Black Tea with Milk, Done Properly
A boldly infused black tea, softened with a splash of milk: the drink that opens, punctuates, and closes the British day. Simple, but everything is in the gesture.
A boldly infused black tea, softened with a splash of milk: the drink that opens, punctuates, and closes the British day. Simple, but everything is in the gesture.
I am sometimes asked what my favorite instrument is; I answer, without blushing, the teapot. Scald it first — one cannot pour water onto leaves in a cold pot, that would offend the tea. One spoonful per cup and one 'for the teapot', the water poured as soon as it boils, three minutes of patience, then the milk. My father and I solved more than one crystal structure cup in hand; I hold that nothing clears the mind better.
- •Black tea leaves (Assam or Ceylon) — one spoonful per cup plus one for the teapot (infusion)
- •Spring water, just off the boil — enough (extraction)
- •Milk — a splash (softener)
- •Sugar — optional (flavor)
Black Tea with Milk, Done Properly
A boldly infused black tea, softened with a splash of milk: the drink that opens, punctuates, and closes the British day. Simple, but everything is in the gesture.
Why this dish? Tea marked every hour of Bragg's day, from the Cavendish to the Royal Institution. Father and son Bragg, the only father-son duo to win Nobel Prizes, would reshape the world of crystallography cup in hand — that is how much the teapot mattered at that table.
I am sometimes asked what my favorite instrument is; I answer, without blushing, the teapot. Scald it first — one cannot pour water onto leaves in a cold pot, that would offend the tea. One spoonful per cup and one 'for the teapot', the water poured as soon as it boils, three minutes of patience, then the milk. My father and I solved more than one crystal structure cup in hand; I hold that nothing clears the mind better.
Ingredients (period version)
- Black tea leaves (Assam or Ceylon) — one spoonful per cup plus one for the teapot (infusion)
- Spring water, just off the boil — enough (extraction)
- Milk — a splash (softener)
- Sugar — optional (flavor)
Ingredients
- Black tea leaves (Assam or English Breakfast) — 1 tsp per cup + 1 for the pot (infusion)
- Freshly boiled filtered water — 200 ml per cup (extraction)
- Whole milk — a dash (softener)
- Sugar — optional (flavor)
Method
- Scald the teapot with a little hot water, then empty it.
- Add tea (one spoonful per cup + one 'for the teapot').
- Pour freshly boiled water over the leaves and infuse for 3-4 minutes.
- Strain into the cup, add a splash of milk (and sugar if desired), serve immediately with scones or biscuits.
How it was made : In Bragg's time, leaf tea brewed in a teapot was the norm; the debate of milk-first or milk-after already divided households. Assam and Ceylon teas, imported from the Empire, dominated British cups.
The contemporary twist : Serve in a transparent teapot to admire the infusion color, with a small carafe of cold milk on the side for a tasting-style experience.
Sources : George Orwell, "A Nice Cup of Tea", Evening Standard (1946)
Lawrence Bragg · Charactorium
