Every month or so, the state department receives a newsletter, and a part of this newsletter is essays submitted by NSLI-Y students that are on a gap year, aka us.
SO here is mine, I thought it would be nice to share it with you guys. Excuse the poor writing, I wrote it in about an hour since I forgot to send it in the night before.
SO here is mine, I thought it would be nice to share it with you guys. Excuse the poor writing, I wrote it in about an hour since I forgot to send it in the night before.
Tea time in Morocco
When I get back to the
United States, I will be immune to caffeine. I will be immune to the caffeine
pills they sell in Walgreens, a venti Starbucks black coffee, and even to the
Thai tea boba I can get two blocks away from my house. These things used to keep
me up until the wee hours of the morning, if consumed after three pm. You may
be wondering why I will be immune to caffeine. No, a caffeine filled spider
didn't bite me and make my blood content solely caffeine, it's the Moroccan
mint tea. I have yet to go one day without drinking this tea. I have about four
cups in the morning (keep in mind these cups are small, almost shot sized), two
cups during our mid morning snack at school, and then a few cups during the
afternoon, the amount depending on whether I venture into Jamaa el Fna (the
main market in Marrakech) and whether I go visit my friend Youssef the
shopkeeper. In short, I consume A LOT of tea during a regular day. And I can
slowly feel myself becoming immune to caffeine, which will prove to be problematic
in college.
In Moroccan culture, it
is customary to offer a guest tea when they visit your house or shop. I'm not
complaining, in fact I adore Moroccan tea and tea time. Tea time in Morocco is
a time in which Moroccans can cool off after a hard day, they can sit around
and converse with friends or family, among the many things they do during tea
time. If a shopkeeper in the souk invites you in for tea, you know that you
have a friend in the souk business now. In Jamaa el Fna, you will often find yourself
walking behind a man carrying buckets filled with a brred (Moroccan tea pot)
and tea glasses. This mans job is to give tea to the various shopkeepers that
want tea at that time. Around five pm is ideal tea time for Moroccans. At this
time, you'll find shopkeepers sitting and drinking tea, and cab drivers will be
very reluctant to give you a ride anywhere because they are on their tea break.
I have made the mistake of interrupting a cab driver during his tea/cigarette
break, and it ended with him taking the extremely long way to my house. I ended
up paying an extra five dirhams, which may not seem like much but to a student,
five dirhams is the difference between eating out or eating at home.
The Moroccan way of
preparing tea is also quite different from how westerns prepare tea. First off,
it is very sweet. My host mom prepares tea with a lot of sugar, about three
sticks of it. She brews the looseleaf Chinese tea first, and then adds a lot of
mint and sugar. She then pours two glasses of tea, only to pour them back into
the brred, in order to mix the sugar that might have settled into the tea.
Finally, the tea is ready to serve. Moroccans don't simply pour their tea in a
simple way; there is an art to it. Moroccans pour tea starting close to the cup,
and slowly move the brred higher and higher up, farther away from the cup. You,
however, must not fill the cup all the way because the cups are made of glass,
therefore they are scalding. Always leave some room for the tea drinker to hold
his cup. Watching my host mom pour the tea is always a treat, since she has
become an expert at it. The first time I drank tea, she informed me that the
foam at the top is a way of telling whether the tea is good or not. The more
bubbles/foam there is, the higher the quality of the tea is. Moroccan mint tea
can also be mixed with Louiza, a lemon verbena tea. I personally prefer the
straight mint tea to the louiza, but to each their own.
Now I know that your
mouth must be watering to taste this amazing Moroccan tea. You can of course
try to make it (although unless you have a Moroccan teaching you, I doubt it
will be as good as it is here in Morocco) or you could visit Morocco, try the
tea and discover that Morocco has much more to offer than just tea! Since the
tea is only the tip, you can surely imagine all the other wonderful things
Morocco has to offer.
No comments:
Post a Comment