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Green with Milk and Sugar

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Member Reviews

This was a fun and exciting read for me. As someone who moved from America to Japan, based highly on the tea culture in Japan, this book immediately peaked my interest. I found this book fascinating. It really delves into the history of tea and changed my perspective on American history from a Japanese mindset.

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This was so interesting to read and I learned a lot from reading it. This area is a bit outside my area of expertise, but I adore tea and learning about new things. I ended up not being able to read the whole thing before it was archived, so hopefully I can pick up a copy elsewhere soon to finish.

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I think it was very interesting to learn about Americans early love of tea. Learning about how tea trade developed. How it started with China and then Japan really developed a great trade arrangement.

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This is one of my favourite types of history books.

1. It's about a fairly niche topic - the drinking of Japanese tea in America - which is shown to have connections with all sorts of issues and events across many decades. Trade connections! Racism and how attitudes towards different ethnicities develops and is deliberately cultivated! What happens to the samurai class when they're moved out of Japanese society! Civil war and foreign war! Marketing and world expos and food regulation. It's all here, and it's woven in and through the overall topic beautifully.

2. There's intriguing and what seem like weird facts. Like the idea of a punch made from 'very strong tea', plus a 1.25 pounds of sugar, a pint of cream AND THEN a bottle of either claret or champagne. I feel ill even thinking about it. Also, the idea that apparently people used to add Prussian blue to green tea, to give it a stronger colour??

3. There's a personal connection to the author, and it's neither gratuitous (I really like tea!) nor tenuous (my next door neighbour's grandfather lived in Taiwan!) nor overly emphasised. Instead, the Hellyer family had been involved in importing "Japan tea" to America for many years, back when that was what it was called and when - as the subtitle suggests - "Japan filled America's tea cups". When appropriate, the Hellyer family experience is used to illuminate particular aspects of the story - Europeans as merchants in Japan, the shipping to America, and so on.

4. It's just really nicely written. Hellyer has clearly done a lot of research, and has been very thoughtful in the way he's put together the material. The overall story is easy to follow - but there's no sense of a steady march towards a definite end. I mean, in one sense there is, because the reality is that American tastes in tea did change (not least away from tea). But it's not all 'oh woe everything was always leading to downfall' - instead, it follows the changes in fashion and expectations and international relations and shows how those things interrelate with the drinking of, and importing/exporting of, tea.

I love history books about food that illuminate a seemingly mundane part of ordinary life and show just how complicated such things really are.

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As an American who loves tea, I found this book to be full of new information regarding the fascinating history of the green tea market in the United States. I loved seeing the various photos showing tea labels and advertisements, as well as the anecdotes and stories of promoting teas at different World Fairs. There's lots of data thrown at readers, which I enjoyed seeing but felt a bit overwhelmed toward the end of the book. I would've liked learning more about how the tea trade impacted the world in a broader context.

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Not everyone is obsessed with tea and how it got to the US, but I am. This was a fun read for me. It is decidedly academic(meaning well researched) but is still accessible to the everyday reader. It is more fact based than story. I love tea and so this was incredibly interesting to me. If you are interested in green tea and it's history, pick up this book.

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This book is academic and thus a pretty heavy read; I ended up reading parts of it that interested me the most. The research itself was very thorough, and I appreciated the author's connection and passion to the topic. As someone who drinks a lot of tea, it was fascinating reading about the history and politics of export. Most interesting to me was the way tea marketing and export were heavily impacted by xenophobia and racism--both in exclusion and the exoticization of Asian countries.

Thanks to the author, the publisher, and NetGalley for an advance copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

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Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for the opportunity to read and review an advanced reader's copy of this book. This in no way affects my review, all opinions are my own.

A very insightful about the history of green tea in the USA and how it's popularity changed during the 1900s.

The book is a fairly heavy read and it took me awhile to slog through it. It's quite academic in language and the extensive research, so it may not be everyone's cuppa for a read. (see what I did there?! :P )

If tea and history are your thing, curl up with a nice cuppa and this book for an in-depth read into the history of green tea.

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Thanks for the opportunity to review this book. I originally chose this book thinking I could possibly have students use sections or chapters for analysis. I think this is too technical for my age group.

Overall, I enjoyed this book. It was a little more scholarly than I expected. What kept me going were the examples of how racism can change seemingly small parts of our day and how those changes radiate out to the rest of the world.

