Alfred Russel Wallace’s menu
Tea — the English break carried to the tropics

Strong black tea and hardtack biscuits of the naturalist

DrinkEvocationfacile40 min

A black tea brewed strong, almost bitter, served scalding hot, and a few hard dry biscuits that withstood long sea voyages. The sober comfort of the Victorian gentleman far from home.

Tea — the English break carried to the tropics

A black tea brewed strong, almost bitter, served scalding hot, and a few hard dry biscuits that withstood long sea voyages. The sober comfort of the Victorian gentleman far from home.

However far my butterfly hunting took me, I never abandoned the habit of a good strong tea at dusk. I want it black, brewed strong, almost harsh, as we take it in our counties, and I accompany it with those hard biscuits that the sailor ironically calls his bilge food. Believe me: under a mosquito net, amid the cries of the forest, this modest steaming cup returned me for an instant wholly to England, and I took heart again for the morrow.
Alfred Russel Wallace
Ingredients
  • Black tea leavesgenerously (infusion)
  • Boiling watera large cup (extraction)
  • Sugarto taste (optional sweetener)
  • Hardtack biscuits (ship's biscuits)a few (accompaniment)
How it was made : Tea was central to Victorian life and traveled in all colonial trunks, stored in metal caddies. Ship's biscuits (hardtack), made from flour and water without leavening, kept for months and served as the reserve bread of long 19th-century voyages.