Svenskt Tenn, Afternoon Tea, Stockholm

Svenskt Tenn is more than just a beautiful design shop. Set up in 1924 by Estrid Ericson the shop sells everything from fabric to furniture, trinkets and tassels. The prints, the most famous of which resulted from collaborations with the Austrian designer Josef Frank, are bright and bold, colourful and charming. The products are arranged stylishly in the large shop to create a psychedelic and fun venue. Upstairs this iconic Swedish design house offers the prettiest afternoon tea in the city. You sit in picturesque surroundings and are treated to a tiered stand of delights.

The tea salon is subtle and quaint compared to the vibrancy and energy in the rest of the shop. When we arrived at two on Sunday afternoon, the petite room was full of girls conversing and friends catching up… sophisticated but sensible. Founder Estrid Ericson drank her favourite tea twice a day (two and a half cups in the morning and two and a half cups with lunch) so it seems fitting that a tea salon has opened here in her honour.

It is easy to relax at Svenskt Tenn,  we sat down and our waitress brought fresh apple juice immediately to quench our thirst. It was delicious tea, very refined and light, but different and special tasting too. My date doesn’t normally drink tea and even he admitted to enjoying this variety. The Svenskt Tenn tea was our favourite, a lovely, mellow taste.

Afternoon tea can be a rather dry affair (after sitting around all morning) and usually far too much is offered… endless heavy scones and sticky cakes. Svenskt Tenn provides the opposite: a delicate, dainty and modest selection. Attractive squares of Swedish rye bread were adorned with smoked salmon, cream cheese and marinated fennel, hot-out-the-oven small scones with jam and butter and petit fours. It was all delicious, particularly the homemade scones!

Afternoon tea is priced at 230kr per person (approximately £20). You receive all the food I have mentioned and a pot of tea. Svenskt Tenn designs and prints are available to buy in Libertys, though for the real experience I would recommend looking round the Stockholm store followed by their gorgeous afternoon tea, memorable for taste and design.

Visit the Svenskt Tenn website here for more information.

Thanks to visitstockholm.com follow them on twitter for news and information, @visitswedenuk

THOROUGHLY MODERN MISS: High tea at the Amstel Hotel Intercontinental, Amsterdam

When we arrived in Amsterdam, the weather was unexpectedly lovely – hot and sunny without a cloud in the sky. So when we got off our bicycles at the Amstel Hotel (Amsterdam’s Intercontinental) for afternoon tea, we decided we’d quite like to take advantage of the sunshine we’d been missing so much in England. They sat us at a table right by the huge French windows, which opened onto the canal and we were bathed in sunlight. There probably isn’t a better way to experience afternoon tea.

We were served 4 different types of tea that afternoon; a Darjeeling, a Lung Ching, an Oolong Fancy and a China Jasmin Chung Hao. Each tea is explained in the menu; the Darjeeling being ‘the champagne of tea’; the Lung Ching a traditional Chinese green tea with a slightly bitter finish; the Oolong Fancy, a half fermented tea from Taiwan and the China Jamin Chung Hao a delicate jasmine tea that was traditionally reserved for the Imperial Court of China.

We started with two traditional Dutch sweets – a Dutch Kringle, which is a sweet, sugary puff pastry biscuit and a Hazelino with a crème of mocha, which was almost like a cross between a meringue and a macaroon, with a creamy mocha filling.

We moved on to a delicious selection of sandwiches, cakes, salads and tiny sweet treats. There was the interesting looking ‘pain surprise’ which was a hollow loaf of bread containing sandwiches filled with salmon, egg and watercress, smoked chicken and cucumber salad. Alongside this was a cake stand with a number of tempting afternoon tea snacks. On the top layer were two small salads; seared tuna for me and mozzarella for Milly. The salad was filled with ripe avocado, tomato and romaine lettuce and was crunchy and fresh. Alongside this was a ‘Tramezzinno’ with roast beef and mustard mayonnaise. We also had homemade scones, chocolate and vanilla, served with clotted cream, preserves and lemon curd. The chocolate scones were a little stodgy, but the vanilla scones were very light and served warm.

On the bottom two layers of the cake stand were some very enticing looking treats. A bon bon of Tia Maria and Nougatine, which was rather like an alcoholic Ferrero Roche; a ‘brownie lolly’- a round brownie served on the end of a little stick, which was a genius idea, since it prevented you from getting your fingers covered in the sticky, oozing chocolate. An orange cremeux on a sable with almond – a delicate orange cream with a very thin, crunchy, almond biscuit base, and a cupcake with vanilla mousse and fresh red berries. The cupcake was perfect; light in texture, whilst the berries cut through the sweet vanilla cream and gave it a good tartness.

The last thing we ate was the ‘Crème bavarois of strawberries with an infusion of roses’. This was almost like a mini cake with a creamy, strawberry topping and strawberry sauce, laced with a rose flavour. It was very sweet, perhaps overly sweet, but tasty.

Our experience at the Amstel was really enjoyable, helped along by the opulent surroundings and blazing sunshine, but the food and tea spoke for itself; a very lovely way to spend a few hours in the afternoon.

More information here.

Written by a Thoroughly Modern Miss, Jessica Hill.