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| Tea (rec.drink.tea) Discussion relating to tea, the world's second most consumed beverage (after water), made by infusing or boiling the leaves of the tea plant (C. sinensis or close relatives) in water. |
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On Apr 8, 4:51 pm, niisonge wrote:
There was a popular television show in Korea, and also aired here in China, also very popular in China; called $B=w?ME72(B. I think the English title is "Girls on the Top". It was a very long episodic drama series, and also very cool. Just about every episode shows mainly concubines of the emperor, drinking tea from a celadon tea set, while plotting how to do away with the crown-prince so that their own son could get the throne. The title sounds naughty... Kevo |
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Kevo wrote:
On Apr 4, 4:43 am, Iggy wrote: On Apr 3, 1:31 pm, Jenn wrote: On Apr 2, 12:18 pm, Tea Geek wrote: Hello, everyone! I would love it if you could recommend any books or films in which tea plays a prominent role. They don't need to be *about* tea per se. An example might be how food/cooking plays a large role in "Eat Drink Man Woman" but that's not really what the move is *about*. We're looking for things like that. --Michael J. Coffey-- Hi Michael, Any episode of Star Trek TNG inolves tea, mostly Earl Grey... You know the rest. I even saw a "Klingon Tea Ceremony" that rocked. Jenn It think my first exposure to tea ceremonies and the notion that tea was something special was from watching the Shogun mini-series. I haven't seen it since I was a teenager though, so it may not be as applicable as my memory suggests. :-) In the new BBC series based on the books of Alexander McCall Smith - The No.1 Ladies Detective Agency, Bush Tea (what is that? Rooibos?) plays an important role in the show as mediating bridge, 2 connect, 2 pour out problems, etc. In Fearless, a chinese movie, the hero discusses some cool deep stuff with a Japanese opponent over a cup of tea, near the end of the film. I second a look at that Fearless reference, if nothing else the gaiwans were really cool. I kept wondering where they got them, they were much bigger than I was used to (The gaiwans). Melinda |