![]() ![]() (51) That has to be the traditional cream tea- a giant home-made scone, caked with clotted cream and jam,(/scone) and all washed down with a good cuppa. (50) That has to be the traditional cream tea- a giant home-made scone, caked with clotted cream and jam, and all washed down with a good cuppa. (49) That has to be the traditional cream tea- a giant home-made scone, caked with clotted cream and jam, and all washed down with a good cuppa. (48) That has to be the traditional cream tea- a giant home-made scone, caked with clotted cream and jam, and all washed down with a good cuppa. (47) Yes, if you wanted a cuppa on a train in the old days it came with a mini tea set assembled, if I remember correctly, on a plywood tray. Did your life pass before your eyes - 'Cuppa tea, cuppa tea. (46) Spike (to Giles) : Oh, poor Watcher. (45) Why, I still have a long workout in my net every morning even before our first cuppa ginseng. (44) The breakfast used is not of the ruff-core variety, it's employed subtly throughout and will enliven your regular cuppa. (43) The breakfast used is not of the ruff-core variety, it's employed subtly throughout and will enliven your regular cuppa. (42) These cups are really cute, so you can make a pretty good cuppa have only been using them two months. (41) Why, I still have a long workout in my net every morning even before our first cuppa ginseng. (40) Back at the car park we had a well earned cuppa and reminisced over another hot day back in 1933. (39) Why, I still have a long workout in my net every morning even before our first cuppa ginseng. (38) Back at the car park we had a well earned cuppa and reminisced over another hot day back in 193 (37) Back home safely, I made a cuppa and sat for a good hour revelling in my favourite magazine. ![]() (36) Why, I still have a long workout in my net every morning even before our first cuppa ginseng. (35) Back home safely, I made a cuppa and sat for a good hour revelling in my favourite magazine. (34) So what's the most gracious way to avoid a Mrs Doyle - style punch - up over a 75 p cuppa? (33) So what's the most gracious way to avoid a Mrs Doyle-style punch-up over a 7p cuppa? (32) Personally I think the jackets look like pyjama coats, but they are not my cuppa. (31) A young nurse put me to bed and said: Would you like a nice cuppa tea, dear ? (30) This, plus a gutful of lager would have stirred a concrete cuppa. (29) Look, I've brought you some things so you can have a cuppa on me. (28) This, plus a gutful of lager would have stirred a concrete cuppa. (27) Look, I've brought you some things so you can have a cuppa on me. (26) And a cuppa is never so welcome as at a rest stop enroute. I finishes my cuppa just before the train is due. (23) And a cuppa is never so welcome as at a rest stop enroute. (22) (1) I'm so thirsty I'm almost dying for a cuppa. (21) I'm so thirsty I'm almost dying for a cuppa. (20) I'm so thirsty I'm almost dying for a cuppa. (19) i'll make you that cuppa, you rest your leg. (17) It was the best cuppa I've ever tasted! Catherine was Portuguese and perhaps, upset by the fact that she was going to leave her sunny country and spend the rest of her life looking out the windows of her palace at rain and clouds, she brought chests full of tea as part of her wedding dowry and so the craze started.(16) It was the best cuppa I've ever tasted! King Charles II married Catherine of Braganza in 1662. Have you ever wondered how this love affair with tea started? Many people say it was with the Portuguese. All that in one little cup, with or without milk, with or without sugar. It is a comfort drink, a refresher, a pick-me up, a relaxer. People drink tea in the morning, afternoon and evening, with their breakfast and other meals. ![]() You might not believe this, but it is estimated that approximately 165 million cups of tea are drunk every day in the UK! And despite the efforts of coffee house chains, such as Costa or Starbucks, with their “lattes”, “flat whites” and “espresso macchiatos”, coffee is way behind and only 70 million cups per day is the estimated overall intake. It is by far the most popular drink in the UK. It means “Would you like a cup of tea?”īritain is a nation of tea drinkers. That’s a question you’ve probably never been asked and yet it is uttered tens of thousands of times every day in British households. ![]()
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