
This is not an argument about preference.
It is a question about naming.
Milk tea is everywhere now. It travels in oversized cups, sealed with plastic film. It arrives layered with foam, syrup, pearls, jelly, whipped cream. It is photographed before it is tasted. It is queued for. It is branded.
It is loved.
But it is not tea in the way tea has long been understood.
Tea, at its core, is leaf and water.
It is an interaction between temperature, timing, and attention. It asks for patience. It changes subtly between infusions. It rewards stillness. The leaf is central. Everything else is secondary.
Milk tea shifts that hierarchy.
Sugar becomes dominant. Texture becomes spectacle. Toppings become personality. The leaf recedes into background function, present but no longer leading. The drink becomes assembled rather than brewed.
There is nothing wrong with sweetness. There is nothing wrong with invention. Culinary cultures evolve. New forms emerge.
But not every derivative needs to inherit the original name without examination.
When tea becomes a carrier for syrup and starch, it moves away from ritual and toward product. It prioritises customization over contemplation. The experience becomes about choice and volume rather than infusion and restraint.
The distinction matters.
Historically, tea carried structure. Whether in a Japanese tea room or a Chinese Gongfu gathering, the focus remained on the leaf. Milk, when added in certain traditions, supported the tea. It did not eclipse it.
Modern milk tea often reverses this balance.
The flavour of tea is frequently muted to accommodate sugar. Ice dilutes what remains. The drink is consumed quickly, through a wide straw, designed for speed rather than aroma.
Tea was never meant to be rushed.
This is not nostalgia. It is clarification.
Milk tea is a beverage inspired by tea. It borrows its name, its colour, its base. But culturally and experientially, it operates differently. It belongs to convenience, to customization, to movement.
Tea belongs to pause.
Both can exist. Both can be enjoyed. But they are not interchangeable.
When everything is called tea, the meaning of tea thins.
And perhaps the quiet leaf deserves its own space again.
With quiet regard,
N. P. Lim
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