You are not logged in. Login Now
 0-16   17-41   42-66   67-91   92-116   117-141   142-166   167-191   192-216 
 217-229          
 
Author Message
md
The tea item Mark Unseen   Oct 14 17:51 UTC 1995

I'm drinking Twining's China Black at the moment.  I find that
there's a greater variety of flavors in tea than in coffee, barring
the "varietal" coffees now in vogue (Vanilla Fudge Nut Honey Almond
Cream Hazelnut, etc.).  Anyone else use tea as a drug?  What are
your favorite kinds?  Any anti-bag fanatics here?  Sun tea fans?
Please share.
229 responses total.
omni
response 1 of 229: Mark Unseen   Oct 14 22:21 UTC 1995

  I favor Twinings Prince of Wales, Lapsang souchong, and Earl Grey. I don't
mind bags, nor tap water, just as long as it's served pronto with lots of
lemon and sugar.
popcorn
response 2 of 229: Mark Unseen   Oct 15 05:16 UTC 1995

I seem to do raspberry leaf tea, with loose leaves in a tea ball, to help
with PMS.  I dunno why it works, but it does seem to help.  Maybe it's
psychosomatic.  At some point when I asked about what's in raspberry
leaves, Rane found some information that said there are mild analgesics
in them.  Maybe that's why it works?  It works a lot better than, say,
ibuprofen or aspirin, so I think there's more to it than just the analgesic
effects.

Other than that, I'll often order herbal tea at a restaurant.  It's warm,
and a lot easier for the restaurant to get right than coffee is.  Right now
I think I'm probably awake because I had some Twining's Earl Grey tea at
a restaurant about 2-3 hours ago.  It was good.  I was sleepy.  I'm not
sleepy now, but, judging by the hour, I should be.
eeyore
response 3 of 229: Mark Unseen   Oct 15 15:57 UTC 1995

i'm really not a  big tea fanatic (o.k., so i hate the stuff...:), but there is
one that i've found that i absolutely adore....it's a hot cinnamon tea that
i get from work, eithr in bags or loose...it's best with too much lemon, and
some sugar.  :)
davel
response 4 of 229: Mark Unseen   Oct 15 18:23 UTC 1995

My own choice is almost any mint herb tea.  I'm a pro-bag fanatic, where
my *own* consumption is concerned.
popcorn
response 5 of 229: Mark Unseen   Oct 16 13:49 UTC 1995

I worry about the bleaches they use in tea bags, even though we're probably
consuming them in such small quantities that they're harmless.  They're not
harmless to the environment.  But teabags are sure a lot more convenient than
doing the tea-ball thing, so I end up using them at work and restaurants.
md
response 6 of 229: Mark Unseen   Oct 16 15:07 UTC 1995

I heard a story once about a British tea-taster: "Hmmm... Oolong.
Ceylon number two. A touch of red Hangchow.  And, of course, the bag."
md
response 7 of 229: Mark Unseen   Oct 16 15:15 UTC 1995

I don't know what tea has in it apart from a little caffein, but 
it wakes me up and clears my head much better than coffee does.  
(Might be psychosomatic, as popcorn says, but I'm not arguing.) 

If I'm making a whole pot, which I seldom do, I like to use loose 
tea and a tea ball.  Otherwise, bags are just fine.  In addition 
to Twining's China Black, I like Bigelow's Constant Comment.  
Constant Comment is *the* thing to drink when you come in from 
raking leaves on a chilly autumn day.  (Remember chilly autumn 
days?) 

I've always loved iced tea.  We have a "Mr. Coffee" iced tea 
maker that makes a half-gallon of any kind of iced tea you like, 
ready to drink in fifteen minutes.  

Some herb teas are wonderful.  Blueberry leaf is one of my 
favorites.  Chamomile tea has, for me, a relaxing and nostalgic 
quality, like bringing a warm sunlit meadow indoors.  Also, some 
of the Celestial Seasonings blends, like "Emperor's Delight" or 
"Autumn Harvest," are okay.  But many commercial herb tea blends 
are bulked out with hibiscus flowers, for some reason, and you 
might even find hibiscus flowers to be the primary ingredient in 
some tea blends that don't have hibiscus in their name.  

