Steenbergs selects its organic dried herbs from specialist growers around the Mediterranean.
Imported from around the world, Steenbergs range of organic spices is second-to-none.
Steenbergs salts are hand-harvested sea salts from the Algarve region of Portugal.
Pepper is the king of spices - Steenbergs has a wide range of different types of organic pepper.
Choose from our favourite salt and pepper mills.
Succulent organic (many of them Fairtrade) vanilla in all formats.
Hard to find specialist spices including hot hot chillies
Organic bulk ingredients.
The new range of Steenbergs spice blends in premium containers.
Delicious and colourful these make a wonderful addition to many meals. They can also be used for potpourri and craft!
Everyone should have these spice and herb blends in their storecupboard - at Steenbergs, we blend these Classic Mixes using our finest organic spices and herbs.
Great for Barbeque rubs or as dry marinades
Steenbergs range of organic curry mixes and curry powders - for all curry enthusiasts.
The Mediterranean offers a huge range of cookery, from peppery organic paella to hot organic harissa and exotic ras al hanout.
How do you improve on our amazing organic pepper or our sundried traditional seasalt? By blending them.
Flavours from around Asia - from organic Nasi Goreng to China 5 spice.
At Steenbergs, we blend our own organic spices and sugar blends to our own recipes.
Enjoy the flavours of American cooking using Steenbergs range of organic American spice blends - from Tex-Mex to Southern Fried.
Organic Seasonings and mixes for burgers and sausages - without crumb - made from organic ingredients.
Variety of organic flavours specifically designed for fish and shellfish
Organic Arabian flavours from Steenbergs
Delicious traditional cereals and mueslis to start the day with
From organic rice to organic beans - great for the storecupboard.
Organic chocolate to eat, drink or cook with.
Organic sauces, mustards, chutneys and jellies for savoury dishes
Organic storecupboard ingredients from organic rice to organic sugar and pasta
Organic fruit for baking, cooking or munching
Tasty organic nuts and snacks for munching.
Organic jams and honey and spreads just waiting for the toast...
All Steenbergs seasonings are gluten, dairy free and vegetarian. These are some of the other products we stock that are for gluten and dairy free cooking.
Range of tinned / canned Fish 4 Ever sustainably fished
Tomatoes in many different forms - sun dried, tinned or pureed. Wonderful to use.
From organic sushi ingredients to soba noodles and miso soup.
Organic culinary oils and vinegars to grace your kitchen
Enjoy Steenbergs wholesome and healthy organic green and white teas.
Steenbergs picks its favourite organic black teas from around the world - beautiful Darjeelings and malty Assams.
Organic Fairtrade ground and instant coffee
Wide selection of our favourite loose leaf tea infusers - tea balls and teapots with filters
Caffeine-free and tasty organic herbal teas / infusions and other organic drinks.
It just wouldn't be Steenbergs if we didn't have our own range of delectable organic chai teas, created using gorgeous organic Indian tea and our range of rich organic spices.
Steenbergs delicious loose leaf teas available bulk.
Enjoy these great little gifts for keen cooks - Fairtrade spice stacker or BBQ stacker.
Perfect gifts for tea lovers - tour the world of tea flavours with Steenbergs' selections of organic Fairtrade teas.
organic mini spices to enjoy the flavours of the world.
Designed for keen cooks, we've put together selections of organic herbs and spices that are perfect for various types of cooking - from Thai and Indian through to Baking and Breadmaking.
Steenbergs has picked some of our favourite products to create these wonderful organic treat boxes.
Wonderfully illustrated playing cards from Belgium
Steenbergs' pioneering range of Fairtrade spices.
Steenbergs range of Fairtrade organic tea.
The Fairtrade flavoured sugars and vanilla extract from our home bakery range
From Fairtrade chocolate and golden syrup to Fairtrade coffee and fruit.
Fairtrade cotton cleaning cloths and shopping bags to Fairtrade Footballs.
Simple, practical products with you and the environment in mind.
Tiger Balm and other ointments to help you through everyday bumps and sprains
Biodegradable nappies to organic bubble bath and nit combs
Everything you need for shaving and male grooming
From Echinacea to multivitamins
Natural and ethical Cosmetics, organic cotton and natural hair removal systems.
