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Memories steeped in sweet tea
The State ^ | Jan. 30, 2002 | Jay C. Grelen

Posted on 01/30/2002 10:41:25 AM PST by aomagrat

Sweet tea, as one of the characters in the movie ''Steel Magnolias'' noted, is the house wine of the South.

It is what we drank when we cooled our houses with attic fans. As a teen-age hay hauler, I'd drink a jug a day.

When I sit around telling stories, that's what I drink, winter or summer.

I am the uncaped crusader for the preservation of the tradition, which is in trouble. Young people don't know how to make tea, and bottled liquid they call tea is sprouting like kudzu in stores.

Here is my tea pedigree:

I have consumed sweet tea at Mrs. Wilkes Boarding House in Savannah, Ga., and at Crooks Corner in Chapel Hill, N.C., where you sweeten your tea with a concoction of mint and sugar water. I have drunk sweet tea with George Wallace.

My sweet-tea crusade developed in a roundabout way in 1993 after I spent a day picking Silver Queen corn in south Alabama. I, sweaty and dirty, went to a catfish joint and ordered a glass of tea to go. The cashier brought a full pitcher and set me in a rocking chair on the porch. I felt obliged to drink the entire pitcher.

I wrote about that woman's kind heart and proposed that sweet tea is much more than a drink. It's the memories of our grandmothers and Sunday lunch. It's a symbol of our hospitality. I invited readers to share a sweet tea memory. Readers rhapsodized.

We learned the importance of tea. My bosses at the Mobile, Ala., newspaper allowed me to sponsor a contest in which a panel selected the best sweet tea. The New York Times published a story about my crusade, which was followed by a story in Saveur, a fancy New York magazine. Then, Southern Living published a small story in which the writer proclaimed me a ``sweet-tea evangelist.''

In 1999, I took the crusade to Oklahoma. The battle there has been lost. To put Oklahomans in perspective, one day I was in a cafe in Hobart. After determining that sweet tea wasn't on the menu, I was happy to find that pinto beans were.

''You have any rice to put under those beans?'' I asked the waitress. She looked at me like I'd ordered a scoop of topsoil.

I have learned that the sugar you use matters. (You can't beat Dixie Crystals.) I use tea from a company in Mobile, which perfected a blend that is as clear after a night in the refrigerator as it is the moment you make it.


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To: FreedominJesusChrist
It was so unhealthy.

But it's so tasty!

161 posted on 02/28/2002 6:34:18 PM PST by aomagrat
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To: Tennessee_Bob
(I hated having to hull peas...ended up with fingers stained for days)

And the quick just under the edge of your thumbnails sore for days, too.

162 posted on 02/28/2002 6:39:35 PM PST by eloy
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To: Prodigal Son
You live in Europe & you miss sweet iced tea? Why? They have tea there & sugar & ice........oh it must be the boiling water they don't have.
163 posted on 02/28/2002 6:40:19 PM PST by Ditter
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To: aomagrat
That is just my preference. I would rather opt for stir-fry, steamed veggies, or pasta. I never understood why Southerners fry their veggies, why? They are better raw or steamed.

I can't really speak for my brother though. He just loved Southern BBQ.

164 posted on 02/28/2002 6:46:17 PM PST by FreedominJesusChrist
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To: aomagrat
Took me a while to find this thread, but I love it. Luzianne is the deal, huh? I'm going to try wimpcat's recipe on this thread - I usually make tea using our beautiful Florida sun.
165 posted on 02/28/2002 6:59:52 PM PST by stainlessbanner
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To: Ditter
You live in Europe & you miss sweet iced tea? Why? They have tea there & sugar & ice........oh it must be the boiling water they don't have.

No no. This is a nation that has entire aisles devoted to electric kettles. It doesn't taste the same. I've made it a couple different times and it never tasted the same as it did back home. I can't figure out why. Perhaps the tea is different? I don't know who that Earl Grey fellow is but he don't know diddly squat about iced tea ;-). Seriously, it doesn't taste the same, don't ask me why.

166 posted on 03/01/2002 2:45:36 AM PST by Prodigal Son
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To: Prodigal Son
I was joking about the hot water. ;9) Your mom probably used Liptons Tea at home, why don't you try English Breakfast Tea & see how it comes out?
167 posted on 03/01/2002 5:15:27 AM PST by Ditter
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To: Ditter
Another thing we always did was put baking soda in the tea. I never thought to ask why and to this day I still don't know- it was just part of the tea making procedure. They're not real big on ice in drinks in Europe anyhow. I went down to the supermarket one Saturday evening looking for ice trays- didn't stock 'em. Had to wait for a Monday to go prowling all over town for a set.

