Tools for writing: A nice cup of tea
Samuel Johnson, the ‘harmless drudge’ who produced the first English dictionary, drank a lot of tea. I’ve seen his teapot in my old college in Oxford - it’s huge! Johnson once said ‘no man but a blockhead writes, except for money.’ My hero.
George Orwell drank a lot of tea too. In fact he wrote an article about brewing and pouring the perfect cup. Although some of his findings are still passionately disputed as I learned when I interviewed the owner the Tea and Coffee Museum a few years ago. I put sugar in my tea, contravening rule 11. You rebel, Stibbe.
Anyhow, it’s clear that there’s a strong correlation between tea-drinking and good writing so I drink pints of it every day.
My favourite blend is (ironically) Breakfast Americana from MightyLeaf. It comes in a kind of silky teabag which is very satisfying to behold and to use. It has a slightly sweet flavour, like a 10% Earl Grey taste, but no bitter aftertaste and it works well with milk, unlike Earl Grey. Brewed for four minutes it’s strong enough to wake me up.
I’m also partial to Jungpana Darjeeling from Fortnum and Mason and loose-leaf Jasmine tea (when there’s no milk). I use disposable Teeli filter bags from Germany to make single cups of tea with leaves. Making a whole pot and then pouring it through a strainer is just too much business for one cup of tea. Another strike against me from Orwell’s perspective but he didn’t have access to modern technology.
Why drinking tea helps me write:
- The pause to boil the water and make the tea - about 5-10 minutes - gives my brain a chance to recharge and work on problems.
- It’s a reward after a hard sprint through the paragraphs.
- There’s a bit of that Zen thing about the ceremony of making tea. Pouring the water, selecting a mug etc. Always the same, always different.
- Sipping the tea for ten minutes after I’ve made it gives me little micro-breaks while I’m writing it.
- Caffeine. Coffee makes me nervous and, eventually, dead sleepy. Tea just keeps on going like a Duracell battery. (Although stronger coffee might work - an old colleague of mine made coffee by pouring filter coffee from the machine over five heaped teaspoons of instant coffee. I don’t think he ever slept.)
- My mug selection reminds me why I’m doing it. I have one with a screenshot of the ‘Hack’ on it, a Microsoft ‘Geek’ mug, two NASA mugs, a lovely Dutch teacup, a Cirrus mug and a matched pair of half-pint mugs which I share with my wife.
Sorry this is such a long post. I meant to write a shorter one but I was interrupted by the man from Porlock with a box of groceries and got distracted. I must go and make myself some more tea.
Technorati Tags: tea, Zen, coffee, mugs, Samuel Johnson, George Orwell, writing, caffeine


Robert Hruzek wrote:
Matthew, Um… you DO know that tea has more caffeine than coffee, don’t you?
-an American hooked on tea
Posted on 18-Aug-06 at 11:13 am | Permalink
Doug wrote:
Matthew:
The post was just the right length. I found myself relaxing while reading your post….tension leaving…imagining the boil, the brew, and first sip. I’m big into self-hypnosis and can very easily enter the moment…good work chap.
Posted on 18-Aug-06 at 1:49 pm | Permalink
Andrew wrote:
Hmm… maybe I’ll have to switch. Tea-focused equivalents of Starbuck’s seem to be popping up everywhere these days too, so the switch shouldn’t be too tough.
Oh BTW, Johnson didn’t write the *first* English dictionary… others had been written more than 100 years earlier. Please excuse my pedantry!
Posted on 18-Aug-06 at 8:51 pm | Permalink
Phil, TDC Design wrote:
“Coffee makes me nervous and, eventually, dead sleepy. ”
This has always been the effect coffee has on me as well, although I drink it anyhow. An old friend of mine works for a coffee company in Kansas City and I recently went through my first 2 lb bag of what has to be the best coffee I have ever had in my life (another 2 lbs on the way). This coffee has none of the adverse effects you mention. I really think it makes me smarter, too (need all the help I can get). I’ve ordered an extra pound for a friend of mine, so we’ll see if it’s just me.
Posted on 21-Aug-06 at 1:12 pm | Permalink
Andrew wrote:
…and now this from the BBC:
Tea ‘healthier’ drink than water.
Posted on 24-Aug-06 at 1:14 pm | Permalink
Bad Language / Tea ‘healthier’ than drinking water wrote:
[...] I’ve always been a big fan of tea-drinking. It is a necessary part of my work and I recommend it to any budding writer. (See Tools for writing: A nice cup of tea.) [...]
Posted on 05-Mar-08 at 6:56 am | Permalink
Janet Swisher wrote:
Are you sure it isn’t really all about the biscuits?
Posted on 20-Mar-08 at 7:41 pm | Permalink
Bad Language / How to cut your power consumption by 40% wrote:
[...] behaviour. I’m trying not to overfill the kettle. I love tea (see Tools for writing: a nice cup of tea) and I hate limescale. So I boil the kettle with fresh water every time. Using a water filter means [...]
Posted on 05-May-08 at 8:41 am | Permalink
Bad Language / How to make money writing for the web wrote:
[...] Work hard. Get up early. Work late. Concentrate. Drink tea. [...]
Posted on 13-May-08 at 1:41 pm | Permalink