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Chris:

I have never seen Dilmah here in the States. It may exist, but I have not seen it.

Twining's English Breakfast is in nearly every large grocery store. Bigelow also makes an English Breakfast blend. Both are in teabags; loose tea is not easy to find in a grocer's here, except in very large cities.

If you don't want to pay the rather high prices charged for Twining's or Bigelow's, Tetley makes a "British Blend" - also in most every grocer's - that makes a good, stout builder's cuppa.

You will also occasionally find Typhoo, if you're in a large city.

If you're eating out, you need to know that most Americans have little familiarity with tea, which leads to cups of tea that are not what you're used to, at least in everyday restaurants (fine restaurants are another matter, of course). It's seldom ordered in most places, which means that when it is ordered, what comes is a cup of hot (microwaved) water, with a teabag on the saucer, if indeed there is a saucer. A wedge of lemon will come with it, but you will have to ask for milk, which is often not available except as a glass of milk. The usual in chain restaurants is "coffee creamer," which I'm sure you know is a non-dairy or semi-dairy substitute for coffee cream.

It can also be a bit difficult to get your tea with breakfast. Not that they won't bring you the obligatory cup of hot water and a teabag, but they will almost certainly bring it at the wrong time, not being used to the proper timing in relationship to the rest of your breakfast. You can anticipate getting your tea almost immediately, with a wait for everything else, by which time the microwaved hot water used for the teabag will have cooled. This timing works for coffee, because they have huge vats of that on hand, ready to "warm up" cups of coffee for diners waiting for breakfast.

You will also run into a bit of "tea discrimination." Coffee drinkers often get free refills - that "warm up" I mentioned. Tea-drinkers are usually charged for every single blessed cup. It sounds unfair. That is because it is unfair. But it is the way things are here.

If I may make a suggestion or two: First, I'm not sure you should bring your favorite tea with you, because of our airport security. Anything that looks remotely like it could be marijuana in disguise is going to delay you, trust me. That sounds insane, but our government has no more imagination or sense of humor than any other, which is to say none at all. You're already going to spend two hours clearing security at our airports; I wouldn't do anything to make it longer.

Second, an immersion heater would be an excellent idea. This is a small electric coil on a flex; you put the coil into a mug of water and it heats the water to boiling very quickly. It makes a hotel room very bearable in the morning. A link to an immersion heater is below, so that you can see what one looks like if you don't already know. A good hardware store, such as Ace Hardware, will have one. By purchasing some teabags, a mug or two and an immersion heater when you get here, you'll have the makings of tea wherever you go in the States.

I hope something here is of help.
 
Thanks Sandy for your advice.

I was planning to bring a starter amount of tea (and rooibos for me) but I guess I can give that a miss and buy it in the US rather than create an ordeal in customs.

Re: humourless officialdom - New Zealand customs are great. On a trip there a year or two ago, we stopped at a motel in Melbourne the night before we flew to NZ. We had a couple of items left over in the morning including some cheese. As I hate throwing out good food, I decided to bring it and declare it on entry to NZ. If they say no, I throw it out. No downside.
When I declared the few food items I had, the customs officer in NZ said "gee, it must be pretty special cheese. We do have cheese in NZ you know." I explained my tight-fisted reason for bringing it, and said "I know you have good cheese in NZ, you sell Mainland cheeses in Australia, and for about half the price you Kiwis have to pay." We had a nice chat about how a New Zealand company could sell cheese in Australia for about $7 for 500g when the same block sells in NZ for about $11. I was able to bring in my little block of cheese - NZ accepts Aussie cheese as safe to import.

but New Zealanders are always lovely to deal with.

I had to phone US Consulate in Melbourne this week about filling out my entry paperwork. The official I spoke to could not have been less helpful or caring if he tried. A complete lack of interest. A good display for his country...

We are bringing a dual voltage travel kettle - one of these...

Chris.

 
Chris:

I apologize for neglecting to put a photo and link of the immersion heater I was referring to. I'm a huge fan of these, because they make packing much lighter. The only thing is, you need to put it in the plastic bag of items you'll carry through airport security, so they'll see that it's a harmless personal item. Because of the coil shape, if they spot it on X-ray, you're in for a wait:

You just stick the coil into a mug of water, plug in the flex, and within a couple of minutes, you have boiling water.

They're about $10 USD, and they're to be found in grocery and hardware stores. You could pick one up when you're here, and give it away before you leave, which would bypass security hassles entirely:


danemodsandy++8-8-2014-13-57-10.jpg
 

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