Tea

POSTED: Tuesday, February 28, 2012, 3:20 PM
Filed Under: Food Events | Tea

The crew at Northern Liberties' Random Tea Room (713 N. Fourth St.) is throwing a party this coming Thursday, March 1 in honor of their four-year anniversary. Owner Becky Goldschmidt will be pouring tea-infused cocktails and passing around some sample bites of their upcoming menu. "We do offer some food now, like muffins and fruit, but we're expanding the menu to something more substantial," says Tea Room herbalist Danielle Dwyer. The specifics of the food and drink will remain a secret until it's party time, but we do know there is a cocktail that will feature their housemade chai. The space is small, so they're opening up the back yard for guests to mingle and warm up around a bonfire. Food and booze are complimentary, but the regular tea menu will be available for purchase, too.

Photo: Random Tea Room on Facebook

Posted by Alexandra Weiss @ 3:20 PM  Permalink | 1 comment
POSTED: Wednesday, September 14, 2011, 11:58 AM
Filed Under: Food Events | Tea

The World Tea East Conference — its first convention, an offshoot of the World Tea Expo — ended its run at the Pennsylvania Convention Center this past weekend. During its two days in Philadelphia, the conference, geared toward members of the press, retail outlets and restaurants, basked in the tannin-soaked glory of a U.S. tea market that's estimated to gross beyond $16 billion come 2016. During its weekend of tastings, pairings and prize-givings, the elders of the tea game were as recognized, as well as the newcomers. Lifelong tea aficionado/freelance tea reviewer Glamorosi (my wife) introduced me to this event and I can't tell you how glad I am she did.

Posted by A.D. Amorosi @ 11:58 AM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Monday, November 8, 2010, 7:35 PM
Filed Under: Coffee | Openings | Tea
Madeline Hoefer and her husband Werner, both of whom have decades of experience in the F&B biz, have taken over Fairmount's Flying Saucer (2545 Brown St.) and will reopen the dormant café on Nov. 19. The coffee shop, which closed in July of this year, has been given a retro '50s makeover with literal interpretations of the name galore — look out for the UFO artwork, ET-friendly logo and "Deep Space Decaf," "Nebula Blend" and "Cosmic Roast" coffees from Souderton's One Village. Hoefer says Flying Saucer Café will also carry Premium Steap teas and an array of sweets and baked goods from South Philly's Traveling Hat Bake Shop and Tea Room, plus housemade soups, chilis, hummus and more.
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 7:35 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Monday, November 1, 2010, 3:20 PM
Filed Under: Food News | On Wheels | Tea
Melange Tea Cart (33rd and Market), which we told you about recently, was involved on a crash on the 21st that left the truck in the repair shop and the mobile tea business closed indefinitely. "At 10:50 a.m. this morning, a truck decided to make a very late left turn directly in front of me at 18th and Washington," owners Boris and Yumiko Ginsburgs wrote on their blog. "To avoid being hit, I was forced to swerve, and the cart rolled over. [...] The cart has sustained major damage that, to be brutally honest, we can not afford to address." Tough stuff. Fortunately, repairs were completed ahead of schedule and Melange is back in action on a test-run today, pouring their select menu of exotic teas and tisanes. (Try the new white teas, like shou mei or bai mu dan.) The cart will be around on Drexel's campus until 2 p.m.; stay tuned to their Twitter to learn when they resume regular hours.

Ticket Stubs: Meal Ticket Weekly Recap, Nov. 1-6 :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper
Posted 2010-11-08 08:32:07
[...] West Philly’s Melange Tea Cart reopens after a crash. [...] 

Tweets that mention After crash, Melange Tea Cart reopens today :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper -- Topsy.com
Posted 2010-11-01 10:50:59
[...] This post was mentioned on Twitter by The Best Of Food.com, Meal Ticket. Meal Ticket said: Crash into tea, yeah. After accident, @melangetea reopens today http://j.mp/apoP88 [...] 
Posted by Adam Erace @ 3:20 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Monday, October 18, 2010, 7:35 PM
Filed Under: On Wheels | Openings | Tea
melange-tea.com
Furnished with gauzy orange drapes and a 14th-century spice merchant’s stock worth of exotic loose-leaf tea, the new Melange Tea Cart (33rd and Market) looks less like a standard Philadelphia food truck than a gypsy tent pitched in a far-flung desert. Boris and Yumiko Ginsburgs are the nomadic healers inside this onetime hot dog cart; the couple and tea aficionados — their blog posts have academic bibliographies! — rolled out Melange on Drexel’s campus in time for the 2010 school year, brewing teas and tisanes that range from well-known (Darjeerling, chamomile, English breakfast) to evocative breeds like smoky Russian Caravan, spicy Lansang Souchong and the Korean roast corn tea known as Oksusu Cha. (Melange also has coffee fans covered with three roasts from South Street’s Cafe L’Aube.) Follow Melange on Twitter, as the cart isn’t always where it’s supposed to be — like today. We walked all around Drexel on their tea trail and came up empty-handed. Being under-caffeinated makes us ornery, then we saw this picture of the Ginsburgs’s dog, Tank, on their website and melted. Awwww! You asked for more adorable dogs on Meal Ticket, you got it.
melange-tea.com

