Sun Hao used tea instead of wine
"Three Kingdoms" written by Chen Shou of the Jin Dynasty recorded such an incident:
Every time Sun Hao, the king of Wu, held a large banquet, Sir, guests must drink at least seven liters of wine. Even if they don’t drink it completely into their mouths, they must pour it out and drink it with a light. There was a man named Wei Yao who could only drink two liters. Sun Hao gave him special treatment. He was worried that he would make a fool of himself due to his excessive drinking, so he secretly gave him tea instead of wine.
This incident appears in the book's "Biography of Wu Zhi Wei Yao". Wei Yao's nickname was Hongsi, and his original name was Wei Zhao. In order to avoid the disobedience of Sima Zhao, the father of Emperor Wu of Jin Dynasty, Chen Shou changed his name to Wei Yao. He was a native of Yunyang, Wu County. He was highly regarded by Sun Hao for his erudition.
But Sun Hao was a tyrant. He was the fourth and last monarch of Wu State. Before he came to the throne, he was named Marquis of Wucheng. After the death of Marquis Jing, he succeeded him as the monarch. He was sexually addicted. Drinking, cruel and easy to kill. When he admired Wei Yao quite a lot, he could secretly cheat during the banquet and secretly replace Wei Yao's wine with tea, so that he could pass the "drinking test". But when Wei Yao disobeyed his wishes, he turned against him and drew his sword in response.
Wei Yao is upright and upright. He can secretly play some tricks at banquets, such as "stealing a pillar" or "secretly crossing the old warehouse", but when it comes to national affairs, one is one and the other is two, and he must seek truth from facts. . So when he was ordered to record the deeds of Sun He, the father of Sun Hao, Prince of Nanyang, he wrote some shameful things in a straight line, which offended Sun Hao and was beheaded and died.
However, "replacing tea with wine" is still widely used by people today, and can be regarded as a generous and elegant thing. This is both Sun Hao and Wei Yao. Unexpected.
Reference materials Chen Shou's "Three Kingdoms"