Murrmurr
SF VIP
- Location
- Sacramento, California
And it's carved out of wood. It's about ...idk... 4" tall, maybe. (I just measured it and I was right on the money. Of course, I look at it every day, but I still jotted down another point for me today.) It's a special cup made for really special tea; a loose leaf tea called yerba mate (but it's pronounced mahtay because it's from South America where I lived for a few years or so). So anyway, you take this tiny spoon, the special one with the tiny camel on the top, which did not come from SA, it came from Syria because I went there once and bought it. It's gold but I don't think I paid too much. Using this special spoon, you put some of that special tea into this special little wooden cup. Well, first a spoonful of sugar goes in it - you don't have to use special sugar, btw. It can just be ordinary sugar - but only I do that. Most SA people don't put in any kind of sugar.
While you're doing all that, you've got a tea pot with some (but not a bunch of) water in it heating up on this special little stove. It's small and really special because I bought it that time I lived in SA and parts of it are filigreed silver and other parts are ivory (without any filigree at all, but it still strikes a nice balance). When the water reaches about 170 degrees or thereabouts, you pour some of it onto the tea in the special cup, gradually, a bit at a time but not too slow, you just don't want to burn those leaves is all.
Then you get your special straw called a bombilla (bom-beeya, 'cause Spanish). I got that in SA too, because you can't very well just drink a cup full of hot, wet leaves (well, even if they're not hot, this isn't a good idea). The end of the bombilla has a very special shape...it is shaped like a spoon, but that's not the end that goes in your mouth (because neither are you going to eat those leaves). The bombilla's spoon shaped end has many, many holes in it. It's actually a special little strainer, you see, so you can sip the nice, hot tea without getting any leaf bits in your mouth. Except sometimes you do if the bits are very, very small.
Okay, take it away, Aneeda!
While you're doing all that, you've got a tea pot with some (but not a bunch of) water in it heating up on this special little stove. It's small and really special because I bought it that time I lived in SA and parts of it are filigreed silver and other parts are ivory (without any filigree at all, but it still strikes a nice balance). When the water reaches about 170 degrees or thereabouts, you pour some of it onto the tea in the special cup, gradually, a bit at a time but not too slow, you just don't want to burn those leaves is all.
Then you get your special straw called a bombilla (bom-beeya, 'cause Spanish). I got that in SA too, because you can't very well just drink a cup full of hot, wet leaves (well, even if they're not hot, this isn't a good idea). The end of the bombilla has a very special shape...it is shaped like a spoon, but that's not the end that goes in your mouth (because neither are you going to eat those leaves). The bombilla's spoon shaped end has many, many holes in it. It's actually a special little strainer, you see, so you can sip the nice, hot tea without getting any leaf bits in your mouth. Except sometimes you do if the bits are very, very small.
Okay, take it away, Aneeda!