CaminaTea Shop

Celine Glasser has been a tea drinker since she was 7 years old. She is not the only fan of the world’s most consumed beverage after water: “Six out of 10 people in France drink tea, which makes it the second most popular drink in the country. As well, 50% of the French drink herbal teas, a healthy drink that is very coveted and in tune with the times,” explains Celine, a native of Roquebrune-Cap-Martin.

Celine has always kept an eye out for tea infusions with unique and delicious flavours. Then, one day during Covid lockdown, as she was about to place an order with a large tea house it hit her: “Why not create infusions myself?”

WATCH VIDEO ABOVE: Celine Glasser explains what you’ll find at her delightful CaminaTea shop (in French).

Together with her husband, Christophe (deputy mayor of Roquebrune-Cap-Martin who in June was announced to replace Herve Aeschbach as the new director of Fight AIDS Monaco), the pair created CaminaTea, an elegant brand representing the French Riviera with values and flavours that highlight the local heritage.

The couple kept their days jobs and in the middle of launching the brand, Celine became pregnant with child number three and took maternity leave. “I left my job as a real estate loan broker in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin in October 2023 to open CaminaTea at 33 rue du Moulin. I have devoted myself full time to the business ever since.”

The quaint maison de thé, which has a few seats inside and out, offers all the tea you can imagine – green, white, oolong, black teas, rooibos, maté, matcha, infusions and fruit infusions. Celine explains they only work with high-quality leaves from, mainly, China, Japan, Thailand, India and South Africa, and that their teas and infusions have no artificial or synthetic flavours, only natural flavours extracted from fruits and flowers. “We do not grind the tea, we add pieces of fruit, flowers and petals.”

Celine, who is as charming as she is knowledgeable, adds that each of their pots or tea bags provides you with all the instructions to make the perfect cup of tea. “The quality of water and temperature are very important, and each tea has its own infusion time. For example, green tea is two minutes while black tea is three. But the dosage is also important.”

CaminaTea’s first recipes were local flavours, like the Fougasse Mentonnaise (anise, almond, orange blossom) and A Stroll at Cap Martin (papaya, goji berry, peach, fig and marigold). “We tested the teas on our family and friends who immediately fell in love with them, so we created a website and posted on Instagram and Facebook. Our customers regularly send us photos of their cup of tea from all over France, telling us things like, ‘Celine, I’m drinking my delicious Balade au Cap Martin tea and I remember my vacation in Roquebrune-Cap-Martin.’

“We were contacted for partnerships which very quickly gave us great visibility throughout France and Belgium and at the same time, we developed our local presence with resellers, restaurants and hotels.”

In Monaco, CaminaTea can be found at the new Joël Robuchon Deli, at Novotel Monte Carlo, as well as at the Monaco Yacht Club. There are three infusions dedicated especially to the Principality – the newly added Rocher du Monaco with ingredients all from organic farming (coconut, natural coconut flavour, vanilla extract), Monaco by Night (a nod to the Monaco fair with apple, almond, cinnamon, safflower) and Merry Christmas in Monte Carlo (apple, orange peel, cinnamon pieces, almonds, rose petals, cloves, vanilla bourbon).

Celine makes it easy if you are looking for gifts made in the region (see photo gallery above), the shop has more than 60 teas, many with local names – Swimming in Golfe Bleue, Sweet Roquebrune Night, Christmas Magic in Menton, Croisette Starlet, Kisses from Menton – with the option of travel size tins or personalised labels. There’s also a 10% discount when you bring your own tin for refills.

Camina is Celine’s nickname. “My grandmother often looked after me and my cousins when we were kids and when we were in her way she would say, ‘Caminaaaa!’ It’s an Italian expression from the word camminare, which means Advance! Go! My stepfather, who had moved to the region at that time, found this expression as funny as it was endearing, and he called me that from when I was very young.

“It seemed obvious to call my brand Camina as a tribute to all the people I love. This name can only bring us luck.”

CaminaTea at 33 rue du Moulin in Carnolès is open:
Tuesday & Thursday 9:30 am – 12:30 pm and 2:30 – 6:30 pm
Friday 1 pm – 6:30 pm
Saturday 9 am – 12:30 pm

Article first published June 16, 2024.

