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Brandi
08-29-2007, 05:29 AM
Google Teastick! This thing is soooo cool. My friend had one and I fell in love with it. My little tea holders always break and seem so cheap. These little things have nothing that can break AND the holes are so small you don't get little bits of tea in your cup. http://www.plymouthtea.com/tenewit.html they are on sale here. But google so you can see how they work. I am buying a bunch for christmas presants.

emily_in_nc
08-29-2007, 07:24 AM
Hey, those are great! My step-mother has a farm and is always giving those of us in the family great herbal tea blends she makes, but I hadn't found anything quite as cool as this for steeping it. Think I'll get one for her and for me!

Thanks!
Emily

Thorn
08-29-2007, 09:00 AM
Thanks for the post....that looks *so* much better than the teaballs I use. I can see a purchase on the horizon.

five one
08-29-2007, 09:47 AM
Ha! I thought this thread was going to be sand sculpture pictures of the Mad Hatter's tea party :D. I seem to remember you saying you'd been doing Alice in Wonderland in Colorado.

It does look like a handy gadget, though. Think I'll be ordering one soon.

Torrilin
08-29-2007, 10:35 AM
I tend to prefer large infusers. I have the bigger, full size teapot version of this one, since I easily go through a pot or two of tea a day.

jillm
08-29-2007, 11:38 AM
I got this from adagio tea--

http://www.adagio.com/images3/products/ingenuiTEA_teapot.jpg
You put your leaves in, pour in the boiling water. When it's done steeping just place the pot on the cup and the tea pours through straining the leaves.

I've used mine 3-4 times a day since I got it in early spring. Love it! Love tea... green tea...yum!

jillm

teawoman
08-29-2007, 11:38 AM
Oooo! me! me! Very cool. :cool: :D

MomOnBike
08-29-2007, 03:29 PM
In my endless quest for a good infuser, I picked one up in Philadelphia this spring. I'm in love. If you're a tea person, yeah, get one.

Blueberry
08-29-2007, 04:44 PM
I'm a definite tea person (and an admitted tea snob), and I didn't really like these. They didn't seem to give enough room for the tea to expand, and the let smaller leaf particles into the tea. I wonder if they've improved them since I tried them....

Emily - A Southern Season in Chapel Hill had them a year or so ago - they might still (and they have a large selection of other yummy stuff in any case...)

Brandi
08-30-2007, 05:51 AM
Ha! I thought this thread was going to be sand sculpture pictures of the Mad Hatter's tea party :D. I seem to remember you saying you'd been doing Alice in Wonderland in Colorado.

It does look like a handy gadget, though. Think I'll be ordering one soon.
Sorry! I will post pic's as soon as I get a chance next week.

margo49
08-30-2007, 11:27 AM
Don't you get an off taste ? Does the metal stain?
I'm a tea freak but prefer to strain as I pour.

ny biker
03-10-2016, 10:52 AM
[bump!]

Please indulge my dumb question! I am a tea drinker, but always with tea bags rather than loose tea (except for long-ago visits to London, when I poured the tea they gave me at the restaurant through a strainer). My neighbor recently ordered a bunch of different kinds of loose tea and she very kindly gave some to me. She also lent me a strainer, a little metal ball on a chain and one of the IngenuiTea cups that JillM posted about above (so many years ago :)). I plan to buy something so I can return the gadgets to her -- I'm leaning toward this because it seems simple, will fit in a drawer and is made by a good company:

http://www.bedbathandbeyond.com/store/product/oxo-good-grips-reg-twisting-tea-ball/1040212128?Keyword=oxo+tea+infuser

I generally make tea one cup at a time by filling my mug with tap water and heating it up in the microwave. I really don't have time or patience for anything more complex than that. I do have a few large mugs which I sometimes use, and they hold 2-3 times as much as a normal mug. But regardless of the size of the mug, I make one mug at a time and that's it.

Anyway here's the dumb question -- I have NO idea how to make tea with these loose leaves. No idea how much tea to use per serving. When I do an internet search I find way too much detail about the type of water to use and complicated charts with brewing times for different varieties. I think my neighbor gave me black tea (four different flavors to try). It's definitely not green.

Every time I see her she asks if I've tried the tea yet, so I need to try it soon. Can anyone give me simple instructions? Is there such a thing as a simple way to make tea with loose leaves??

Thanks very much!!!

