Sunday, June 24, 2012

Spring Tea & Garden Party, March 2012

Table Setting: March Spring Tea & Garden Party
There are few hours in life more agreeable than the hour dedicated to the ceremony known as afternoon tea.  ~Henry James, The Portrait of a Lady

 All right, dear Reader.  I know this post is abominably late. But, seeing as I have all the lovely photo evidence and it looks like we'll be hosting several more delightful tea parties this year, I thought it best to show you the impetus for our tea party revival.

Me (left) and H with tea accompaniments.

Looking back on it now, it seems inevitable that we (the lovely Ms. H & I) would begin throwing the kind of ladies' teas we've read about in books but never actually attended ourselves.  After all, who throws tea parties these days?  I don't know a woman (of any age) who's been to one (let alone, knows how to throw one).  And that is simply unacceptable.

 For me, getting here began with tea cup collecting in 2005.  Along the way, other seemingly disparate parts of my life began to converge: the life-long influence of consummate entertainers Aunt & Aunt Chef; many years of merchandising retail housewares; a whole lotta Candlewick luncheon trays (something else I've been collecting); way too many Jane Austen movies and an ever-evolving sense of culinary adventure.  Whisk all those things together and what do you get?  A single thirty-something girl just itchin' to show her friends a good time by throwing a classic tea party. 

I imagine my friend, H, came to this point by a similar route (with even more Jane Austen movies under her belt). 

Whatever the path, we found ourselves quite bored this past February and in need of something to look forward to.  I was cleaning and organizing everything I own, which included unpacking some of my lovely tea sets still in boxes from my last move.  Long story short, I decided to throw a combination tea & garden party for one of my bible study groups and H had to be on the guest list.  

Had a ball making the invitations...they doubled as place card holders.

I ordered a special Teatime Bliss issue of Victoria magazine (my all-time favorite) and we ooh & ahhed over the clever recipes.

We incorporated some tea party staples with our own go-to show-stoppers to create a delectable menu: a spring greens salad w/homemade garlic vinaigrette; herbed cheddar scones w/ fresh chive or oregano butters; chevre-stuffed dates wrapped in basil & prosciutto; Parmesan carrot phyllo bites; cranberry chicken salad tea sandwiches with candied pecans (we cut-out bread slices in the shape of flowers and butterflies); assorted petit fours; artisan ribbon candy and the big finale: mango and blackberry Cabernet sorbets garnished with edible flowers.  WOW!

Mango & Blackberry Cabernet Sorbets with edible flowers

But, what is a tea party without fabulous teas?  H is the Queen of Tea, so I left the selection up to her.  She served a robust English Breakfast Tea with the salad and  hors d'oeuvres course and a creamy Madagascar Vanilla Red Rooibos Tea for our main course and with dessert. A-mazing!

Pinkies Up!

Sooooo, Reader, this is where I admit that all the time we spent planning and preparing the tea menu actually pales in comparison to the amount of time I spent setting the table.  The wonderful thing, is that after several years of working at Pier 1 and shopping discount stores and flea markets, I had plenty of spring serve-ware and napkins to choose from.  I also have enough tea cups to do several color schemes (she admits sheepishly).  I chose the following silver, green and pink floral theme to compliment a variety of tea cup patterns:

  
Homemade Oregano Butter
Wheat Grass Centerpiece

The wheat grass centerpiece was an idea I'd seen done in magazines and had been dying to try myself.  Voila!  In March, they became available through my employer and I was able to order an inexpensive flat.  What a lush, springy addition to our party!  

But, just in case I couldn't get into enough decorating trouble on my own, Aunt offered us a few more necessary accessories.  Fortunately, she also instructed me in what they were and how to use them properly (it's always better when you don't look like you're clueless--especially when you are).  Note: the best thing about nobody really having tea parties anymore is that no one will know if you aren't doing it exactly right.

Remember the tea kettle - it is always up to its neck in hot water, yet it still sings!  ~Author Unknown    

      
 So, after weeks of planning, the day of our Spring Tea & Garden Party finally dawned and our guests arrived ready to live it up!


The Lovely Laura Comes to Tea


I have to admit, this was the prettiest table I'd set to date.  So, it was extra delightful to show each of my guests into the dining room and hear them squeal with the same girlish joy I was experiencing.  We set the mood with a fabulous French/Early 20th Century Jazz playlist and Citrus & Prosecco Spritzers.  Then the party began in earnest!


The girls had a wonderful time--yay!!!

Each cup of tea represents an imaginary voyage.  ~Catherine Douzel

Thus began what I've come to call the Year of Tea Parties.  Before the gals had even left, H and I were hatching plans for our next tea soiree (and for the one after that).  


The funny thing is, I feel like God made me for stuff like this.  I love to host parties--and spoil my guests rotten!  I think He wants me to use these gifts of hospitality for fellowship and for caring for the women in my life.  Just because I don't have a husband (yet), doesn't mean I should fore go the hostess part of who I am as a Godly woman.  He's blessed me with ample resources and it just seems silly to let them collect dust when they could be used to bring happy memories to the people I encounter. So, I guess you could call this...a tea ministry...what a good idea...

 The mere chink of cups and saucers tunes the mind to happy repose.  ~George Gissing, The Private Papers of Henry Ryecroft

Tea quotes courtesy of The Quote Garden.

    

5 comments:

  1. Wow! Wow! Wow! I've never seen such a pretty table. And what a great idea. Love your heart and your desire to lavish your friends with love. Keep up the great work!

    Katie D (fellow tea lover... Hint, hint!)

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    1. Lol, thanks Katie! Very glad you like it. Of course, as a fellow tea lover, you must come over for tea sometime...

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  2. I love the idea of a tea ministry! Maybe you could go a little farther and have someone watch the kids and throw one for the single mother's of the church! Or some other deserving ladies that never get to dress up.

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    1. Oooooo, good ideas, Brown. I am all about any reason to throw a tea party these days.

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  3. Tanya, the tea parties look like soooo much fun! I remember a tea party you hosted in Maine with snow up to the windows, but we festive and eager for spring! I love that you're taking on a year of tea parties. Love you!

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