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Tea Shops Alexandria VA

Tea shops or tea houses are cafes in which tea can be consumed, usually with the accompaniment of fine foods and snacks, as well as tea and tea accessories can be purchased for at-home consumption. Tea shops will often offer rare tea selections, as well as teacups, teapots, tea tools and serving components. Read through the following articles to learn more about tea and find local tea shops and providers who can help you find what you’re looking for.

Green Spring Gardens Park
703-941-7987
4603 Green Spring Road
Alexandria, VA
Tudor Place Historic House & Garden
202-965-0400 x 110
1644 31st Street NW
Washington, DC
Park Hyatt Washington Tea Cellar
202-419-6755
24 & M Streets NW
Washington, DC
Jefferson Hotel
202--448-2300
1200 16th Street NW
Washington, DC
Ching Ching Cha
202-333-8288
1063 Wisconsin Avenue NW
Washington, DC
The Ritz-Carlton at Pentagon City
703-415-5000
1250 South Hayes Street
Arlington, VA
Snap
202-965-7627
1062 Thomas Jefferson Street NW
Washington, DC
Hillwood Cafe at Hillwood Estate, Museum, & Gardens
202--686-5807
4155 Linnean Avenue NW
Washington, DC
Just Paper and Tea
202-333-9141
3232 P Street NW
Washington, DC
Shanghai Tea House
202-338-3816
2400 Wisconsin Avenue NW, 2nd floor
Washington, DC
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Afternoon or High Tea

       Before there was oil there was tea. The original "black gold" has been the social fuel of the British Empire since the 17th century. It filled the coffers of the East Indian Tea Company, the treasury of the British Empire, started wars, calmed nerves and helped generations through stressful situations. In fact, tea by far exceeds the popularity of coffee in most Middle Eastern countries.
       British merchants devised processing methods for "black tea"(fully fermented) and marketed tea both in England and abroad.
       The Tea Exchange, where millions of "tea chests" are traded annually is still in London, whereas the Coffee Exchange is in N.Y.
       London is still the place to go for a perfectly serves afternoon tea, which depending on the establishment, may consist of a couple of cups of tea along with some pastries, but more often than not is a meal.
       First, be aware that no self-respecting tearoom will use tea bags, always loose leaves. In 1610, Dutch traders brought the first commercial shipment of tea to Europe from China. Even tough it took cargo ships four years to get to China and back, tea drinking swept Europe by the late 17th century.

       In London, two events helped herald the era of tea. The plague outbreak of 1665 made the population crave a healthy life – boiled water and fresh air. One of the upsides of the Great Fire of London (1666) was the creation of open spaces in the overcrowded town. Soon vacant lots became the new fashionable places, leafy, gentle gardens with names such as the Temple of Flora. As tea consumption caught on they changed into tea gardens.
       The government was quick to realize an excellent tax revenue source and imposed a considerable tax on tea both in the U K ands all colonies; this lasted from 1689 – 1964. The tax was fatally unpopular in some places, i.e. Boston in 1773, which started the War of Independence.
       China, at the time the only source of tea and was insisting on being paid in silver for tea and in 1793, Lord Macartney was dispatched to China in an attempt to convince the Chinese to accept British goods instead. He failed, but British merchants came up with a more sinister plan – smuggling opium into China and demanding payment in silver. The situation deteriorated and created havoc with the social fabric having made a large proportion f the population heroin addicts.
       In 1893, Chinese authorities destroyed 20,000 chests of British opium and a year later, the Admiralty sent a fleet to force China to open her ports to buy their "drug".
       While the opium wars were raging in China, British merchants started growing tea in nor...

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