OakLeaf
03-10-2016, 11:56 AM
I'd strongly recommend a basket rather than ball type strainer. Tea leaves expand when they get wet, and once they do, they choke water circulation out of a ball strainer. Something like this (http://www.rishi-tea.com/product/loose-tea-infuser-basket/brewing-accessories). Any kitchen store and many coffee/tea shops have them.

Elsewhere on Rishi Tea's site, you can click on any tea they sell and get the brewing instructions. Yep, it's simple. Especially with black tea, that's brewed with boiling water. The only thing that makes green and white tea slightly trickier is getting the water temperature right. (I've learned the sound that water makes in my electric kettle makes when it gets to 180°F, the temperature for brewing the mid-grade Sencha that's my daily tea.)

I also have a pump-type thermal bottle (like they keep hot water and coffee in some restaurants). So I'll heat a kettle full of water, dump it into the bottle, and then brew my tea one cup at a time. (Can't really recommend the combo bottles, the ones that both heat water and maintain the temperature with vacuum insulation - every one I've seen boils the water first then lets the temperature drop. That boils the oxygen out of the water, which you don't want with green or white tea, plus it means you have to set it up at night for the water to be green tea temperature by morning. But, if you'll only be drinking black tea and keeping the water just below 212°F, that might be an option for you.)

Extra simple method that doesn't require any accessories: put tea leaves and hot water into a measuring cup, infuse for the specified time, then strain through any kitchen strainer into your mug. That's how I brew herbal teas, so I don't mess up the flavor in my green tea basket.

Beware though: once you taste good tea, it's hard to go back. Stuff isn't cheap. And a metal cylinder of tea leaves will get your suitcase searched every. single. trip.

Blueberry
03-10-2016, 03:47 PM
This (http://www.amazon.com/Finum-Brewing-Basket-medium-black/dp/B000I68NCS) is my favorite basket.

I concur with Oak on the basket suggestion. I'm a fellow tea snob. :-) Though, I have to confess, I love my insulated keep warm gadget. I don't notice the lack of O2, and the convenience is worth it for me. But that's far from the simple solution for you.

Simple Instructions for Black Tea: boil the water (in a pan or a kettle or something - can be hard to do in the microwave). Pour over the leaves. Start with 1 tsp a cup (8oz). If it's really dense (little pieces), use less. If it's really fluffy (big leaves), use more. Remove them in about 4:30 for most black teas (darjeelings are odd - if it feels like you have a mouth of cotton at that, you probably have one and need to steep for a lot less time). There are different guides, and you can adjust to your taste - but that's where I start with new black teas.

VeganBikeChick
03-10-2016, 04:27 PM
Speaking of brewed teas, does anyone have a commuter cup for tea they recommend? I have a Kleen Kanteen but don't like drinking my tea out of it. I'd prefer something non-breakable (i.e, NOT ceramic) as I'm a total klutz.

Eden
03-10-2016, 06:13 PM
I have a Thermos commuter bottle. It is fantastic. It keeps my tea hot, like seriously really hot all day long. The all stainless one is better than the colored ones, which have a plastic skin on them. I bought my husband the blue one and I swear it's not quite as good.

OakLeaf
03-10-2016, 06:47 PM
I have a stainless steel insulated travel mug, just a cheap one that my dentist gave out as a promotional item a few years ago. Lots of different companies make them. I still get some off taste from the plastic lid, but it's better than a whole plastic mug.

rebeccaC
03-11-2016, 03:12 AM
Simple Instructions for Black Tea: boil the water (in a pan or a kettle or something - can be hard to do in the microwave). Pour over the leaves. Start with 1 tsp a cup (8oz). If it's really dense (little pieces), use less. If it's really fluffy (big leaves), use more. Remove them in about 4:30 for most black teas (darjeelings are odd - if it feels like you have a mouth of cotton at that, you probably have one and need to steep for a lot less time). There are different guides, and you can adjust to your taste - but that's where I start with new black teas.

I learned this method for green tea from a Chinese girl friend in college….i bring some good bottled spring water to a boil, pour it into my yixing teapot and wait a minute+ (depending on the leaves being used) and then fill the teacup/s I’m using and discard what little water is left. then I add the amount of tea wanted to the teapot and pour the water from the cups into the pot and steep. I’ve brought down the temperature of the water to match the type of green tea, prewarmed the teapot and cups and have just enough tea for the cups wanted.