Cheikh Anta Diop’s menu
The Three Glasses — the tea ceremony that closes the meal and accompanies conversation

Ataya (Senegalese Mint Tea)

DrinkDocumented☕ 🍯moyen45 min

A heavily brewed green tea, generously sweetened and perfumed with mint, served in three successive rounds in small glasses, with a foam obtained by pouring the tea from a height. Bitter first, then sweet, it is patience made into a beverage.

The Three Glasses — the tea ceremony that closes the meal and accompanies conversation

A heavily brewed green tea, generously sweetened and perfumed with mint, served in three successive rounds in small glasses, with a foam obtained by pouring the tea from a height. Bitter first, then sweet, it is patience made into a beverage.

Sit down, the tea will take as long as it needs—and that is perfectly fine. The first glass is bitter as death, the second sweet as life, the third smooth as love: so says the proverb. We pour from a height, from one glass to another, to crown the tea with a beautiful foam. It is around these three rounds that we remade the world, that we discussed Africa and its history for hours. Anyone in a hurry has no place around the ataya stove.
Cheikh Anta Diop
Ingredients
  • Chinese green tea (gunpowder)a good pinch (base)
  • Fresh minta bunch (flavor)
  • Sugargenerous (sweetness (increasing each round))
How it was made : Green tea, introduced to Senegal via trans-Saharan trade routes and Maghreb influence, became an essential social ritual in the 20th century. Prepared on a small charcoal stove, ataya structures the time of sociability: the three rounds are never rushed.
Sources : Documented social practice of the ataya ceremony in West Africa