The Singles Forum Goes to a Tea Party! (Come Join Us for a Spot O'Tea!)

  • Christian Chat is a moderated online Christian community allowing Christians around the world to fellowship with each other in real time chat via webcam, voice, and text, with the Christian Chat app. You can also start or participate in a Bible-based discussion here in the Christian Chat Forums, where members can also share with each other their own videos, pictures, or favorite Christian music.

    If you are a Christian and need encouragement and fellowship, we're here for you! If you are not a Christian but interested in knowing more about Jesus our Lord, you're also welcome! Want to know what the Bible says, and how you can apply it to your life? Join us!

    To make new Christian friends now around the world, click here to join Christian Chat.

Ballaurena

Active member
May 27, 2024
141
62
28
#63
Poor Susanna -- I feel like a total failure!! :cry::ROFL:

I'm just not a drinker. I really don't like the taste of most alcohol unless it's a flavoring and very watered down, or used in a recipe.

And I've never been officially tested, but I think I'm allergic -- I can have a little bit but a full glass would set my face on fire, make my heart was about to pound right out of my chest, and I'd probably hurl on your brand-new boots. :oops:

I have similar reactions to caffeine, though not as severe, but I have yet to break my morning coffee habit.

I've read that a lot of Asians are lacking an enzyme that breaks down alcohol, and that's exactly how it feels -- like it's constantly circulating in my system and I can't get rid of it.

Unfortunately, there are reasons why I always say I'm a boring nerd! :confused::D:geek:
I'm glad to hear I'm not the only one, though I'm sorry it sounds like you've got it worse. I still try a serving of alcohol once in a while, but I'm learning that, that is all it takes for me to have a headache before I leave the restaurant. And yes indeed, all those complexities of wine that connoisseurs discuss sound fascinating, and sadly not for me.

I'm not a big one for caffeine, but since A1 dairy products are like a shot of morphine to me (no more dollops of Daisy cottage cheese for me, thanks), I too seem to be a bit on the sensitive side. God is showing me, though, that there is a psychological, or really, a spiritual aspect to a different reaction I had just this morning to something else, so I will be re-examining the alcohol thing anew with Him.
 

Ballaurena

Active member
May 27, 2024
141
62
28
#64
Hey Everyone,

This thread is inspired by a fellow member who said in a recent thread that he could see me (and another CC member) as being princesses at a tea party. :love: And this got me thinking...

It's been a long time since I wore a "princess dress" -- my high school prom, in fact, which was a LONG time ago :ROFL:, but I have fond memories of enjoying the honor of attending 2 tea parties with my Mom and a ladies' group she was part of. It was such an amazing experience!

Now I'm not really a princess-y type girl -- my "style" is definitely more jeans and t-shirts (featuring my favorite cartoon characters, of course!) But it was really inspirational to see these older ladies in my Mom's group being so excited to dress up for a "fancy" day out. Some of these women were in their 70's and 80's, but they dressed to the full nines in twirling, bright-colored dresses with large, fancy hats that had wide, elegant brims and decorations. These ladies were bubbling with enthusiasm and life, and I couldn't help thinking, "Yeah, these are the gals I want to be like when I grow up!"

But the best part for me is that our host and her mother, who were the owners of the tea house, were actually from Britain, and had set up their little shop to include a genuine British phone booth, like this:

View attachment 264817

Everything about the place had a wonderful, authentic touch. Some of the goodies we were served were even made from the host's mother's own family recipes, and the host's British accent was like a beautiful song. I loved that it not only was everything scrumptious, beautiful, and fun, but we were getting a mini cultural lesson right along with it!

I have a good CC friend who is pretty much a tea connoisseur, and one of the things I look forward to when visiting her again someday is that she's promised to take me to the local tea house. :) Maybe this time I'll even wear a princess dress! :love: (AND a tiara if I'm really feeling feisty!)

Therefore, I think the Singles Forum and Friends should have their very own tea party as well. :) (My friend said she HAS seen men at tea parties, though they were most likely there with their wives and not on their own.)

And don't worry about the usual "stuffy" dress codes -- at this party, people can come just as they are. :)

* Have you been to, or would you try going, to a tea party? (If not, what's more your style -- a coffee house?) Perhaps a winery or brewery?

I love the establishment of beverage culture! I don't like alcohol as a drink (I see it as something for recipes,) but I went on a tour of a winery that showed us the barrels the wine was aging in and explained how different types of wood affects the flavor, etc. I just find the process of how things are made, the different notes and flavors, etc., to all be fascinating -- so it definitely doesn't have to be just tea!

If you have been to other beverage-related places or would like to, tell us where you went or where you want to go! I would love to see the Starbucks flagship roastery. :coffee: I'm not big on Starbucks coffee, but I would really love to see how the whole shebang works.

How about all of you?

* What kinds of tea (or other beverages) would you be interested in?

* What will you wear? (Do you like the chance to dress up, or are you going to show up in last night's pajamas?) Totally acceptable in our group, by the way -- no judgments!

* Who will you be bringing as a guest, if you would like to bring one? (I, of course, will be bringing my mom!)

* What kinds of food/snacks have you tried at such places, or what would you like to try?

View attachment 264818






View attachment 264820

Personally, I am not big on scones, which are apparently seen as a staple for afternoon tea (I find them to be a bit dry,) but I loved the little cakes, clotted cream (the host's mother's own recipe,) and was surprised that I didn't even mind the cucumber sandwiches, because I normally don't like cucumber.

