Albert Sabin’s menu
The glass of tea that warms (meal closer, Russian style)

Russian Tea in a Glass, Jam in the Mouth

DrinkReconstruction☕ 🍯facile10 min

A strong black tea served very hot in a metal-rimmed glass, sweetened not with melted sugar but with a spoonful of jam kept in the mouth—'Russian style'. Bitterness of tea, fruity sweetness that follows.

The glass of tea that warms (meal closer, Russian style)

A strong black tea served very hot in a metal-rimmed glass, sweetened not with melted sugar but with a spoonful of jam kept in the mouth—'Russian style'. Bitterness of tea, fruity sweetness that follows.

In Moscow, during our trials, meetings stretched on and tea never left us. They served it as in my childhood: very strong, almost black, in a burning glass held by its metal rim. Here is the custom I love—you do not sweeten the glass; you slip a dab of jam under your tongue and drink the bitter tea over it. Sweetness and bitterness meet in the mouth, and for a sip, you find again the country where you were born.
Albert Sabin
Ingredients
  • Black tea leavesstrong (concentrated infusion (zavarka))
  • Boiling wateras needed (dilution)
  • Sour cherry or strawberry jama spoonful (sweetness served separately)
How it was made : In the Russian Empire and among Eastern European Jews, tea was prepared with a samovar: an ultra-concentrated infusion (zavarka) diluted with hot water, served in glasses held by a metal podstakannik. Drinking tea 'vprikusku'—with a piece of sugar or a spoonful of jam held in the mouth rather than dissolved—was common practice among ordinary people.
Sources : Darra Goldstein, A Taste of Russia, Russian Information Services, 1999 · Claudia Roden, The Book of Jewish Food, Knopf, 1996

See also