After crash, Melange Tea Cart reopens today :: Meal Ticket :: Food Blog :: Philadelphia City Paper
Posted 2010-11-01 10:21:56
[...] Tea Cart (33rd and Market), which we told you about recently, was involved on a crash on the 21st that left the truck in the repair shop and the mobile tea [...] 

Michelle
Posted 2010-10-18 15:23:12
OMG that dog is adorable!
Posted by Adam Erace @ 7:35 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Monday, September 27, 2010, 11:00 PM
Filed Under: Coffee | Food News | Tea
Photo | Michael T. Regan
Jocie Dye, who owns Mt. Airy's InFusion with husband Jason Huber (shot above for our '07 piece on Saxbys Coffee), has announced via press release the couple's intentions to sell the coffee shop (7133 Germantown Ave.), citing a shift in professional goals. (The cafe opened eight years ago, and Dye and Huber briefly ran a second  location in South Philly in the 10th-and-Carpenter space that is now Mazag.) An excerpt from their announcement:
So the goal is to find a similarly community-minded independent company to take it over. Until that happens, say Dye and Huber, they’re in it to win it. Infusion is maintaining a full calendar of events, while a new ad campaign highlights the integral role their customers played as InFusion evolved from “just” a coffee shop to a community gathering place and key driver in Mt. Airy’s Germantown Avenue renaissance. “Even with competing demands on our time and energy, we continue to improve our menu offerings, and to make ourselves available to the community,” says Dye. “InFusion is too important to Mt. Airy and to us personally to do it any other way.”
Those interested in inquiring about InFusion should contact Dye at 215-248-1718 or jocie@infusioncoffeeandtea.com.
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 11:00 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Wednesday, June 30, 2010, 9:59 PM
Filed Under: Openings | Tea
Get the flash player here: http://www.adobe.com/flashplayer
Thanks to trusted Meal Ticket tipsters JC and DO for simul-sharing word of Cups & Chairs' opening with us. (We first mentioned it back in March.) The tea-centric café, located at intersection of Fifth, Passyunk and Monroe (701-03 S. Fifth St., 215-238-8TEA), is the brainchild of Kylie Tsai, a tea fanatic who left a career in IT to open the shop. (Former co-worker Jen-rung Lai designed the spacious interior.) The 30-seat shop carries 59 varieties of looseleaf tea sourced from around the world — Japanese matcha (aka ceremonial green tea; Tsai's greatest love/specialty), African rooibos, South American yerba mate, etc. — plus tea drinks (the "Before Sunrise" is matcha floated over orange juice), home-steeping accessories and a simple menu of sandwiches, salads, pastries and light bites. Tsai also showed us an outdoor courtyard that she hopes to have up and running in a few months' time. Hours: Mon.-Fri., 7 a.m.-8 p.m.; Sat., 8 a.m.-8 p.m.; Sun., 8 a.m.-6 p.m.

danya
Posted 2010-06-30 18:44:34
Who's making the food?

vance
Posted 2010-07-01 12:05:11
Ooo. yum. matcha. can't wait.

michael
Posted 2010-07-02 17:53:56
Love their Before Sunrise special - a delicious blend of OJ and matcha.

michael
Posted 2010-07-02 17:59:45
Don't know who makes the food, but the sandwiches and salads were unique, fresh and tasty.  I have to sample some more.

Terry Bell
Posted 2010-07-04 16:51:09
Kylie!  Congrats on your opening.

Erin
Posted 2010-07-06 12:33:58
Yay for matcha! Thanks for the early tip on this post, Drew. Any luck in me buying straight matcha powder from there? Or any suggestion where? Dying to make a matcha finishing salt!

Drew Lazor
Posted 2010-07-06 13:58:18
Erin, yes, I believe you can buy any of their teas looseleaf, and I don't see why that wouldn't include matcha.

Natalie
Posted 2010-08-19 12:21:55
You can buy loose matcha at the tea place on 4th and monroe (around the corner - across from Essene).  it's $10 an ounce.
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 9:59 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Monday, March 22, 2010, 3:59 PM
Filed Under: Openings | Tea

Thanks to Meal Ticket tipster DO for this one: Unitea is the name of the tea bar aiming for a March 29 opening at 265 S. 44th Street, right on the same block as Local 44 and Tampopo in West Philly. Owner Kashif Ahmad is an accountant by trade, but he's got some family connections to the food/drink biz — his aunt, Tayyaba Khanum, owns Nanee's Kitchen in the Reading Terminal Market. Ahmad will offer a lineup of 25 or so international teas (Ahmad's landed a top-of-the-line Brasilia espresso machine that can simultaneously brew coffee and tea), fresh-squeezed juices, a few sandwiches and crepes on weekends. Lots of halal and vegetarian options, too.


