04-12-2021, 06:29 AM
You’ll want to savour every last sip of this tea, which costs S$800
a pot
It’s a rather special experience taking สมัครสล็อต traditional English tea while looking
out over The Royal Mews at Buckingham Palace. But to truly experience teatime like
an aristocrat, you’ll want to sip on The Rubens Golden Tips Tea while you’re at it.
At the swanky Rubens at the Palace, a pot of said tea is priced at a cool £500 (S$838),
making it the most expensive tea in the United Kingdom. To make your money’s worth,
you’ll get a glass of champagne, freshly baked scones, an assortment of pastries and
elegant finger sandwiches to go with it.
Why the extravagant price tag? The hotel’s spokesman explained that Golden Tips tea
is not only rare, but its production entirely natural and, thus, slow. Few estates plant
these bushes, which must be tended to for about seven years before their silvery buds
yield mature, fuzzy tips that are ripe for the picking.
This slow growth can be attributed to the cool climate of the Sri Lankan highlands
where the tea is grown. The mild weather translates to a longer time for flavour to
develop on the bush. When ready, only the fine tips are picked and then sundried on
a swathe of velvet cloth until they turn from silver to gold. After that, it’s off to market.
The premium also stems from the fact that it takes five kilograms of buds to yield
a single kilogram of the tea. To put its rarity in perspective, out of Sri Lanka’s annual
production of 300 million kilograms of tea, less than 100 kilograms comprise
the Golden Tips variety – even less after the tips are sifted and the less-than-excellent
among them eliminated.
As early as 1891, a pound of Ceylon Golden Tips tea sold in London for the equivalent
of £1,260. Today, £500 gets you a pot of the liquid gold that will fill three precious
teacups.
The brewing of the tea is itself a craft. Suffice to say, “it’s not simple a process of
boiling a kettle and sticking a teabag in a cup,” said the hotel’s spokesperson via email.
“The whole experience takes guests on an extraordinary white-glove service,
using gold tweezers to pick and weigh the leaves with precision.” The tea is prepared
using natural still water, which is boiled and used to infuse the leaves.
a pot
It’s a rather special experience taking สมัครสล็อต traditional English tea while looking
out over The Royal Mews at Buckingham Palace. But to truly experience teatime like
an aristocrat, you’ll want to sip on The Rubens Golden Tips Tea while you’re at it.
At the swanky Rubens at the Palace, a pot of said tea is priced at a cool £500 (S$838),
making it the most expensive tea in the United Kingdom. To make your money’s worth,
you’ll get a glass of champagne, freshly baked scones, an assortment of pastries and
elegant finger sandwiches to go with it.
Why the extravagant price tag? The hotel’s spokesman explained that Golden Tips tea
is not only rare, but its production entirely natural and, thus, slow. Few estates plant
these bushes, which must be tended to for about seven years before their silvery buds
yield mature, fuzzy tips that are ripe for the picking.
This slow growth can be attributed to the cool climate of the Sri Lankan highlands
where the tea is grown. The mild weather translates to a longer time for flavour to
develop on the bush. When ready, only the fine tips are picked and then sundried on
a swathe of velvet cloth until they turn from silver to gold. After that, it’s off to market.
The premium also stems from the fact that it takes five kilograms of buds to yield
a single kilogram of the tea. To put its rarity in perspective, out of Sri Lanka’s annual
production of 300 million kilograms of tea, less than 100 kilograms comprise
the Golden Tips variety – even less after the tips are sifted and the less-than-excellent
among them eliminated.
As early as 1891, a pound of Ceylon Golden Tips tea sold in London for the equivalent
of £1,260. Today, £500 gets you a pot of the liquid gold that will fill three precious
teacups.
The brewing of the tea is itself a craft. Suffice to say, “it’s not simple a process of
boiling a kettle and sticking a teabag in a cup,” said the hotel’s spokesperson via email.
“The whole experience takes guests on an extraordinary white-glove service,
using gold tweezers to pick and weigh the leaves with precision.” The tea is prepared
using natural still water, which is boiled and used to infuse the leaves.