MonacoPride 2024

In the early hours of June 28, 1969, nine New York City police officers raided the Stonewall Inn, a gay club located in Greenwich Village. A search warrant in hand authorised them to investigate the illegal sale of alcohol, and – in accordance with a New York criminal statute –arrest people who were not wearing at least three articles of gender-appropriate clothing.

WATCH VIDEO ABOVE: Annette Anderson delivers spectacular speech at MonacoPride 2024.

Activist and photographer Mark Segal, 18 at the time, was at the LGBTQ+ hang out that day. He recently described the event to Katie Couric Media, saying it was “an ordinary night” dancing at the Stonewall Inn when the police “poured in, threatening and beating patrons … but instead of complying like they normally did when these altercations occurred, the crowd decided to fight back.”

He described, ‘“It was the most horrific, frightening scene I had ever been part of. My first reaction in my head was, ‘Oh gee, we better call the police’ – and then I realised these are the police. Realising that we gay people can be treated like this was probably one of the most depressing times in my life. [It felt like] no one cared about us, not even the police.”

The police barricaded themselves inside and called for backup as some 400 people rioted and set fire to the bar. The flames were extinguished in time but the riots continued for six days. This incident became known as the Stonewall Uprising, the tipping point for the Gay Liberation Movement in the US.

In 1970, a year after the Stonewall Inn raid, activists commemorated the anniversary with what was the first gay pride march. Today, the Stonewall Uprising continues to be honoured worldwide with Pride Month in June.

In Monaco, across Pride Month, the Barclays Private Bank building lights up in the colours of the rainbow. It was Barclays Monaco who, in 2022, collaborated with Fight Aids Monaco and Stars’n’Bars to create MonacoPride, to provide an opportunity to educate Monaco decision makers about LGBTQI+ rights and to change the outdated laws that create serious hardships for many families of people working and living in Monaco.

Speakers Monserrat Marchchetti (Barclays Private Bank Monaco), Hervé Aeschbach, (Fight Aids Monaco) Annette Anderson (former manager of Stars’n’Bars) with Camille Gottlieb (representing her mother Princess Stephanie), Christophe Glasser (Fight Aids Monaco), Lorenzo Turco (Barclays Private Bank Monaco) and (Marina Ceyssac (High Commissioner for Protection of Rights).

Every year since, on June 20, MonacoPride brings together residents and workers to celebrate the LGBTQI+ community. The annual cocktail continues to grow larger, more dynamic, and this third edition invited an unprecedented 150 guests to the new port restaurant, Marius.

It’s a party with a purpose, a reflection on the year’s achievements – like the welcome creation of the new Mon’Arc En Ciel Association – but also to focus on the road ahead as Monaco is consistently rated among the worst counties in Europe in terms of LGBTQI+ civil rights. 

Hervé Aeschbach, director of Fight Aids Monaco (WATCH VIDEO BELOW), pointed out how there are no spousal rights for widows or widowers of a spouse in a same-sex couple legally married in other countries and same sex families who are denied medical benefits for their children.

In a riveting speech, Annette Anderson thanked the “many courageous members of the Conseil National as well as the [Marina Ceyssac] High Commissioner for Protection of Rights who have fought for equal rights for the Rainbow Community” but went further to say, “It is OUR responsibility to fight for OUR rights.”

Mon’Arc en Ciel cofounders Isabelle and Anais Berruti, Cynthia Salvanhac and Laure Bernardi.

Annette also commended the Isabelle and Anais Berruti, Laure Bernardi and Cynthia Salvanhac, the thirtysomething cofounders of the country’s first LGBTQIA+ association, Mon’Arc en Ciel

When Mon’Arc en Ciel launched a month ago, Anais said in an interview, “Monaco is small, people talk. I have never been uncomfortable saying that I’m in a couple with a woman. But we are young. We are not the same generation as older people who have maybe had different experiences.

“Some individuals feel there’s a risk of being regarded negatively, so they keep quiet. We understand, and that’s why we created this association. To tell these people that, even if they don’t want to speak out, the association will do it for them.

Article first published June 21, 2024. Photos and videos copyright Good News, Monaco.