Suncoat's water and sugar based make-up and nail polishes and removers.
Weleda - the wonderful skin care company that has been creating skin care ranges for plants for the last 80 years.
At Steenbergs, we blend our own organic spices blends to our own recipes. So enjoy Home Baking with Steenbergs organic Fairtrade Mixed Spice or our organic Fairtrade vanilla extract.
From organic dried fruit to yeast and flaked almonds - all your bakery ingredients from Steenbergs.
Organic stone-milled flour from North Yorkshire
all types of organic sugar for baking, also in liquid form such as molasses and syrup.
From recycled foil to unbleached baking paper - lots of ideas for the eco-friendly cook.
Practical and eco-friendly cleaning and household products
Eco household products including daylight bulbs, bird seed and candles
Daylight bulbs and hand dipped candles.
There are 2 main schools of Japanese tea ceremony, the Omotesenke and Urasenke. Urasenke is the more popular. All the ways of performing these tea ceremonies have many features in common, for example -
Both tea houses and tea rooms are usually small, a typical floor size being sufficient for 4 tatami (traditional Japanese woven mats of straw). The smallest tea room may be just 2 mats, and the size of the largest is determined only by the limits of its owner's resources. Building materials and decorations are deliberately simple and rustic.
Guests may be served a light, simple meal called a kaiseki or chakaiseki, followed by sake. They will then return to the waiting shelter until summoned again by the host. If no meal is served, the host will proceed directly to the serving of a small sweet or sweets. Sweets are eaten from special paper called kaishi; each guest carries his or her own, often in a decorative wallet which is tucked into the front of the kimono.
Each utensil, including the tea bowl (chawan), whisk (chasen), and tea scoop (chashaku), is then ritually cleaned in the presence of the guests in a precise order and using prescribed motions. The utensils are placed in a precise arrangement according to the ritual being performed.
When the ritual cleaning and preparation of the utensils is complete, the host will place a measured amount of green tea powder in the bowl and add the appropriate amount of hot water, then whisk the tea using using precise, prescribed movements.
Conversation is kept to a minimum throughout. Guests relax and enjoy the atmosphere created by the sounds of the water and fire, the smell of the incense and tea, and the beauty and simplicity of the tea house and its seasonally appropriate decorations. The bowl is then served to the guest of honour (shokyaku literally the "first guest"), either by the host or an assistant.
Bows are exchanged between the host and guest of honour. The guest then bows to the second guest, and raises the bowl in a gesture of respect to the host. The guest rotates the bowl to avoid drinking from its front, takes a sip, murmurs the prescribed phrase, and then takes 2 or 3 more sips before wiping the rim, rotating the bowl to its original position, and passing it to the next guest with a bow. The procedure is repeated until all guests have taken tea from the same bowl, and the bowl is returned to the host.
In some ceremonies, each guest will drink from an individual bowl, but the order of serving and drinking is the same. If thick tea (koicha) has been served, the host will sometimes prepare thin tea (usuicha) which is served in the same manner.
In some Japanese tea rituals, however, only koicha or usuicha is served. After all the guests have taken tea, the host cleans the utensils. The guest of honour will request that the host allow the guests to examine the utensils, and each guest in turn examines and admires each item, including the water scoop, the tea caddy, the tea scoop, the tea whisk, and, most importantly, the tea bowl. The items are treated with extreme care and reverence as they are frequently priceless, irreplaceable handmade antiques, and guests often use a special brocaded cloth to handle them. The host then collects the utensils, and the guests leave the tea house.
The host bows from the door, and the ceremony is over. A tea ceremony can last between 1 hour and 5 hours, depending on the type of ceremony performed, and the types of meal and tea served.
Obon temae
In Obon Temae, the host places a tea bowl, whisk, tea scoop, chakin and natsume on a special tray; these items are covered by the fukusa. Thin tea is prepared on the tray while kneeling seiza style on the floor.
Ryū-rei
In Ryū-rei, the tea is prepared at a special table. The guests are seated either at the same table (one guest) or at a separate table. The name refers to the practice of performing the first and last bows standing at the entrance to the tea room. In Ryū-rei, there is usually an assistant, who sits behind the host and moves the hosts stool out of the way as needed for standing or sitting. The assistant, also, serves the tea and sweets to the guests.