good morning.
a fine way to start the morning, and the week, is to break open a new box of tea and brew a pot. T2 have a shiny new boutique beneath the old gowings building in the city — perfect timing, really, for i was in the market for a new breakfast tea.
in the shop, there is english breakfast tea of course, and irish. but there is also sydney breakfast (scented with bergamot) and melbourne (vanilla). i was curious about the indian breakfast tea, and asked enough questions (fewer than you’d think necessary) that the countergirl packed a little sample — “enough for a small pot,” she said — in a baggie for me to take away. i love that!
in the end i came away with the morning tea, a hearty blend of broken leaf tea, according to the spiel on the box. and it’s true; it’s the kind of robust tea that tastes of the bush from which it was plucked.
it was the perfect foil for a wedge of coconut brioche, a light and chewy bun in a sturdy helmet of sugary desiccated coconut — reminiscent of something from a chinatown bakery — which i had procured on yesterday’s excursion to petersham.
we don’t really do mother’s day, but y’know, any excuse to have cake… so two mums and two kids and a sister and a brother descended upon honeymoon patisserie for second breakfast. i made it through the wall of people at the counter, only to be confronted with a second, more impressive obstacle: what to choose.
there were slices of a brown slab cake with pink icing and silver dragees, three layers sandwiched with cream and custard. i resisted. there were custard tarts in three sizes, and i had been thinking about them all morning, and yet… i sort of wanted bacon and eggs, so i picked their opposite: a rather ostentatious caramel tart. and a jam donut. and, because i don’t like playing favourites, the coconut brioche to go,
the donut was excellent. dense and chewy with a generous smear of sugary red jam. it wasn’t hot, but that was part of its charm. i should’ve gotten the big one. should’ve maybe not gotten the caramel tart, because after i ate that, i felt somewhat unbalanced. (it must be said that the caramel was lovely and soft, and very compelling. it compelled me to eat its entire self after all.)
afterwards, we ran around the park, and worked up an appetite for baked beans on buttered toast. normalcy returned.
6 Comments
god, i love a good jam donut, but the brown slab cake sounds just amazing looking! icing and custard and sparkle on top. wow!
I adore T2. Their china jasmine teabags smell like real jasmine and the super pricey buddha’s tears are ambrosial! I have to drink a lot of green tea to counteract all those sugary cakes…
deb: that’s icing and custard and cream, in a separate layer of its own. yes, a very fine old skool cake. but i was afraid the shopgirl would judge me. 😛
belle: good to know! i did smell the jasmin tea leaves, and buddha’s tears as well, and was quite ready to buy them… until i saw the price tag. one for the birthday wishlist, i think! or a flush, frivolous moment. 😉
i know that feeling … maybe next time we can go together. strength in numbers! hahaha 😀
Coconut brioche and Indian tea. YUM! I have the T2 lemongrass and ginger when I want to feel refreshed, and years ago bought a wonderful rose tea. It was like liquid Turkish delight, and I just remember feeling flush with pink and all womanly when I’d drink it. Will have to get some again. Intriguing that Melbourne breakfast tea is vanilla – I wonder how they swung that one.
deb: let’s! 🙂
momo! hi! fancy seeing you here. the rose tea sounds very promising — i shall look out for it. i’m down to the last couple of spoons of a very precious bag of muji rose-pu erh tea — rosey and smoky all at once.
i must admit, i was somewhat underwhelmed by the indian breakfast tea, which i finally tried this morning. it’s a blend of assam and darjeeling, but with rather more darjeeling and rather less assam than i’d like… a bit mild.
what flavour do you reckon sums up melbourne?