A Tea Addict's Journal

Tea service is hard

December 31, 2017 · 8 Comments


Restaurant tea service is often bad, I think mostly because it’s difficult to get right. Of all the things that a server needs to do, making tea to serve a customer is probably one of the most time consuming. You have to gather at least 3 pieces of wares, put leaves into the pot, add hot water, then bring it over and pour it out for the customer plus all that cream and sugar business. Compared to coffee, where you really only need one cup for the coffee and usually only a button press for the actual liquid, it’s a lot of work.

Moreover, there are other hidden problems in tea service. Like yesterday morning when I drank this cup – the tea was supposed to be English breakfast, but the problem is the little metal pot they used had been brewing quite a bit of peppermint tea, it seems – my English breakfast tasted like peppermint English breakfast, which was, well, kinda gross.

I’ve always bemoaned the poor state of affairs in most tea service at restaurants, but as I have family in the F&B business, I have also come to appreciate exactly how much trouble it is to offer good tea in a restaurant setting. You can’t charge too much (certainly not more than a cup of specialized coffee) and you have to try to make it quick – all the while trying to offer something serviceable, and most of your clientele don’t really care. There’s a good reason why so much tea service is so mediocre. Nobody is really willing to pay for the good stuff.

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8 responses so far ↓

  • John Bickel // January 1, 2018 at 12:01 am | Reply

    That last part seems like the biggest problem, variation in expectations. If someone really wanted to reach out to the broadest set of preferences by customer count they would only offer tea bag versions, and that would solve storage problems. It would be tricky to get a basic version of Western loose tea right, and even then half the people into loose tea would have problems with some aspect. I was just in a restaurant yesterday where teas looked great but better versions cost a good bit more than the fish and chips I ordered (and I didn’t try any tea, more because it was in the evening).

  • Jackie // January 1, 2018 at 12:59 am | Reply

    I think you are wrong. The restaurant tea mostly is served is just a tea bag in a tea pot and doesn’t take that amount of time. I think they are just not interested in tea drinking customers or why they only serve Lipton? The real tea drinker like myself and my husband, we are always curious and on the hunt for restaurants or cafes with a good selection of tea and sometimes we find them and we are happy to pay more for a nice cup or pot of tea.

    • MarshalN // January 1, 2018 at 1:41 am | Reply

      Not always. You can pay $6 or $8 and get some loose leaf (which is what I got in the picture) but it doesn’t make it any better. Just because you’re willing to pay for a cup doesn’t mean there are enough of us who will do the same to support better tea service. Even at very high end restaurants the attitude is often just “good enough while not offending the picky ones”

    • kyf // January 6, 2018 at 9:24 pm | Reply

      This kind of generalizations is amusing. It obviously depends on location / city & the type of restaurant / establishment. In Hong Kong, some dim sum places used to let you bring your own peurh & brew it the way you like it for you. You can sit there for hours if you are a good customer. In fact, one place even cautioned me against drinking restaurant provided puerh (which I found unremarkable) and told me to bring my own tea.

      I heard that years ago in Beijing only some hotel restaurants have really rare green tea served to guests at high prices.

  • John Bickel // January 7, 2018 at 12:53 pm | Reply

    I might have mentioned a bit about how often I see decent tea in restaurants where I live, or where that was. It’s all but unheard of where I live, in Bangkok. A limited number of tea theme cafes sell decent loose tea but in restaurants it rounds down to none at all (although I can think of one exception). That other restaurant was in St. Petersburg (Russia, not Florida), and per my impression few people keep up with decent loose tea there, but probably more than here. It wouldn’t be that hard for a restaurant to stock one mid – range Tie Kuan Yin and a couple others on that level but in few cases would it be profitable, or a business draw. Some tea drinkers wouldn’t care for that basic a selection, or the water mineral content could be way off ideal; lots of things could come up. Lots of other people would only want tea bags instead, or blends with flowers for loose tea. I agree with the premise of the post; it just wouldn’t work in most cases to sell what people with a good bit of exposure to tea would consider good tea. It’s nice that there are exceptions, but I’ve experienced very few, and in a limited sense we do get around.

  • kyf // January 7, 2018 at 3:49 pm | Reply

    The basic point that it is trickier to serve good tea at public establishments than good coffee or wine is worth pointing out. The biggest problem could be that good tea is easily contaminated. Dirty hands could ruin a whole batch. Soapy, greasy, or pepperminty utensils …

    • kyf // January 7, 2018 at 4:12 pm | Reply

      But then I would say that the basic Hong Kong milk/cream tea is good & it can take abuse. So it depends on what you mean by good tea…

  • teamedicineblog // January 19, 2018 at 10:06 am | Reply

    Can’t say I have ever had a decent cup of tea out of metal tea pot unless it was a silver pot, not sure if anyone has looked at the science behind this or whether it is entirely subjective from my own point of view or experience

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