Towns named Tea: a cozy couple

A search for towns named Tea turned up only two: one in Missouri and the other in South Dakota. The first is just a cluster of houses on Tea Road, but Tea, South Dakota has a history dating back to the 1800s and an annual celebration of Tea Days. If you’re a tea drinker, cozy up to this bit of Americana from our heartland.

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Perry LuckettComment
Towns named coffee: cozy U.S. locales

Towns named “Coffee” in the U.S. are limited to two cozy little burgs, but three others use the word in their names as well. Some of these coffee places are just crossroads or scattered homes along a state highway, but others have cool origin stories. Why a blog post on this subject? Well, we’re coffee maniacs, so just having the word “coffee” in a town name is enough to set us off.

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Perry LuckettComment
Update on arabica coffee problems: cozying up to solutions

Increasing demand for high-quality arabica coffee could be too much, too soon for this disease- and climate-threatened variety. Experts predict production will have to be at least 1 million tons higher by 2028. Meanwhile, leaf rust, pests, and hotter temperatures in arabica growing regions have put the squeeze on yields around the world.

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Perry LuckettComment
Tea in teapot or glass: There’s a cozy day for that

As a popular alternative to soft drinks in the United States, iced tea makes up about 85% of all tea consumed. That’s probably why tea drinkers celebrate a national iced tea day and month in June each year. But hot tea holds its own in other countries, especially the United Kingdom, and no fewer than eight celebratory occasions honor this esteemed beverage around the world

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Perry LuckettComment
Coffee substitutes: Can you cozy up to them?

Have you heard of “coffee substitutes”? I don’t mean separate alternatives, such as matcha or kombucha, which don’t try to imitate coffee’s color and flavor. Here I’m talking about “coffee” made with chicory or dandelion roots—often without caffeine—that are intended to imitate coffee.

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Perry LuckettComment
How war has influenced coffee drinking

War has unfortunately been a part of world history for thousands of years, and we see its influence every day in American culture. Not surprising, then, that it also has influenced the history of coffee drinking and (sometimes) how people must adapt when coffee is scarce.

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Perry LuckettComment