My first conscious memory occurred on the lower landing of a staircase that spiraled up four floors of the 14th-century, moat-encircled Gjorslev castle in Denmark.
And now, five decades later, I’m standing on the same spot, this time with a statuesque Danish woman in stylish Japanese casual wear.
“This is roasted and steamed tea from Korea,” Mette Marie Kjaer tells me, offering a pleasant cup of miso-tinged brew.
Ms. Kjaer runs her Asian tea company, Sing Tehus, from a rented wing of the castle, offering tea ceremonies and yoga retreats while maintaining Gjorslev’s status as the oldest continuously inhabited building in Scandinavia.
After half a century of benign neglect following my grandfather’s departure, the castle is hosting not just yoga and tea events, but arts festivals, medieval fairs and even a summer musical theater in its courtyard.
Persons:
Edward Tesdorpf, ” Mette Marie Kjaer, Kjaer, Sing
Locations:
Gjorslev, Denmark, Danish, Korea, Scandinavia