
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 this slowly over the years. There are teas I once rushed to sample because of hype, reputation, or the promise of rarity. Some disappointed. Some were technically impressive, yet left no mark. Others were unremarkable, yet in a quiet way, they were exactly what I needed in that moment.
Tea does not owe you excitement. It does not guarantee revelation with every cup.
In many traditional practices, the value of tea lies not in variety or rarity, but in understanding what matters to you. A familiar oolong that you return to again and again can offer more satisfaction than a new, exotic leaf that demands attention and scrutiny.
Modern tea culture often conflates rarity with quality. A limited harvest is presumed better. A mountain-grown tea commands awe. But experience shows otherwise. The teas that endure in memory, the ones we savor without thought or anxiety, are often the modest ones. The everyday teas that sit quietly in the cabinet, waiting for no occasion.
Perhaps this is a lesson beyond tea.
Not everything new is better. Not every reputation is deserved. And not every opportunity requires engagement.
Tea reminds us to pay attention selectively. To focus on the cups that matter. To savor moments without chasing them relentlessly.
So the next time you are presented with a rare or highly praised tea, pause. Consider whether it truly deserves your attention. Perhaps the cup you are holding already is enough.
Because in the end, tea does not need your approval. You simply need to notice it.
With quiet regard,
N. P. Lim
Why We Secretly Judge Tea Shops by Their Music
I never thought much about music in tea shops, until I started noticing patterns. The tea is brewed, the cups are warm, and the aroma drifts through the room. But then the music starts, and suddenly, the entire experience changes. Some shops play classical or soft jazz. Conversations linger. Sips are slow. Even the tea…
The Best Everyday and Gift-Worthy Blends from Gryphon Tea Singapore
I have a small confession. For the longest time, I treated tea like a background character in my day. It was just the thing I gulped between meetings, barely tasting it. Then a friend handed me a proper cup one quiet afternoon, and I finally slowed down enough to notice the aroma, the warmth, the…
We Talk Too Much About Tea and Not Enough About Drinking It
Tea culture has become remarkably good at talking about tea. We discuss origins. Elevation. Harvest seasons. Processing methods. Water temperatures. Brewing vessels. There are endless conversations about tea. And yet I sometimes wonder whether we spend enough time simply drinking it. This may sound like an odd criticism coming from someone who enjoys learning about…
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The light in the late afternoon does something quiet to a room. It softens. It lingers on the rim of a porcelain cup in the elegant Tea Room, slides along the curve of a silver pot, and settles into the folds of a linen napkin without asking for attention. There is a stillness here, the…
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I used to think there would be a moment when my tea journey felt complete. A tea so good that I would stop searching. A tea that would make every other tea feel unnecessary. Years later, I can confidently say that moment has never arrived. And I’m starting to think that’s the point. Tea drinkers…
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I still remember the first time someone handed me a cup of Darjeeling First Flush, a prized form of black tea, and asked me, quite seriously, not to add milk. I almost laughed. Tea without milk felt like toast without butter. But I humored my friend, took a sip, and paused. The liquid was pale…
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One of the things I love most about Singapore is that we never really chose between kopi and tea. We kept both. Walk into almost any hawker centre or coffee shop and you’ll see it immediately. One person orders kopi-o. Another asks for teh-c. Someone else is drinking Chinese tea from a flask they brought…
The Tea We Keep Saving for Later
Many tea drinkers have a tea they are saving. A special oolong purchased during a memorable trip. A rare tea gifted by a friend. A tea that feels too valuable, too limited, or too meaningful to drink casually. So it waits. Days become weeks. Weeks become months. The tea remains carefully stored while more ordinary…
Earl Grey Tea Benefits: What Is Earl Grey Tea and Why Has It Endured for Centuries?
Introduction Few teas are as instantly recognisable as Earl Grey tea. Even among people who do not regularly drink tea, the distinctive citrus aroma of Earl Grey often feels familiar. It appears in tea shops, cafés, afternoon tea menus, and kitchen cupboards around the world, yet many people still ask the same question: what is…
Is Tea Acidic? Understanding Tea Acidity and What It Means for Tea Drinkers
One of the most common questions among both new and experienced tea drinkers is surprisingly simple: is tea acidic? The answer is yes, but the reality is far more nuanced than a simple yes or no. Most teas fall on the mildly acidic side of the pH scale, yet they are generally far less acidic…
