>>16841632>I don't really know what to call it since it's name here is just plain teaI know the feel. I thought the one here was just called Turkish tea for the longest time, because I don't know, that's what everything I've seen so far said. But it's apparently rize tea instead. I was thinking that had to be a strange name for it.
Oh, and they also simply call it tea here. I guess that's normal with whatever's the most widespread.
>How do ye drink so much tea.It's also drank all times of the day here, and the case doesn't seem to be that different from how you're wording it. I guess our type of tea is just more addictive? And that it simply tastes very nice, as long as you pour it right. Putting it on the ranking of drinks to have alongside a meal, I'd place it right alongside cold water. Really, it's that good.
But, yeah, maybe we're kind of extreme with it.
Tea in the morning, with and after breakfast, with and after any kind of snack (almost), a couple or so more times before the evening hits, with (for me at least) and after dinner, then probably some more before the day ends.
I even have tea with every bowl of cereal I eat. Right after as well. And probably several throughout every night I stay up.
Hell, yesterday we had literally every single person in our classroom drinking a cup during a lecture. It was an occasion, but still.
I'm way more addicted to it than the average person here, but it's still a thing basically everybody enjoys here.
Maybe the difference is that you may have some people there who don't enjoy tea still despite how popular it is, but here, I haven't met a single person who didn't like it. People do have coffee, but not for the enjoyment of it, just the effects.
>Is it the same in turkeyI don't think so. Pretty much every person I've met my age was also a fan of it.
I mean, we still have the cafeteria at every school serving tea. I guess that says something.