The term
‘Afternoon Tea’ conjures up pictures of Edwardian ladies eating dainty,
wafer-thin cucumber sandwiches and bite-sized, melt-in-the-mouth scones, served
on delicate floral china in the drawing room.
Even when I
was a child (long after the Edwardian era) ‘tea’ was still a meal we had,
especially on a Sunday. Then it consisted of bread and butter with tinned tuna
and tomatoes, followed by Hales Lime Layer Cake (whatever happened to that) for
example.
Now it
seems that ‘Afternoon Tea’ is well and truly back on the menu at many
Supermarket Cafés, so why not give one a try?
Morrison’s
Afternoon Tea –
definitely the best value, £2.05 - £2.59, price has varied between branches I have visited lately. For this you get sandwiches filled with cheese/ham/egg or whatever is
available, a cream-filled scone or egg custard tart (sometimes 2) and a pot of
tea, so great value whatever you pay. I love the fact that sandwiches come with
this one – it doubles as a light lunch.
Sainsbury’s
Cream Tea, £2.55 -
£2.75. Consists of a fruit scone, pot of clotted cream, mini jar of jam and a
pot of tea (£2.55) or cup of coffee (£2.75). I seemed to have more cream and
jam than I needed, so took the rest of the (yummy Taste The Difference
strawberry) jam home, bit tricky to do this with the cream though. Nice this
gives you the choice of tea or coffee.
Tesco’s Cream Tea, £3. The poorest value,
which is unusual for Tesco. The
standard pot of tea, fruit scone, clotted cream and a pot of jam, which is
quite ordinary, but charged at a higher price than the others.
One point
that I would like to make about all these teas though is that they are served with fruit scones, whereas I would
prefer a traditional Devon (plain) scone – as would my husband who has a
violent dislike of sultanas and currants.
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