Post by A Long Display Name Here on Sept 11, 2012 18:17:34 GMT -6
What a day. It was days like today that made Hoshi glad the shop closed an hour after sun down. Their normally busy times extended by about an hour a piece, compounded by the fact that the people who stopped in for the tea-tasting ceremonies had to wait until they were less busy, creating a back up in service that just permeated the whole workday. Things didn't die down until about twenty minutes prior, and Hoshi was -for once- relieved at the sight of an empty shop.
There were ten minutes left til closing, but her mother had gotten on her case about shutting the store up before the exact time posted on their sign. It was silly, she thought, but there was really no arguing with umma.
The short woman sighed, pulled out a chair from one of the table, and propped her feet on a chair opposite. Her feet were aching from running around all day. Umma had helped during the busier parts, but for the majority she had been on her own. She rubbed her left heel to soothe the dull pain. Maybe I'll hire someone if this keeps up. But who? She didn't really know any one other than Mizu and Jin Ho, and most of her regular customers were geriatric. It had to be someone she could trust, and someone who would quickly learn the ropes.
It wasn't that difficult to take orders during rush hours. It was just as simple as offering the menu of the day's tea blends, boiling water, then giving the appropriate amount of cups and strainers to the people at the table. All of the shop's teas were dried loose-leaf and brewed to order, unlike many shops that would just brew on giant vat of tea until they ran out — or worse, the shops that used those awful "bags" with some generic tea leaf inside. She had taken one of them apart before, out of curiosity, and was appalled — when she poured hot water over the leaves, they didn't blossom, they just tinted the water brown. She had tossed out the rest of the box of tea bags. Waste of money, perhaps, but there was no way she'd let those things defile her kitchen any longer. She prided herself, like her father did, on the custom blends the shop offered, and every blend of tea was served with dried leaves that seemed to come to life once re-immersed in water.
The hardest part about working at The Lotus Café was learning the tea ceremony. Hoshi had been brought up on it, but for a newcomer it might be difficult; if she hired someone, it needed to be an intelligent person who would understand not only the difference between the tools needed for the ceremony, but how to use them, as well as the customs needed to be observed by the tea master. It was a lot to take in, and someone would either need to love tea as much as she did, or love to pay attention to detailed, complicated tasks.
Pulling a magazine out of her purse, Hoshi flipped through the pages, re-reading for the umpteenth time an interview with Tahno. The Wolf Bats waterbender was Hoshi's major celebrity crush. It was such a pity that Jin Ho didn't like going to the Probending Arena. She'd love to catch a match, but she had no one to go with and there was no way she'd be going alone. Part of the fun in something like probending was the ability to share it with someone, and she had no one like that.
Glancing at the clock, Hoshi shrugged off the remaining five minutes. Surely no one would care, right?
She stood from her seat, her bare feet making pattering sounds as she crossed the wooden floor to lock the entrance. But-— wait. No. Was that someone coming up to the door? Hoshi sighed, then jammed her flats back on her feet, pushing in the chairs and hiding her purse and magazine and plastering a smile on her face.
There were ten minutes left til closing, but her mother had gotten on her case about shutting the store up before the exact time posted on their sign. It was silly, she thought, but there was really no arguing with umma.
The short woman sighed, pulled out a chair from one of the table, and propped her feet on a chair opposite. Her feet were aching from running around all day. Umma had helped during the busier parts, but for the majority she had been on her own. She rubbed her left heel to soothe the dull pain. Maybe I'll hire someone if this keeps up. But who? She didn't really know any one other than Mizu and Jin Ho, and most of her regular customers were geriatric. It had to be someone she could trust, and someone who would quickly learn the ropes.
It wasn't that difficult to take orders during rush hours. It was just as simple as offering the menu of the day's tea blends, boiling water, then giving the appropriate amount of cups and strainers to the people at the table. All of the shop's teas were dried loose-leaf and brewed to order, unlike many shops that would just brew on giant vat of tea until they ran out — or worse, the shops that used those awful "bags" with some generic tea leaf inside. She had taken one of them apart before, out of curiosity, and was appalled — when she poured hot water over the leaves, they didn't blossom, they just tinted the water brown. She had tossed out the rest of the box of tea bags. Waste of money, perhaps, but there was no way she'd let those things defile her kitchen any longer. She prided herself, like her father did, on the custom blends the shop offered, and every blend of tea was served with dried leaves that seemed to come to life once re-immersed in water.
The hardest part about working at The Lotus Café was learning the tea ceremony. Hoshi had been brought up on it, but for a newcomer it might be difficult; if she hired someone, it needed to be an intelligent person who would understand not only the difference between the tools needed for the ceremony, but how to use them, as well as the customs needed to be observed by the tea master. It was a lot to take in, and someone would either need to love tea as much as she did, or love to pay attention to detailed, complicated tasks.
Pulling a magazine out of her purse, Hoshi flipped through the pages, re-reading for the umpteenth time an interview with Tahno. The Wolf Bats waterbender was Hoshi's major celebrity crush. It was such a pity that Jin Ho didn't like going to the Probending Arena. She'd love to catch a match, but she had no one to go with and there was no way she'd be going alone. Part of the fun in something like probending was the ability to share it with someone, and she had no one like that.
Glancing at the clock, Hoshi shrugged off the remaining five minutes. Surely no one would care, right?
She stood from her seat, her bare feet making pattering sounds as she crossed the wooden floor to lock the entrance. But-— wait. No. Was that someone coming up to the door? Hoshi sighed, then jammed her flats back on her feet, pushing in the chairs and hiding her purse and magazine and plastering a smile on her face.