In Colombia the term las onces (the elevens in Spanish) is used to describe a similar meal. Among Chileans, the tradition was known as under the same name, although in modern times, it has shifted in most respects to later in the afternoon, more closely reflecting the pattern of British "tea time". In Australia and New Zealand, it is called morning tea or smoko (often little lunch or playlunch in primary school). Choice of foods consumed at morning tea vary from cakes, pastries or lamingtons, or biscuits, to just coffee. In the Royal Australian Navy it is commonly referred to as "Morno's".
In popular culture
For Elevenses, Winnie the Pooh preferred honey on bread with condensed milk. He is also said to have coined the word, "smackerel" having an equivalent meaning to 'elevenses'.
Paddington Bear often took elevenses at the antique shop on Portobello Road run by his friend Mr Gruber and usually received some sound advice about his current thorny problem at the same time.
In Middle-earth of the Lord of the Rings universe by J.R.R. Tolkien, it is a meal eaten by Hobbits in addition to second breakfast.
The term appears extensively throughout the novel Don't Stop the Carnival, by Herman Wouk, in which various characters gleefully partake of "elevenses" at every opportunity, usually accompanied by alcoholic beverages. The "Lang Elevenses" consists mainly of Johnnie Walker Red Label and the participants would generally get rowdy by the hour of 1:00pm. It was sometimes known to continue past the start of afternoon tea.
References
External links
- Elevenses - corporate disruption via the medium of tea and a light snack
- A nice cup of tea and a sit down - an elevenses news site
See also
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
Last updated on Friday September 19, 2008 at 22:38:40 PDT (GMT -0700)
View this article at Wikipedia.org - Edit this article at Wikipedia.org - Donate to the Wikimedia Foundation
Copyright © 2009, Dictionary.com, LLC. All rights reserved.