How about all of you? :)

Pull up a chair, fill your cup, and tell us how YOU would feel about attending a Singles Forum Tea Party! (Or, beverage event of your choice.) :)
I am so definitely dressing up. Otherwise it isn't really a tea party to me, though I will take you all as you are. I'll have an Earl Grey pot of tea, some of those tiny little sandwiches and sweets on a three-tiered tray, and a scone with cream and strawberry preserves, though I know lemon curd is more traditional.

As for men being there, the idea that they aren't is mostly American. The year Papa dropped dead, Mom wisely recognized that Christmas would be painful to try to do as usual, so she took us all to Victoria B.C., which has been described as the most European-like city in North America. God and my brother-in-law then managed to get us reservations for high tea at the Empress Hotel (a hotel so fancy it has a special entrance for when the queen/king of England visit) right when the carolers arrived (I think that part was God). Anyway, as my sister noted, there were lots of business men there having tea like it was normal. Plus the aforementioned bro-in-law is an anglophile himself who likes his tea.

And at least coming to a tea party hosted by my mom isn't for the faint of heart anyway even if she doesn't serve snake or shark, or whatever. Before my sisters were married, their then-boyfriends, now husbands, were both invited to a tea party at my family's home. My mom went shopping for novel things to serve and made up a tray of colorful veggies. At one point, the elder boyfriend picked up a small pepper and ate it. The younger boyfriend then did likewise, only he followed it up by picking up the cream pitcher and drinking it straight down. Turned out my mom had bought cute little hot peppers by mistake, and since the elder boyfriend is a quiet man who likes to eat really hot things, he didn't let on that it was, as he acknowledged later 'up there' for hotness.
 

Lynx

Folksy yet erudite
Aug 13, 2014
25,556
8,435
113
#66
I did some frog legs once. Tasted like chicken. Well, sorta.
I tried those and they tasted like fish to me.
The texture is chicken. The flavor is fish, somehow. Frogs taste like if you force-fed a chicken a diet of only fish for its entire miserable life.

At w*rk we have a separate oil vat for only fish, because (in theory) the fish flavor would permeate chicken if we cooked everything together. Sometimes a chicken nugget bounces off and into the fish vat, because it is right next to the table where we fill fry baskets. I call those escaped nuggets frog leg nuggets, because they are chicken nuggets cooked in the fish vat. Nobody eats them - not even me.
 

seoulsearch

OutWrite Trouble
May 23, 2009
15,507
4,770
113
#67
I am so definitely dressing up. Otherwise it isn't really a tea party to me, though I will take you all as you are. I'll have an Earl Grey pot of tea, some of those tiny little sandwiches and sweets on a three-tiered tray, and a scone with cream and strawberry preserves, though I know lemon curd is more traditional.

As for men being there, the idea that they aren't is mostly American. The year Papa dropped dead, Mom wisely recognized that Christmas would be painful to try to do as usual, so she took us all to Victoria B.C., which has been described as the most European-like city in North America. God and my brother-in-law then managed to get us reservations for high tea at the Empress Hotel (a hotel so fancy it has a special entrance for when the queen/king of England visit) right when the carolers arrived (I think that part was God). Anyway, as my sister noted, there were lots of business men there having tea like it was normal. Plus the aforementioned bro-in-law is an anglophile himself who likes his tea.

And at least coming to a tea party hosted by my mom isn't for the faint of heart anyway even if she doesn't serve snake or shark, or whatever. Before my sisters were married, their then-boyfriends, now husbands, were both invited to a tea party at my family's home. My mom went shopping for novel things to serve and made up a tray of colorful veggies. At one point, the elder boyfriend picked up a small pepper and ate it. The younger boyfriend then did likewise, only he followed it up by picking up the cream pitcher and drinking it straight down. Turned out my mom had bought cute little hot peppers by mistake, and since the elder boyfriend is a quiet man who likes to eat really hot things, he didn't let on that it was, as he acknowledged later 'up there' for hotness.
I loved this post -- thank you so much for sharing!

I'm so sorry about your father and pray that God continues to comfort your family.

What really struck me was your observation of men who were attending High Tea as an everyday occurrence -- I love the contrast of different things being placed within different cultural contexts. In the USA, a man at a tea party would be seen as something only a sissy would do -- in England, it's not only normal but probably expected. Love it! I wish they would make the the norm here.

And the pepper story was hilarious!! :ROFL:

Oh, that poor younger boyfriend. :whistle::LOL:
 

stingray72

Active member
Jun 15, 2024
190
89
28
#68
some british people in here i see....i was born in England lakenheathe to be specific....my dad was in the air force 20 years.
 

Ballaurena

Active member
May 27, 2024
141
62
28
#69
I loved this post -- thank you so much for sharing!

I'm so sorry about your father and pray that God continues to comfort your family.

What really struck me was your observation of men who were attending High Tea as an everyday occurrence -- I love the contrast of different things being placed within different cultural contexts. In the USA, a man at a tea party would be seen as something only a sissy would do -- in England, it's not only normal but probably expected. Love it! I wish they would make the the norm here.

And the pepper story was hilarious!! :ROFL:

Oh, that poor younger boyfriend. :whistle::LOL:
Thank you. It has been 17 years since Papa passed now, though your kind words aren't a waste, especially since my mom still struggles with his loss.

As for the younger boyfriend, at least he got a good wife out of his efforts of facing a tea party, and THAT tea party in particular.