A Valentine’s Afternoon Tea from the Heart
The heart is a symbol of love. Whether one creates an entire heart themed afternoon tea or only chooses to enhance a menu with a few elements, your table will look enchanting.
Pink Lemonade Tea ©Ellen Easton
Prepare any green or white tea of choice. Add pink lemonade. Serve hot or iced.
Additional Links for Inspiration and Recipes:
https://www.thethreetomatoes.com/valentines-teatime-hearts-and-roses
https://www.thethreetomatoes.com/roses-for-the-sweet
https://www.thethreetomatoes.com/a-guilt-free-valentines-dessert
https://www.thethreetomatoes.com/a-love-affair-with-chocolate
https://www.thethreetomatoes.com/a-rosey-table
https://www.thethreetomatoes.com/a-floral-afternoon-tea
https://www.thethreetomatoes.com/edible-sugar-lace
https://www.thethreetomatoes.com/strawberries-for-a-summer-day
https://www.thethreetomatoes.com/a-proper-afternoon-tea-individual-place-settings
https://www.thethreetomatoes.com/afternoon-tea-biscuits-cheese-straws-and-scones
©Ellen Easton
Ellen Easton, author of Afternoon Tea~Tips, Terms and Traditions(RED WAGON PRESS), an afternoon tea authority, lifestyle and etiquette industry leader, keynote speaker and product spokesperson, is a hospitality, design, and retail consultant whose clients have included the Waldorf=Astoria, the Plaza and Bergdorf Goodman. Easton’s family traces their tea roots to the early 1800s, when ancestors first introduced tea plants from India and China to the Colony of Ceylon, thus building one of the largest and best cultivated teas estates on the island.
