Coffee and Tea has
become an essential part of life and we grow up drinking either one of the other,
depending on our lifestyle or taste buds; some take regularly or occasionally
for refreshment and at the occasions of meetings and events, they becomes a
treat. I know some who don’t drink coffee or tea, thinking it’s not good for
health, but gulp bottles of soft drinks! There isn’t certain facts how much good or not
taking coffee or tea, but in my opinion there’s a limit for everything. I enjoy
both coffee and tea according to my desire at that moment, but my most favorite is coffee.
Coming to the
post, I just thought to share some of my memories related to Tea Urns (can) and
the vendors carrying it on their bicycles to make life out of selling tea or
coffee. Since my grandparents have done dairy business and owning a tea shop
then, I grown up watching their day-to-day activities but the Tea Urns are
seldom used by them. They make coffee or tea using the milk that kept heated in
a vessel directly on the stove and being a crowded residential area, theirs was
the only tea shop to open from early morning to night and they work hard to
keep up customers.
My initial
memory of Tea Urn was in 1991! During
the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi, the then Prime Minister of India, all the
shops were closed in Chennai or perhaps because of Bandh (a form of protest
used by political activists in India) to mourn his death. Since the bomb blasts
(in which he was killed) occurred close to Chennai (Sriperumbudur is 40km from
here), there was a situation of anxiety everywhere and I still remember how uproar
my grandfather’s house street was, where
the tea shop also lies, where people standing together here and there, and discussing
about the matters…
My grandparent’s
house is situated in one of the crowded or congested street in south Chennai
and getting in and out of it is an adventure and taking a car means stickers in
scratches. The people here don’t need a reason to engage in street fights and
it used to be an entertainment for the residents here, to come leaning on the
wall and watching the scene. So, in a situation like this, the turmoil has been
in its full swing related to the assassination. My grandparent’s does not only
run a tea shop, but also reared dozen of milch buffalos and couple of cows in
the backyard. So shutting down the tea shop means, lose of liters of milk.
To avoid the situation, they sold the milk in black (market) through
the side entrance of the house and the Tea Urn was filled and put on the street
side to deliver tea. I accompanied my
uncle while he took care of the Tea Urn, open and closing the tap filling the
little tumblers with tea. Every time I see a vendor pedaling with Tea Urn in
the streets, I remember that moment and my grandparent’s use on Tea Urn is
rarity and I have seen it only left ideal on the loft. Apart this, there was
also a ginger coffee vendor who later joined the neighborhood of my
grandparents.
He come from a very poor family and stayed at a rented hut, adjacent
to my grandparent’s house along with his wife and an infant. His only source of
income was selling ginger coffee in the Tea Urn carried on his only bicycle. Since
they rented hut at our neighbor’s friendly house, I used to go to their house
while playing around and have witnessed him filling the Tea Urn with ginger
coffee. But with my bad memory I couldn’t recollect the procedure he handled in
making the ginger coffee. (Couple of years back I happen to taste the ginger
coffee while visiting marina beach, from one of the Tea Urn vendors and it was
such hot and spicy to hurt my throat, and then I decided not to taste it
anymore.)
It was also a period where the plastic or paper cups weren’t prevailed;
so he used to take two small pails of water along with him, which used to hang
on both sides of his bicycle’s rear carrier. He also put hang a wire basket on
the handlebar with few dozens of steel tumblers, pressed one inside another,
and once the customers sipped off he wash away the tumblers with the pails of
water immediately, for another round of service. It was also interested to watch
him tying the Tea Urn in his bicycle carrier, making sure it doesn’t fall off
while pedaling on streets.
In early 20s, there was a bicycle vendor who used to visit my
uncle’s workshop regularly to supply tea and coffee to the employees. My uncle
runs a Maruti (car) workshop at the ground floor of our native house in Adyar
and while I am quite out of the school then, I used to watch his (bicycle
vendor’s) activates from our balcony. He used to put stand his bicycle in front
of the workshop, which means getting a good sight on his from the balcony and
unlike the ginger coffee vendor, who sold only ginger coffee, he was capable of
selling 4 in one (bicycle).
He was such an active young person, and his hands used to play while
he makes anything out of milk. With one Tea Urn (filled with milk) tied to his bicycle
carrier, he satisfies four kinds of taste buds with sufficient use of coffee
and ginger powders, hot teas brew and spice ingredient. He used to come hanging
two wire baskets on the handlebar, one had two vacuum flasks of hot milk and
teas brew and the other with three cylindrical boxes containing powders of
coffee, ginger and spice for making masala milk! It’s another great
entertainment for me, then, watching his series exchanges made between the
beverages according to the customer’s request.
If it is for coffee, he picks up a little plastic cup (from a packet
of series of cups that hang on the side of the Tea Urn) and drops a little
spoon of coffee power and fills it with milk by opening the Tea Urn tap. Before
he serves anybody, he make two long pours using another steel tumble he
separately handled for this purpose. And for making tea, he opens of the flask
and pours few mm of teas brew in the cup and makes another long pour after
filled with milk. He maintained this act for every other beverage.
Many a time I had taken coffee from him and those days the quality
of content used to be somehow fine… but these days they are just hot water Tea
Urns. Except hotels, restaurants and homes, coffee or tea has gone so bad in
taste and thickness at tea shops and bicycle vendors. Once, the tea shops at
countryside used to be excellent in beverage, with the use of direct cow or
buffalo milk, but now, they also seems well spoiled by making use of packet
milk. I really feel regret how well have we gone down in quality and quantity
compared to early days. Not only beverage, anything u takes lacks quality today.
P.S. Both the pictures were captured at Chennai Marina beach at
various moments, and what inspired me to write this post.
This is a very interesting writing. I like seeing the life by reading your words. I didn't know that milk was sold in India and it was amazing that it had to be sold out the side door of the business.
ReplyDeletewhat unique memories of your grandparents' business in times of trouble.
ReplyDeletei am coffee lover,can drink coffee all he time.. have so many good and bad memories associated with it
ReplyDeleteu have such innocent memories related with tea
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Wonderful coverage. This is a common site on beaches and Indian Railway
ReplyDeleteI have never tasted tea/coffee made out of fresh cow's milk. It's always been packet milk for us. My favorite is tea and I still like the tea offered in roadside shops, even though the quality offered has come down, because of the vada/samosa/bajji that I can have along with the tea. I just love that combination :)
ReplyDeleteDestination Infinity
Wonderful writings to share here Jeevan. We used to have bicycle vendors here as well, but I don't think they've been around for awhile. They should be though - it's more environmentally friendly and more efficient in big cities!
ReplyDeleteWhat lovely memories! Those tea-urn people are unique!
ReplyDeleteThose assassination days were indeed tense. Nice reading about the tea vendors of those days and now.
ReplyDeleteI hear a long sighing sound after all the memories of the olden days. Ginger is supposed to be really good for you and for a cold but I have never heard of ginger coffee. I do drink lots of ginger ale and tea in the heat too.
ReplyDeleteSometimes in the bigger cities in Canada you can spot a bicycle vendor selling ice cream. They play music to attract attention. But usually even the ice cream vendors now have small vans.