Tea Bar Coming To 44th | Under the Button
Posted 2010-03-25 11:30:58
[...] to our pals over at City Paper’s Meal Ticket, a new “tea bar” called Unitea is planning to open soon on 44th and Spruce, right by [...] 
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 3:59 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Friday, March 12, 2010, 9:05 PM
Filed Under: Openings | Tea
effectualdesigns.net
Kylie Tsai tells Meal Ticket she hopes to have Cups & Chairs Tea Café, at 701-03 S. Fifth Street (the intersection of Fifth, Monroe and Passyunk) open by May. Tsai, a Taiwan native who worked for many years in the IT industry, will offer an international selection of looseleaf tea, available to sip in at one of 30 seats or to go for home brewing. She also plans on serving lattes using matcha, the concentrated green tea Japanese traditionally use for tea ceremonies. Food-wise, Cups & Chairs — the space was formerly a fabric store — will offer pastries, sandwiches, panini and soups. (Thanks to Meal Ticket tipster DH for the heads up.)

PhillyChitChat
Posted 2010-03-12 16:34:03
That's the cutest logo.

NOW OPEN: Cups & Chairs Tea Cafe :: Meal Ticket :: Philadelphia City Paper
Posted 2010-06-30 17:01:29
[...] Meal Ticket tipsters JC and DO for simul-sharing word of Cups & Chairs‘ opening with us. (We first mentioned it back in March.) The tea-centric café, located at intersection of Fifth, Passyunk and Monroe (701-03 S. Fifth St., [...] 
Posted by Drew Lazor @ 9:05 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
POSTED: Wednesday, November 11, 2009, 3:50 PM
Filed Under: Tea

Photo | Mark Stehle

Technically Philly co-founder/editor and CP contributor Brian James Kirk is a serious tea head, so Meal Ticket dispatched him to Premium Steap to check out what's new for the chillier months.

On a summer afternoon, one could likely amble into Premium Steap (118 S. 18th St., 215-568-2920) and find owner Peggy Stephens (right) perched alone at the store's cash register, patiently waiting to help customers. But recently, as a cold drizzle fell on a mid-autumn morning, Stephens had her hands full, unloading new drink accessories while simultaneously schooling a new employee about Steap's expansive selection of of 160 looseleaf varieties. "Christmas is crazy for me," Stephens told us, her neck wrapped with a red scarf to fend off the chill that comes in after the constantly swinging-open door.

Though her holiday gift lineup features contemporary cookware, Pantone mugs, travel containers and Indian drinkware, tea is Stephens' priority, and she finds that sales always get a boost when customers start jonesing for a warm cup to distract from miserable weather.� The store's "more cozy drinks" now dominate the shelves, she explained � ones that complement holiday desserts or make a brisk trip across town a little more bearable.

The store's black teas, which are typically harvested late in the season, are currently at their freshest. Steap's Indian black spiced chai has just enough bite from cinnamon, black pepper and cloves to coerce drinkers away from more conventional morning teas like Earl Grey or English Breakfast. The Chinese black Cozy Almond, our new favorite to wake up to, is flavored with cinnamon and safflower blossoms along slices of rich nut; it's delicious straight or dashed with milk.

Stephens also touted her Japanese Genmai-Matcha, a hearty green "sushi tea," with bits of rice garnished with a Japanese tea powder that give the finished product a deep, hearty flavor that's tasty alongside a spicy roll. The organic Yin Gou Chinese green, a great post-lunch pick-me-up, is smooth and never bitter. Then there's the selection of green and white teas flavored with real dried fruit: blueberry, strawberry, raspberry and everything between, all subtly touched with ginseng. Since they're naturally sweet on their own, there's no need for added sugar � and they make great iced teas, Stephens reminded us.

Walking away from the store, as the frigid rain drops turned to steam atop the warm plastic lid of our paper to-go cup, the mere thought of anything iced gave us the chills � but Stephens' collection of teas is doing its part to make winter seem a little shorter.

Posted by Brian James Kirk @ 3:50 PM  Permalink | Post a comment
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Founded in October 2008, Meal Ticket is a City Paper blog about food, drink and assorted other things that make you go mmm. We do recipes, interviews, restaurant news, commentary and much more. We don't do restaurant reviews herethose are handled in print, mostly by our critic (and Meal Ticket contributor) Adam Erace. Got a tip, question, thought or concern? Just want to say hello? Please shoot a note to caroline@citypaper.net.

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