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This is a fascinating look at the history and consumption of green tea. I have not seen many other books that focus on green tea specifically, usually, you read about black tea or just "tea" in general. I feel like I learned a lot from this book and it really opened my eyes to the effects of imported goods and food and how change and trade are so important. Fascinating read!!

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Green with Mill and Sugar is a fascinating academically minded look at Japanese tea, the United States, and how they are intertwined. Hellyer discusses the popularity of tea in the US and the ways it has changed over time. For instance, green tea, often with milk and sugar, used to be the favored tea. Due to a variety of reasons discussed therein, black tea became more popular in the US and green tea more popular in Japan. I found it very interesting and filled with not only a great about of information but statistics and images as well. While it is a little dry, I highly recommend for anyone interested in the history of tea and/or wondered why we drink what we do.

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A lovely academic book containing exactly what the tin suggests: a history of Japanese tea, in relation to America. As a bonus point, the author is a historian of early and modern Japan whose family used to be involved in the Japanese-US tea trade - I assume that's where his interest spawned from, and it's pretty neat for the rest of us that it did.

While mostly concerned with Japan, "Green with Milk and Sugar" starts long before that, during a time when tea came from China, Japanese borders were closed to the British, and the US threw tea into the sea.

Hellyer shows that tea used to be a staple of American culture, and follows the ups and downs in the popularity of various types of tea (greens, blacks, Oolongs, Chinese, Japanese, Indian, Ceylonese), the value of imports, the routes, the ways in which it was drunk and where, the advertising and the mentality related to it.

It's quite a ride. Chinese tea used to be artificially colored with Prussian Blue, for example. When Japan opened its borders, Chinese tea experts were hired in Japan to ensure that the tea made for export would be suitable for American tastes. At one point, there was a lot of anti-Chinese sentiment, while the Japanese were viewed neutrally; but eventually, feelings turned against the Japanese, too. When Southern Asia started exporting its black tea to the US, it would make claims about Chinese/Japanese teas being impure and tainted by the sweat of Asian workers, unlike Indian/Ceylon tea, which was made by machines. And so on.

The book contains a lot of hard data: how many millions of pounds of tea were imported to the US during some years; what types they were; where they were popular. It also contains anecdotes about some of the people involved, photos and reproductions of ads and labels, stories about the promotion of teas at World Fairs.

The only thing I really felt was missing was a larger context for the tea trade. The book is great as it is, but it's so tea-centered that it's hard at times to figure out what role that tea had in the wider world. What does it mean that Japan exported so many millions of pounds of tea? Was it exporting other things? If yes, how much did it care about its tea exports in comparison with other exports?

Overall, a great read, and one I'd be happy to throw at friends. Many thanks to NetGalley and Columbia University Press for this ARC.

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What an interesting book! There is so much more to the history of tea than I had ever realised. This book does such a great job at bringing to light details and stories all along the common theme of tea and it's historical and cultural significance.
My favourite part is all of the photographs and illustrations that are a part of this book. It's like walking through a museum and really helped bring the history to life.

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Written in a decidedly academic style, this book may not appeal to the masses. However, if you have a thirst for both tea and knowledge, this book is a treasure trove. Those interested in American history and Japanese culture will gain a lot as well.

My thanks to author Robert Hellyer, NetGalley, and Columbia University Press for allowing me to read a digital advance review copy of this book. This review is my honest and unbiased opinion.

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I will confess that as someone who sees at least several Dunkins on my way to work and back, I don’t usually think of the USA as a major tea-drinking country (excluding sweet tea’s ubiquity in the south, apparently), much less a land where green tea in particular reigns supreme. However, apparently that was indeed the case, according to Robert Hellyer’s “Green with Milk and Sugar.” In this history, Hellyer covers how Japanese green teas used to be a preferred beverage all across the United States, particularly in its midwestern heartland, before a combination of market forces, ad campaigns that played upon white Americans’ racism, and eventually WWII upended this position.

Hellyer’s style of writing is very much academic, which admittedly makes for a bit of a dry narrative at times. However, the excellently thorough detailing on the evolution of Japan and America’s intertwined tea-consumption habit still made for an interesting read overall, and the author;s passion for the subject is clear. Lovers of food histories in particular will find much to enjoy here.

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