Suutei tsai ( (cyryllic) (Mongolian script) (IPA)) is a traditional Mongolia beverage made from tea, milk, millet and salt.
The drink is also known as süütei tsai, tsutai tsai, salt tea, or Mongolian salty tea.Mongolia, by Michael Kohn, 2008, page 43 “süü (milk) may be cow, sheep, or goat milk.... Mongolian tea (tsai in Mongolian; shay in Kazakh)"
Occasionally, tail fat is added to increase richness and flavor.
The way of preparing the drink can also vary. The traditional way of cooking it includes stirring it by scooping it up while it is boiling and pouring it back in from a height. However, many today omit this step.Mongolia, Guek-Cheng Pang, 2010, page 129
The tea that the Mongolians use for suutei tsai commonly comes from a block. The block consists of a lower quality of tea that is made up of stems or inferior tea leaves and is compressed into a block that can be easily stored. When needed, the tea is chipped off and added to the suutei tsai.The changing world of Mongolia’s nomads, Melvyn C. Goldstein, Cynthia M. Beall, 1994, page 43
During the mid-thirteenth century, a Franciscan friar, William of Rubruck, set out to the Mongol Empire to make an account of the Mongols. In his account, Rubruck noted the Mongols' drinking habits with water, saying that the Mongols were "most careful not to drink pure water".William of Rubruck’s account of the Mongols, by Rana Saad, 2005, page 19 In a land where juice and wine were not readily available, many Mongols opted to drink milk-based products like suutei tsai or Kumis (a type of milk alcohol made from fermented mares milk) instead of pure water.
Suutei tsai is one of the most common drinks in Mongolia. It is often drunk at meals and throughout the day. It is usually served to guests when they arrive at a Mongolian home, known as a yurt or ger. Upon arriving, guests are usually served suutei tsai with a hospitality bowl filled with snacks.Teen life in Asia, by Judith J. Slater, 2004, page 118 Suutei tsai can be drunk straight, with boortsog (Mongolian fried biscuit) or with buuz (Mongolian dumplings).World and Its Peoples: Eastern and Southern Asia, Volume 2, by Marshall Cavendish Corporation, 2007, page 269
In addition, suutei tsai is available in instant packet form.
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