Tea Lovers Pack Sold-out Pasadena Festival of Tea

Mikko Nakatomi demonstrates to visitors the purifying of hands at a stone basin (tsukubai).
Photos by Ruth SOWBY

By Ruth SOWBY

For the seventh consecutive year, at a cost of $20 per ticket, visitors were able to sample teas at the Pasadena Tea Festival held on April 12 at Storrier Stearns Japanese Garden. Local tea vendors at the festival specialized in a wide variety of Japanese, Chinese and Korean teas. Sprinkled throughout the garden were women dressed in traditional Asian garb.  

Tea hostesses bring in ingredients used in a traditional Japanese Tea Ceremony.

Garden creative director and festival co-organizer Meher McArthur greeted guests at the registration desk at the front of the garden. McArthur, a Japanese art historian, answered questions from visitors.       

A highlight of the festival was a traditional Japanese Tea Ceremony, held several times during the day. While visitors lined up waiting to be invited in, Mikko Nakatomi demonstrated the ritualized purifying of hands at a stone basin (tsukubai). Once guests were seated inside the tea house, a tea hostess used prescribed gestures and utensils in front of her seated audience to meticulously prepare the tea. At the end of the ceremony guests enjoyed a bowl of macha, a powdered green tea that is whipped up with a whisk in a tea bowl. 

The macha tea is prepared for visitors as part of the Japanese Tea Ceremony.

According to Nakatomi, “The practice of tea drinking offers a sense of community and camaraderie.”    

New Pasadena residents Sandra Padilla and daughter Susana planned to visit the garden and thought the festival would give them a good opportunity. West Los Angeles resident Rhiannon Geving appreciated the “different teas from different areas.”

Vendors Shalini Prakash of Glenburn Tea-Direct (left) and Julia Maher organize their wares at April 12 Pasadena Tea Festival.
Storrier Stearns Park is the setting for the Pasadena Tea Festival.
Cameras without flash could be used in the tea house as a tea hostess prepares the Tea Ceremony for visitors.