
For the longest time, I treated my favorite teas like they needed a reason.
I would buy something beautiful, maybe a delicate oolong or a tea that smelled faintly floral the moment I opened the tin, then immediately start rationing it in my head. I’ll save this for guests. For weekends. For days that feel important enough.
Most of the time, those days never came.
So the tea stayed untouched while I continued drinking the ordinary ones instead. Somehow, using the “good tea” on a random Tuesday evening felt wasteful, even when that was exactly the kind of day that probably needed it most.
I think a lot of us do this with small comforts. We turn them into rewards instead of allowing them to be part of everyday life.
At some point, I stopped waiting.
Now I make the tea I actually want, even if the day itself feels completely unremarkable. Sometimes especially then. There’s something quietly comforting about choosing a little care for yourself without needing to justify it first.
And honestly, tea tastes different when you stop treating it like it belongs to some future version of your life.
It becomes less about occasion and more about presence. A slow morning before work. Ten quiet minutes after dinner. Rain against the window while the kettle boils in the background.
None of those moments are dramatic. But maybe that’s the point.
Maybe good tea was never meant to be saved for special occasions. Maybe it’s meant to make ordinary days feel slightly softer.
The Tea That Keeps Me Coming Back
I have a tea I return to more than any other. It is not rare. It is not expensive. In fact, most people would probably pass it by without a second thought. And yet, somehow, it has become a quiet companion over the years. I first drank it on a rainy afternoon. I had been…
Tie Guan Yin: The Iron Goddess of Chinese Oolong Tea
Tie Guan Yin, also known as Iron Goddess or Iron Goddess Oolong, is a celebrated Chinese oolong tea originating from Anxi County in Fujian Province, China. This tea from Anxi Fujian holds a special place among other teas due to its unique aroma, flavour, and rich cultural story. It is made from the tea plant…
Why Tea Shops Might Be the Last Quiet Places We Have
There is a growing habit in Singapore that I find both comforting and slightly unsettling. People are working everywhere now. Cafés, co-working spaces, neighborhood bakeries, even small corner shops. A laptop seems to turn any table into an office. And in many ways, this flexibility is impressive. It reflects how life has adapted to work,…
Why Not Every Tea Deserves Your Attention
Tea culture encourages curiosity. There are endless varieties, origins, and rituals to explore. Some teas are rare, some are aged, some are celebrated in distant mountains. The temptation is to try them all, to chase novelty in the hope that every cup will surprise you. But not every tea deserves your attention. I have learned…
Sipping Serenity: Where to Enjoy Chamomile Tea Singapore in the City
Singapore moves quickly. The trains run on time, the workdays stretch long, and the humidity outside rarely lets anyone slow down by choice. Yet within this busy rhythm, a quiet counter-current persists. People look for small pockets of stillness, and increasingly, they find one in a warm cup of chamomile tea. There is something fitting…
Why Some Teas Taste Better When Shared
I’ve always found that tea, more than most drinks, seems to gain something when shared. A cup alone can be comforting, quiet, even meditative. But a cup shared with someone else, whether a friend, a family member, or a stranger in a small tea house, somehow becomes richer, fuller, more alive. It’s not just the…
The Timeless Charm of Tea Culture Through English Breakfast Singapore
There is a small ritual I return to on the warmest Singapore afternoons. The city outside shimmers with heat, the air conditioning hums softly, and I reach for a familiar tin of English Breakfast tea. The kettle clicks, steam rises, and within a minute or two the kitchen fills with a warm, malty aroma that…
The Tea That Reminds Me of Home
I still remember the first cup of tea I drank after returning from a long trip. It was nothing remarkable, a simple black tea brewed in my kitchen but it tasted different from any cup I had drunk abroad. It wasn’t the leaves themselves. It wasn’t the water or the pot. It was the familiarity…
A Tea Lover’s Honest Review of Gryphon Tea Company Singapore
There is a particular hush that settles over my kitchen on a weeknight, after the dishes are done and the day finally loosens its grip. That is when I open a new box of tea from Gryphon Tea Company Singapore. Last week, the box belonged to Gryphon Singapore, and the moment I lifted the lid,…
Why Tea Can Teach Us About Mindful Consumption
I’ve been thinking a lot about waste lately. Not just the kind we notice-the piles of packaging, leftover food, discarded cups-but the quiet, everyday kind: the tea leaves left unused, the leaves steeped once and thrown away, the water poured down because the cup is “not perfect.” Tea has a way of making you notice…