Milk: pro or con?  I'm against it in tea.  Makes me sick to my 
stomach, in fact.
simcha
response 8 of 229: Mark Unseen   Oct 16 18:18 UTC 1995

I love tea, and I love coffee, too.  For tea, I prefer Twining's
Earl Grey or English Breakfast, either brewed in my automatic drip 
coffee pot (that gold coffee filter is easier to clean than the
balls, and we end up with no leaves!).  I find that we make the
tea on the strong side; I like it straight and my husband adds
unrefined sugar.

Pregnant I drink Celestial seasonings mandarin orange or mint
medley.  (Beware...I think it's bigelow's mint that is flavored
tea, complete with caffeine).  For those, I use bags.  My kids
drink apple orchard (again, celest. seas. caff free).  They aren't
allowed to have soda, so they like making this or hot chocolate 
for themselves.
davel
response 9 of 229: Mark Unseen   Oct 16 19:53 UTC 1995

I have yet to find a tea ball or strainer that doesn't leave me feeling
like I'm drinking sawdust.
iggy
response 10 of 229: Mark Unseen   Oct 16 21:23 UTC 1995

i like irish breakfast tea, english breakfast, darjeeling, and
the regular ol' red rose orange pekoe.
i just bought some pure peppermint herb tea, which my cat seems to
like more than i do.
once i tried to drink catnip tea around a cat...heh.. i think that
is something everyone should try once.
omni
response 11 of 229: Mark Unseen   Oct 17 05:42 UTC 1995

  I can drink it with milk, I prefer cream, with sugar. But usually it's
lemon and sugar, or just sugar. 

 I keep all my teabags in mon big ziploc bag so that they can intermingle;
gets pretty interesting after a few months.
eeyore
response 12 of 229: Mark Unseen   Oct 18 21:59 UTC 1995

we have a glas teapot at work that apperntly works wonderfully....there is a 
middlei cylendar that has verrrrrry thin slits to hold the tea in, and let the
water out...one of these day's i'm gonna try it...:)
aaron
response 13 of 229: Mark Unseen   Oct 22 18:10 UTC 1995

Last time I was in England, I discovered that there is a quaint custom
of asking, "Would you like a cup of tea," before your host brings you a
cup of tea.  The question is pro forma.  Your answer, "Yes," "No," or
"A giant purple monster ate my boxer shorts," will inevitably result in
your being brought a nice, hot cup of tea.

Why not use a proper English tea pot, with built-in strainer, and deal
with the stray tea leaf?  You'll be happier.
eeyore
response 14 of 229: Mark Unseen   Oct 23 17:46 UTC 1995

thats what this glass pot is....t's like corning ware, and very strong.
glenda
response 15 of 229: Mark Unseen   Oct 26 02:20 UTC 1995

We got one of those glass teapots as a wedding gift.  You put the loose tea in
the middle cylinder and pour boiling water through it.  Ours has a glass base
with an indentation in it that holds a small metal cup for a voltive candle
to keep the tea warm.  Whenever we can both decide on the same tea we use it,
makes wonderful tea and gently keeps it warm.  However, we usually don't
agree on which tea to drink at the moment and so we have several tea ball,
strainer thingies, special spoon shaped tea ball devices so that we can each
make a cup of whatever.  (STeve loves to go and pick out a selection of teas
at the People's Food Co-op.  Makes live interesting cause he doesn't always
label the bags and you have to guess which is what by smelling them.)

This is the time of year that I start thinking about Russian Tea (orange, lemon
spiced tea) and will probably make up a batch (as soon as I find the box that
is hiding my recipe box or we get a working monitor so that I can access my
computer recipe files).  Will post the recipe when I do.
eeyore
response 16 of 229: Mark Unseen   Oct 26 15:11 UTC 1995

we just got our noel tea in at work.....it's good sstuff, even tho the smell is
sorta like bubblegum...:)
 0-16   17-41   42-66   67-91   92-116   117-141   142-166   167-191   192-216 
 217-229          
Response Not Possible: You are Not Logged In
 

- Backtalk version 1.3.30 - Copyright 1996-2006, Jan Wolter and Steve Weiss