When did you stop calling it tea?

Posted by: Christopher_M on 16 June 2017

I mean your evening meal. Do you still call it tea? Maybe you have you never called it tea? Has it always been something else? If so what was that called?

And do you eat again after your 'tea'? And when?

For myself, I noticed it returning home at the end of my first year at university. It had become odd referring to tea but I couldn't say dinner at home. My parents social life during my teens had consisted mainly of supper parties. So I settled on supper. This is what we all say in our family now and have done for about thirty years. All apart from my car mechanic brother, who still 'goes round for tea'. Preferably at six or soon after.

Interested to hear your thoughts. Mine prompted by something I heard on the radio recently.

Thanks, Chris

Posted on: 16 June 2017 by Paper Plane

It's tea in this household and has been in every one I've ever lived in.

steve

Posted on: 16 June 2017 by dave marshall

I gather it's a Northern thing, and "having us tea" seems to be the norm "oop 'ere". 

Posted on: 16 June 2017 by VladtheImpala

Breakfast in the morning, lunch at lunch time, tea in the evening, supper a late snack in our house.

Posted on: 16 June 2017 by Finkfan

It's dinner in this house and that's what I've always called it. Tea is for drinking!

I did find it strange in my younger days however, when I could either have a 'school dinner' or a 'packed lunch'.

Breakfast, lunch and dinner here. 

Posted on: 16 June 2017 by VladtheImpala
Finkfan posted:

It's dinner in this house and that's what I've always called it. Tea is for drinking!

I did find it strange in my younger days however, when I could either have a 'school dinner' or a 'packed lunch'.

Breakfast, lunch and dinner here. 

I was similarly confused! Dinner and lunch are used interchangeably around here. When I was a youngster, tea was served with slices of buttered bread and, erm, tea.

Posted on: 16 June 2017 by sjbabbey

it's quite clearly tea time around 6 p.m. After all we had dinner money if we stayed for school dinners.

Posted on: 16 June 2017 by Eoink

I grew up in London with Irish parents, and the evening meal was dinner. I moved to Yorkshire about 10 years ago, where the meal is definitely tea.  My 30 year old niece accuses me of having become Northern if I don't adapt when back South. 

Posted on: 16 June 2017 by Huge

'Tea' is at tea time (ca. 15:30 to 16:00 hrs) and is a minor repast, dinner is ca. 19:00 and is a full meal.

Posted on: 16 June 2017 by Finkfan
sjbabbey posted:

it's quite clearly tea time around 6 p.m. After all we had dinner money if we stayed for school dinners.

Ah but if you have dinner in the middle of the day, why do you have a lunch menu at a restaurant? 

Posted on: 16 June 2017 by VladtheImpala
sjbabbey posted:

it's quite clearly tea time around 6 p.m. After all we had dinner money if we stayed for school dinners.

Quite so! But then we used to have a Sunday lunch of a roast dinner, usually between the time we'd usually have lunch and tea. And Sunday tea would be later than normal tea time and consist of sandwiches, cakes, jelly etc. (and tea). Not tea at all!

So why is a dinner party held between tea and supper times and no tea is served?

Posted on: 16 June 2017 by VladtheImpala
Finkfan posted:
sjbabbey posted:

it's quite clearly tea time around 6 p.m. After all we had dinner money if we stayed for school dinners.

Ah but if you have dinner in the middle of the day, why do you have a lunch menu at a restaurant? 

O tempora, O mores! We've made a right dog's dinner/breakfast/lunch/tea/supper/snack/snap/repast of this.

Posted on: 16 June 2017 by sjbabbey
VladtheImpala posted:
sjbabbey posted:

it's quite clearly tea time around 6 p.m. After all we had dinner money if we stayed for school dinners.

Quite so! But then we used to have a Sunday lunch of a roast dinner, usually between the time we'd usually have lunch and tea. And Sunday tea would be later than normal tea time and consist of sandwiches, cakes, jelly etc. (and tea). Not tea at all!

So why is a dinner party held between tea and supper times and no tea is served?

Ah, Sunday Dinner (about 3 p.m. after getting home from the pub/parish club to watch the footy on ITV and fall asleep). Happy days.

Dinner parties between tea and supper? How many meals did you have a day?

 

Posted on: 16 June 2017 by sjbabbey
Finkfan posted:
sjbabbey posted:

it's quite clearly tea time around 6 p.m. After all we had dinner money if we stayed for school dinners.

Ah but if you have dinner in the middle of the day, why do you have a lunch menu at a restaurant? 

I never went to restaurants for my school dinner.

Posted on: 16 June 2017 by VladtheImpala
sjbabbey posted:
VladtheImpala posted:
sjbabbey posted:

it's quite clearly tea time around 6 p.m. After all we had dinner money if we stayed for school dinners.

Quite so! But then we used to have a Sunday lunch of a roast dinner, usually between the time we'd usually have lunch and tea. And Sunday tea would be later than normal tea time and consist of sandwiches, cakes, jelly etc. (and tea). Not tea at all!

