Chic...Cute...and Chinese


Chinese Tea Ceremony
Post by:dotty

tea ceremonyA good friend of mine got married a couple of weeks ago.  It was a beautiful wedding on a beautiful sunny day, and I was very honored to be in the bridal party.  She had a semi-traditional Chinese wedding, as her husband is not Chinese.  One of my favorite Chinese wedding tradition is the Tea Ceremony.  This is when the bride and the groom serve tea to the elders and show their respect, it is also a chance for the elders to give their good wishes to the newlyweds.  I don’t want to risk not explaining it right.  Here’s a good explanation of what I found on The Chinese Historical and Cultural Project.

On the wedding day, the bride serves tea (holding the teacup with both hands) to her parents at home before the groom arrives. She does this out of respect and to thank her parents for raising her. The tea at this time does not need to have the lotus seeds or dates, and the bride does not need the assistance of a “lucky woman.” She pours and serves the tea by herself without the groom.

Traditionally, after the wedding ceremony, the newlyweds serve tea (holding the teacups with both hands), inviting the groom’s elders to drink tea by addressing them by formal title, e.g. first uncle or third aunt.

The general rule is to have the woman on the left side and the man on the right side. The people being served will sit in chairs, while the bride and groom kneel. For example, when the newlyweds serve tea to the groom’s parents, the bride would kneel in front of her father-in-law, while the groom would kneels in front of his mother.

The newlyweds serve tea in order, starting with the groom’s parents then proceeding from the oldest family members to the youngest, e.g. the groom’s parents, then his paternal grandparents, then his maternal grandparents, then his oldest uncles and aunts, and all the way to his older brother.

In return, the newlyweds receive lucky red envelopes (“lai see,” which means “lucky”) stuffed with money or jewelry. The helpers, who are usually women blessed with a happy marriage or wealth and chosen by the fortune teller or bride’s mother, also get lucky red envelopes stuffed with money from those being served. These envelopes are placed on the platter which holds the teacups.


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