It's weird little things like that make you homesick. For instance- here in the UK- you're not supposed to put electrical plug ins in your bathroom. Want to blow dry your hair- leave the bathroom. They seem to have a bit of a phobia about electricity in the UK- all the plugins have to have a switch (like a light switch) to cut the juice off at the wall. Many's the time I put on a kettle of water to boil somewhere during a tv commercial and ten minutes later I was fustrated to learn someone had cut the appliance off at the wall- I guess out of fear that it would cut itself on while no human was in attendance and organize the other appliances into rebellion. At least it's not like that in the rest of Europe.

And another thing that ticks me off here... (don't get me started ;-))

168 posted on 03/01/2002 5:44:59 AM PST by Prodigal Son
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To: Amelia
Just bumping one of my favorite recent threads...

Besides fried chicken, I'd love to have one of my Sainted Grandmother's tea cakes.

I never knew why they were called tea cakes. They were a sort of cross between a biscuit and a cookie. Not sweet like a sugar cookie, but with a wonderful vanilla flavor. Very plain.

They were absolutely wonderful. If anyone has a reasonable guess as to what a tea cake is, and can offer a recipe, I'd be eternally grateful.

169 posted on 03/05/2002 9:42:55 AM PST by TontoKowalski
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To: TontoKowalski
Tea cakes are like shortbread. I've had them, and at one time had a great recipe, but I'm not sure where it is now...looking....
170 posted on 03/05/2002 3:59:00 PM PST by Amelia
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To: aomagrat; billbears
What kind of jars or pitchers do you both use for your sweet tea? I have these 1 gal glass jugs with a nozzle on the bottom that keep leaking all over my icebox. Any suggestions?
171 posted on 09/20/2002 6:46:25 AM PDT by stainlessbanner
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To: aomagrat
Sweet tea bump from Mobile.
172 posted on 09/20/2002 6:50:11 AM PDT by blam
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To: stainlessbanner
I prefer those big widemouth gallon pickle jugs. Kinda hard to pour from, but that's what my family has used for generations.
173 posted on 09/20/2002 6:53:08 AM PDT by aomagrat
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To: stainlessbanner
We've always used those big plastic pitchers that you pour from at the top
174 posted on 09/20/2002 6:55:36 AM PDT by billbears
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To: BlackbirdSST
"Brought to mind a "catfish joint" I frequented as a youth, Villa Rica, Georgia. All you can eat corn fed farm catfish and the best cornbread and sweet tea around. Nothing like a mouth watering memory. Blackbird.".

You must be talking about the Rock Inn cafe.

175 posted on 09/20/2002 6:59:12 AM PDT by Vigilantcitizen
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To: aomagrat
Mmmmmmmmmmm sweet tea. Alas, in Houston, one is rarely served sweet tea. Alabama has the best sweet tea, by far. Mmmmmmmmm sweet tea. =)
176 posted on 09/20/2002 7:13:11 AM PDT by Aggie Mama
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To: viligantcitizen
Yes indeed. From the area? Another good eating spot was Hudson's Hickory House in Douglasville. Good Southern BBQ, and great Sweet Tea, if memory serve's! Blackbird.
177 posted on 09/20/2002 7:39:13 AM PDT by BlackbirdSST
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To: BlackbirdSST
"Yes indeed. From the area? Another good eating spot was Hudson's Hickory House in Douglasville. Good Southern BBQ, and great Sweet Tea, if memory serve's! Blackbird."

Yes, I have lived around here for most of my 35 years.

Hudson's is excellent. Real fries, excellent sweet tea in those extra large styrofoam cups, and their inside sliced pork is to die for.

Needless to say, the new Sonny's that was built near the interstate isn't doing very well.

If you haven't been here in a while, you wouldn't recognize the place.

178 posted on 09/20/2002 7:50:49 AM PDT by Vigilantcitizen
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To: aomagrat
Growing up in NC, I didn't know tea was made without being sweetened until I was about 15. Glass jar, few tea bags, some sugar, and place on stoop for a few hours and let Mr. Sun do his work.

A tall glass of iced tea helped me through many an afternoon growing up, we drank gallons of the stuff growing up. It was a staple.
179 posted on 09/20/2002 8:00:11 AM PDT by HamiltonJay
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To: aomagrat
There is nothing like Sweet tea !!
180 posted on 09/20/2002 8:56:04 AM PDT by kassie
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