Your Guide to Authentic Regional Eats
Sign In
|
Register for Free!
Restaurants
Recipes
Forums
Eating Tours
Merchandise
FAQ
Maps
Insider
The Tea Box
693 Fifth Avenue
,
New York
,
NY
-
(212) 350-0180
Overview
Reviews(
1
)
Rate Restaurant
Upload Photos
Bookmark
Email
3
Posted By
Bruce Bilmes and Susan Boyle
on
January 31, 2010 9:11 AM
Takashimaya in New York City is the sole US outpost for the upscale Japanese chain. Really quite small as NYC department stores go, the carefully chosen items are spread out vertically between six gallery-like floors. There are usually more salespeople ready to help you than there are customers shopping.
An unlikely environment in which to find Roadfood. Yet, when that road is New York's Fifth Avenue, most of the traveling will be on foot, trekking from store to store, dodging cabs at intersections while weighted down with boxes and shopping bags. It's right about mid-afternoon that the intrepid New York shopper will be looking for a chance to relax and recharge. Enter Takashimaya's basement-level Tea Box to the rescue.
On exiting the elevator into the retail tea shop in front of the tea room, the first thing that hits you is (at least to our senses) the incongruous aroma of fresh-roasted coffee. Peruse the vast selection of teas, both prepackaged and blended to order, and some of the most beautiful jewel-like packaged cookies and sweets we've ever seen. Many of the items you see out here will be available in the tea room proper.
As you are shown to your table in The Tea Box, you'll instantly begin to sense the calming influence of the gentle plucking of Japanese music in the background, the tans and greys and beiges of the furnishings, and of the fabrics overhead, and the subdued lighting.
Lunches of salads and sandwiches and bento boxes are popular, but it's the tea service that grabs us. The East-West Afternoon Tea brings, in addition to your pot of tea, finger sandwiches, cookies, pastries and fresh fruit. For those of lesser appetite, a la carte selections include sorbets and ice creams, chocolate-covered ginger, butter cookies, creme brulee flavored with green tea, and something they call vegetable "cookies." The simple iced tea is superb, served with a side pitcher of what our waitress referred to as "sugar water."
The tea menu includes dozens of varieties of green, black, flavored, and herbal teas, a toasted buckwheat "tea", and there's even coffee imported from Japan. Teas are served in rustically beautiful pots, and your cup and saucer is festooned with a rock candy stirrer.
A pot of tea, some delicate Yoku Moku butter cookies, and a little time secluded from the outdoor bustle, and you'll be ready to face another round of the finest shopping New York has to offer.
Overall Rating
11
out of
12
people found the review helpful. Was it helpful to you?
No
Yes
What is Roadfood?
|
Submit Content
|
Privacy Policy
|
Contact Roadfood.com
Copyright 2011 - Roadfood.com