Tea, remembered.
Experience, shaped
with intention.

Tea advisory practice at the intersection of culture, hospitality, and experience design.

An exceptional tea experience creates connection — to one another, to oneself, to place.
Tea — and the art of taking time — is the ultimate luxury.

Maison Haute Feuille works with those for whom tea is an instrument of hospitality.

Hotel · Fine Dining · Bar · Private Client · Spa

SERVICES
01 

Read

DIAGNOSIS

Audit the existing tea service and identify opportunities. Define the role tea can play within the guest experience.

02

Design

COMPOSITION

Compose a tea ritual specific to the place, teas sourced from exceptional producers, objects chosen with care, gestures transmissible to the team.

03

Curate

EXPRESSION

The place, expressed through tea. A complete identity — rare teas, considered objects, and rituals that could belong nowhere else.

Tea audit · Tea producer selection · Tea programmes · Food & tea pairing · Experience design · Teaware & accessories curation · Team training · Bespoke tea rituals

SIGNATURE MOMENTS

Each engagement gives rise to moments that shape perception and memory — woven quietly into the rhythm of a place.

Beige teapot and bowl on a tray in a minimalist room with wooden door frames and soft natural light

ON ARRIVAL

Before the key, before the room — a cup of tea still warm from the kitchen

Stone console table with white ceramic vessels and single white flower in a minimalist interior

TEA & THE CHEF

A tea composed alongside the chef — its notes threaded through each course, present but never announced.

APPROACH

The work begins with listening — to a place, its rhythm, its people.

Each project is born from a conversation — and evolves with the place. Never a preconceived solution.

Tea set with teapot and cup on a tray in a sunlit minimalist corridor with neutral tones
PERSPECTIVE
CURRENT NOTE

The arrival tea ritual is the most underused tool in hospitality

In Michelin-starred service, the amuse-bouche is sacred — a first gesture that sets the register of everything that follows. Hotels understand the welcome drink. Yet the tea moment, which could carry equal weight and far deeper cultural resonance, is almost universally treated as an afterthought: a bag on a tray, a kettle in the room, a line on the breakfast menu.

The arrival tea is not a beverage. It is a declaration. It says: we have thought about this moment. We know who you are. We have prepared something for exactly now. In the most considered hospitality environments, no detail is incidental — and tea, composed with the same intention as a first course, becomes a memory before the guest has even reached their room.

Spring 2026 — Maison Haute Feuille

The right conversation,
at the right moment.

Collaborations are considered individually — with hospitality leaders, chefs, hosts, and select private clients who share a commitment to the quality of every detail.

Hospitality · Gastronomy · Private clients