Rose Garden Parlors
Open intermittently and by special request
A lovely spot for tea for two and small gatherings up to 8. But this entire area, with its interconnected spaces and nooks, also makes a beautiful setting for private parties of up to 25.
Rosas Milagrosas
This room dedicated to Our Lady of Guadalupe celebrates the bold and vibrant lifestyle of Latin America and the momentous event that occurred on the Hill of Tepeyac in Mexico and changed the world forever. Seats up to 7.

Rose & Fig
A little nook for two in honor of Rita of Cascia, who while bedridden, requested her cousin bring her a fig and a rose from her childhood home. Though it was the dead of winter, her cousin was able to find one fully ripened edible fig and one rose growing on a rosebush, which, it is said, still blooms to this very day. Seats 2.

Wondrous Rose
This bright and airy tea parlor evokes the seaside life in the Philippines and the rose petals that are said to mysteriously fall from the sky there as a sign of love from above. Seats up to 4.






The Bridegroom's Garden
Dorothy of Caesarea earned the title of patron saint of gardeners and florists after an angel brought roses and fruit to the man who mockingly requested some fruit from her “bridegroom’s garden” as she was martyred. The miraculous roses spurred a change of heart, and he too ended up dying a martyr’s death. Seats up to 3.
Therese’s Garden
A table for up to eight in a French garden setting in honor of Therese, “The Little Flower,” who practiced doing small things with great love. We like to think she would have loved steeping all her friends’ favorite tea and sitting down with them to enjoy some good conversation. Seats up to 9.




The Queen’s Secret
A little spot for two to have tea under the crown that reminds us of the queen who served the poor against the wishes of the rich. When she was caught sneaking out of the castle to give bread to the hungry, she opened her cloak and roses fell out instead of bread. Seats up to 4.


