[lit-ideas] Earl Grey Never Drank Earl Grey

  • From: Jlsperanza@xxxxxxx
  • To: lit-ideas@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
  • Date: Sat, 11 May 2013 13:04:28 -0400 (EDT)

From today's 

From today's "World Wide Words" (© Michael Quinion  2013 -- 
http://www.worldwidewords.org):

Earl Grey never drank Earl  Grey.

-- which McEvoy might find difficult to refute ("unless we  symbolise it," 
he might add, conspicuously). 

Quinion concludes his  piece:

"As always, there are loose ends. But the stories that connect  Earl Grey 
tea to a nineteenth-century aristocrat have been debunked. Earl Grey  never 
drank Earl Grey."

----

More in ps.

Cheers,
 
Speranza
 
---
 
Quinion writes:

"For the most part, etymology isn’t a flashy subject. It needs care and  
patience rather than academic brilliance and is rarely rewarded by moments of  
breathtaking insight. But at times a search for the provenance of a term 
turns  into an intriguing detective story with an unexpected dénouement.
In October  2012, the Oxford English Dictionary issued an appeal for 
information about the  term Earl Grey tea."
 
"This is a blend of black China teas flavoured with bergamot, an oil  
derived from a citrus fruit native to the Far East but widely grown in Italy.  
Various stories link it to the second Earl Grey, who was British prime 
minister  between 1830 and 1834 and largely responsible for the Great Reform 
Act of 
1832  as well as removing the monopoly of the East India Company on 
importing tea from  China. One legend says that the tea was a reward for his 
(or an 
envoy of his)  rescuing the son of a Chinese mandarin; another, that a 
Chinese diplomat gave  him a gift of it while he was prime minister. The 
website 
of the family home,  Howick Hall, says that it was specially blended by a 
Chinese mandarin to offset  the lime taste of the water from the local well 
and that Lady Grey used it when  she was entertaining in London. (A version 
of Earl Grey tea called Lady Grey tea  with a less pungent flavour, created 
in the early 1990s by the tea merchants  Twinings, is named after her.)
The etymological problem for the OED was that  the first example of the 
term Earl Grey tea it had on record was dated 1929,  though they knew of Earl 
Grey’s mixture from 1891."
 
"Various contributors progressively took the story back. An advert from  
about 1928 by Jacksons of Piccadilly claimed to have introduced it at the  
request of Earl Grey in 1836. A tale appeared in several versions in the decade 
 after 1891 claiming that Earl Grey’s mixture was so named because the earl 
had  introduced it to Her Majesty. But he had retired to Howick after 
leaving office,  aged 70, and may not even have met Queen Victoria, who 
ascended 
the throne in  1837. A further advertisement for Earl Grey’s mixture, in the 
Morning Post in  1884, announced that “this choice Tea can only be obtained 
of the Introducers  and Sole Proprietors, Charlton and Co” of Piccadilly."
 
"The story took a surprising twist when researchers on the Foods of England 
 site found that Charlton and Co had advertised a tea in 1867 as the rather 
 expensive “celebrated Grey mixture”, with no reference to any 
aristocratic  connection, though it did boast of its “most distinguished 
patronage”. 
Might the  business have added a noble association later on as a marketing 
ploy, one that  was to be copied by others? It could well have done. Victorian 
advertisers  weren’t renowned for their strict adherence to truth."

"The search for the name runs into the sand at this point. But it’s not  
the end of the story. The use of bergamot as a flavouring and scent long  
predates any connection with Earl Grey — for example, it was added to snuff  
early in the eighteenth century. But its early associations with tea are  
disreputable. A newspaper report in 1824 was ominously headed, “To render Tea 
at  
5s a Pound equal to Tea at 12s”. It explained."

"If we can discover any fine-flavoured substance, and add it to the tea  in 
a proper manner, so as to make it agree and harmonize with the original  
flavour, we shall be able to improve low-priced and flavourless teas, into a  
high-priced article of fine flavour. The flavouring substance found to agree 
 best with the original flavour of tea, is the oil of bergamot, by the 
proper  management of which you may produce from the cheapest teas the finest 
flavoured  Bloom, Hyson, Gunpowder, and Cowslip." Lancaster Gazette, 22 May 
1824.

"While this would better be described as adulteration, it has to be viewed  
against the background of the shocking “improvements” that were made to 
many  foodstuffs at the time, such as adding alum to bread to make it more 
fashionably  white and colouring sweets with poisonous compounds of copper and 
arsenic. Tea,  being expensive, was subject more than most to adulteration, 
including adding  Prussian blue to green tea or graphite to black to make 
them look better (facing  them was the trade term) or variously adding black 
lead, copper carbonate, lead  chromate and turmeric to used tea leaves to 
tart them up and sell them as fresh.  In this context, flavouring cheap tea 
with bergamot was a trivial offence,  though in 1837 an injunction was awarded 
against a London grocer to prevent it  selling its tea."

"Brocksopp and Co.’s Mowqua’s small-leaf gunpowder was so inferior a  tea, 
that deponents could not set any price upon it ... it was artificially  
scented, and appeared to have been drugged with bergamot in this country." The  
Bristol Mercury, 13 May 1837.

"It’s hardly likely that an aristocrat such as Earl Grey would have lent  
his name to a mixture that had such unsavoury undertones. The absence of any  
contemporary evidence of a link means that we have to look elsewhere for 
the  origin of the name. Perhaps the Grey mixture sold by Charlton and Co 
later in  the century was named after some other Grey? The Foods of England 
site 
 identified a candidate in William Grey & Co of Morpeth, which advertised 
in  1852 (it may be merely a coincidence that its shop was only about 25 
miles from  Howick Hall)."

"As always, there are loose ends. But the stories that connect Earl  Grey 
tea to a nineteenth-century aristocrat have been debunked. Earl Grey never  
drank Earl Grey."
 
 
 

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