So why is a dinner party held between tea and supper times and no tea is served?

Ah, Sunday Dinner (about 3 p.m. after getting home from the pub/parish club to watch the footy on ITV and fall asleep). Happy days.

Dinner parties between tea and supper? How many meals did you have a day?

 

Looking in the mirror, far too many! Not that I was ever invited to dinner parties.......... (cue sound of distant violin).

Posted on: 16 June 2017 by Kevin-W

When I was growing up in a lower-middle-class house in London and Kent in the late 1960s and early 1970s, lunch was 'dinner' and dinner was 'tea'.

When I went to grammar school in 1974 I learned from middle class people that lunch was lunch and dinner was dinner.

At University my best friend was an upper-class  girl. She called lunch 'luncheon' and dinner 'supper'. 'Tea' was a cuppa, cucumber sarnies and dainty cakes, taken at about 4pm.

Posted on: 16 June 2017 by fatcat

My daughter recons you can determine the ‘Class’ of somebody by how much they spend on lunch. Mind you she’s only come to this conclusion since she moved down sarrf, and been unable to buy her usual lunchtime meat and potato pie and sausage roll.

Apparently London’s a culinary blackspot, pies are filled with fruit and you can’t get a steak pudding anywhere.

Anyway, I’m off to get my supper. Peanut butter on toast, a Cadbury cream egg and a couple of bottles of lager.

Posted on: 16 June 2017 by The Strat (Fender)

I love it - even mealtime designations are class related.  Presumably in a truly socialist state there will be a standardised terminology

Posted on: 16 June 2017 by Hook

If you wanted to eat like a hobbit...

Breakfast - 7am.
Second breakfast - 9 am.
Elevenses - 11 am.
Lunch - 1 pm.
Afternoon tea - 3pm.
Dinner - 6 pm.
Supper - 9 pm.

Posted on: 16 June 2017 by Simon-in-Suffolk

Still call it tea at SinS towers. If we have friends around or we go out to eat then it's evening dinner, but we regularly bring in fish and chips home  for tea.

Posted on: 16 June 2017 by VladtheImpala
Hook posted:

If you wanted to eat like a hobbit...

Breakfast - 7am.
Second breakfast - 9 am.
Elevenses - 11 am.
Lunch - 1 pm.
Afternoon tea - 3pm.
Dinner - 6 pm.
Supper - 9 pm.

No biscuits? And tea?

Posted on: 17 June 2017 by Tabby cat

It's dinner here but middle class friends call it supper or tea.

It's all food at at the end of the day but everyone's got their own name for it.

Posted on: 17 June 2017 by Kevin-W

We haven't even got into the whole fraught debate about what to call the last course yet.

Sweet? Afters? Dessert? Pudding?

And don't get me started on the whole napkin/serviette thing... 

Posted on: 17 June 2017 by VladtheImpala

As Assistant Chief Deputy Under-Secretary for Nutrition in the Department of Administrative Affairs, I am delighted to give all forum members a sneak preview of new legislation to be announced in the Queen's speech next week. This has come after many meaningful and insightful meetings with the august DUP.

Henceforth, under the new Meal Times (Nomenclature) Regulations 2017, made under the enabling Angel Delight Act 1963, meals shall be described thus, and in no other way:

1. Morning Meal (Praise the Lord)

2. Mid-day meal (Praise the Lord)

3. Evening meal (Praise the Lord)

4. Late evening meal (Praise the Lord)

5. Antacid meal (Praise the Lord) (sponsored by Gaviscon)

In Schedule 1 of the Regulations, we deal with the nomenclature of courses (and anticipate Brexit)

1. All course names will be in English

2. Service shall be Russian (and not French) as a result a an online-poll.

3. Where more than one course is served, the order shall be: starter, main, afters. Only greedy b***ards need more courses.

4. Afters may be modified depending on the offering. Thus, you may only refer to pudding if you are actually serving a pudding, sweet if you are serving something sweet and dessert may consist of fruit with a dairy product.

Regards,

The newly knighted Sir Vlad of Everton.  

Posted on: 17 June 2017 by Simon-in-Suffolk
Tabby cat posted:

It's dinner here but middle class friends call it supper or tea.

It's all food at at the end of the day but everyone's got their own name for it.

Interesting, around these parts it's tea... more landed gentry and aspiring middle class types refer to it as dinner.. the middle class types tend to call it this in front of others... supper is definitely for toast after having come back from the village local or a night out in town... obviously stereotypically.

Posted on: 17 June 2017 by TOBYJUG
Kevin-W posted:

We haven't even got into the whole fraught debate about what to call the last course yet.

Sweet? Afters? Dessert? Pudding?

And don't get me started on the whole napkin/serviette thing... 

Yes I used to be summoned with Afters.

Puddings and Desserts are differentiated by the spoons.  A big shovel and it's a pudding, with a Dessrt spoon it's a , well..

"Tea" was something I had as a snack after coming home from school to keep until dinner.

I remember getting such a bollocking when I used a cloth serviette to blow my nose in when eating a hot curry at a fancy curry house.