About This Experience
Within the walled gardens of a palace that has welcomed diplomats and dignitaries for over two centuries, this two-hour tea ceremony elevates Morocco's beloved mint tea ritual into an experience of extraordinary refinement and cultural depth. You enter through massive carved cedar doors into a world of manicured gardens where fountains murmur beneath orange and lemon trees, jasmine perfumes the pathways, and peacocks stroll across lawns trimmed to emerald perfection. Your ceremonial tea master -- one of the few remaining practitioners of the royal tea tradition -- welcomes you to a pavilion draped in hand-embroidered silk where a gleaming array of antique silver teapots, hand-painted glasses, and brass trays awaits. The ceremony unfolds over three distinct tea services, each representing a different philosophical dimension of Moroccan hospitality: the first glass is bitter like life, the second is sweet like love, and the third is gentle like death. Between services, the tea master explains the significance of each gesture -- the height of the pour, the number of brewing cycles, the selection of fresh spearmint and Chinese gunpowder green tea. A trio of Andalusian musicians plays classical malouf melodies on oud, violin, and darbuka in the background. Accompanying the tea are silver trays of exquisite palace pastries: gazelle horns filled with almond paste, honey-drenched briouats, sesame chebakia, and fresh fruit from the palace orchards. The ceremony concludes with a guided stroll through the garden, where the history of the palace and its role in Moroccan diplomacy is revealed.