Top hat and monocle???fencerdenoctum wrote:On pretension- I drink tea wearing a top hat and monocle.
You!!!
Hello, my name is InTEAgo Montoya. You keeled my father. Prepare to die.
So true...(sigh)...the tea industry has a tendency to be rife with pretension. What's fun about my Adagio peeps is they tend to laugh at it all and just do their own thing.ABx wrote: I think it just depends on where your focus is. While I think a person could easily be pretentious about tea, and I've met some, it's more often a way of breaking away from the pretensions of everyday life and a tool to find common ground. If you were to be really showy and snobbish and controlling about the tea experience then it could easily turn into a pretentious affair, but if you're more focused on the social aspects then I wouldn't think so (of course that may be easy for me to say...).
Of course there will always be some that feel that it is from the outside, and some that will have associations with snobby Europeans with their pinkies in the air, but I don't know if there's much you can really do in those cases.
Perhaps I'm just lucky that my friends have thus far just been interested - they just have to put up with my obsessiveness.
Well the article might be pretentious but the restaurant is modest and delicious. Just like the cup of Ceylon Pettiagalla FOP I am drinking right now!scruffmcgruff wrote:I'm with you. Oy vey! Isn't that article's writing the same sort of pretentiousness we were trying to avoid in the first place? Those New Yorkers.
(To be fair, though, the article does leave me salivating!)