcolonial
standards) which flank the pediment above the door. Established in 1706, the
Twinings tea shop is the oldest shop in London still owned by its founding
family and located on the original site, not to mention holding the world’s
oldest continually-used company logo. In the back of the shop is one of
London’s tiniest museums, but well worth perusing over a nice cup of (free) Earl
Grey.
Go
there…
… To try a new or unusual tea in the free,
help-yourself ‘Tea Bar’ while looking at nineteenth-century prints of monkeys
harvesting tealeaves in Ceylon or checking out antique tea caddies (you, not the monkeys, though I wouldn't put it past them). It’s also a
fun place to take tourists (the box sets of tea make great gifts too), or to
meet a friend to catch up over a cuppa.
Must-Know Info
Opening Hours: Monday – Friday:
8.30am-7.30pm, Saturday – Sunday: 10am – 4pm Closest Tube: Temple
Background
Jean Carolus, Afternoon tea, 1879 (oil on canvas) |
Afternoon tea, c.2012. Still a stylish affair... |
Royal Wedding blend, 2011 |
Curation & Interpretation
It’s worth noting that the tiny museum at the back of the shop does not purport to tell the history of tea (for that, you can catch glimpses at the London Docklands Museum, or hopefully a more comprehensive account once the defunct Bramah Museum of Tea and Coffee reopens). Rather, it’s the museum of a dynasty, intertwined with the evolution of a brand. Portraits of notable Twinings patriarchs line the walls of the shop like the corridors of a country estate, each perching somewhat proprietarily over a niche of products for sale: pastel-hued tealeaves of variously fruity persuasions or the coveted tea of the month display.
The portraits bear you along into the tea bar
and museum at the back, the journey into the past completed by horse and
carriage: printed across one wall is a C19th photograph of a delivery cart
parked outside the store. Cases contain collections of notable tea caddies,
family portraits, royal charters and early packaging, an eclectic mashup of
objects and ephemera with little interpretation or evidence of curatorial
intent. Perfect, however, for letting your eye alight on an unexpected treasure
over a steaming mug of Lapsang Souchong.
Anecdotal
Aside
Thomas Twinings’ son Daniel, who took over
the family’s growing tea concern, was the first to export tea. He included
amongst his patrons the governor of Boston. And we all know how THAT turned
out.
In 1831, Twinings launched the Earl Grey brand,
named after then Prime Minister Charles Grey (who is now more famous for the
eponymous tea than for the electoral Reform Act of 1832 or his role in the
abolition of slavery). The distinctive taste came from infusing black tea with
the oil of the bergamot orange from South-East Asia. The origin of the blend
has become a source of myth and legend. My pick is the idea that it was a
serendipitous accident caused when a gift cargo of tea from China to Earl Grey
absorbed the flavour of the Bergamot oranges stored alongside it on the long
journey. In 2011, after almost 200 years of Earl Grey tea as the ultimate
cipher of ‘genteel contentment’ (according to the Telegraph), Twinings decided to oomph up the citrus overtones, only
to be barraged and boycotted by outraged teadrinkers across the nation
declaring it was so bad they’d ‘rather drink PG Tips’ <cue collective intake
of breath at the sheer audacity>. Twinings has since capitulated by (re)introducing Earl Grey: The Classic Edition. Now that’s
what you call a storm in a teacup!
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