Tea Across the U.S. (Part Two): Unexpected Gem in Kansas Print E-mail
Tuesday, 13 October 2009
House of Cha in Lawrence, KS Editor’s Note: This is the second in a multi-part series of first-person accounts by WTN Contributing Editor Lindsey Goodwin, who punctuated her recent move from North Carolina to Oregon with visits to tea shops of all kinds. For part one, click here.

After leaving my home state of North Carolina (and the deliciousness of French Broad Chocolate Lounge), my next stop was House of Cha, an unexpected gem in Lawrence, Kan.

To say that Lawrence is a college town is an understatement: Roughly 30,000 college students make up about a third of the city’s population. Although Lawrence’s many independently owned shops were closed when I arrived at 9:15 p.m., the main street was still bustling with patrons of restaurants and bars.

House of Cha is located just off of the main street, so about half the tables were full despite the late hour. Joleen Freeman, the personable, enthusiastic young woman who was running House of Cha when I visited, described Lawrence as a “little Austin, Texas,” and told me that a large international student base makes House of Cha both a successful business and an entertaining place to work or visit.

House of Cha straddles the line between Perhaps it is this combination of college-town surroundings and international influence that resulted in the tea room’s unusual dichotomy of tea: bing cha puer cakes line the walls, shelves are filled with large Chinese-style canisters of oolong from the owner’s in-laws’ tea farm in Taiwan and Yi Xing tea ware adorns the counters, yet bubble tea is heavily featured on the menu and the store signage.

It’s rare that a tea business crosses the line between “serious” and “fun” so boldly, so I inquired about it. Freeman informed me that the claim of “the best bubble tea guaranteed” on the banner outside isn’t just ad-speak. Forget artificially flavored syrups – at House of Cha, they brew fresh tea concentrate for their boba three times a day and cook imported, raw Taiwanese tapioca pearls daily.

Even I was temped to try it (despite having sworn off bubble tea forever after a particularly terrible experience), but I opted instead for some of their directly sourced Snowy Moon Oolong (from the last picking of winter in the Chinese calendar), a bowl of house-made soup and a side of matcha-dusted pumpkin seeds.

The oolong was smooth, floral and distinctively buttery. The vegetarian soup proved to be a welcome break from highway food, and the matcha pumpkin seeds left me wishing I’d ordered more of their tea snacks for the road.

Bonus trivia: House of Cha was the first U.S. tea company to import a unique type of vacuum-sealed canister from Taiwan. It looked like something that would be popular for other types of plant materials in Asheville and California (nudge, nudge).

I left at 10, when the tea room closed. I still had hours of driving ahead to make my next destination (Denver, Colo.) in time for a tea stop there, but House of Cha – with its calming atmosphere and caffeine-rich oolong and matcha pumpkin seeds – was just the boost I needed for a late-night drive through the Kansas grasslands.

» 2 Comments
2Comment
at Saturday, 24 October 2009 23:31by Lindsey Goodwin
Despite conventional wisdom about tea and Baby Boomers, I see a lot of college students and twenty-somethings (like myself) getting really into tea these days. I hope to see more college towns with great tea spots (like this one) soon!
1"teacast.net"
at Wednesday, 21 October 2009 09:44by teacast
There are a few cafes in my college town, but none would probably match this place, which is disappointing!
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