SadLuther ,

I basically take everything 'black' with two sugars, I never put milk in my tea. And I'm particularly partial to Earl Grey and peppermint.

Also, Demerara sugar FTW.

How is the iced Grey? Doesn't sound like my cup of tea (tee-hee) but your choice is very intriguing...

MacedWindow OP ,
@MacedWindow@lemmy.world avatar

Its great! I saw the little "try over ice!" on the box and never looked back. I reccomend an extra tea bag and steeping a bit longer, then pouring over more ice than you think you need. You want to flash cool it. I dont add anything to preserve the strong flavor, but I know many throw in some sugar.

WR5 ,

American raised in the Southeast checking in: put tea bags in kettle of water on stove, heat until the kettle whistles, pour into 1 gallon container with sugar, mix while still hot, and finally place in refrigerator for storage.

When its 78 in February and won't cool down until November, having a nice, cold glass of sweet tea is lovely.

KingThrillgore ,
@KingThrillgore@lemmy.ml avatar

Infuser in hot water for two minutes, add cream and sugar after removing infuser

Bebo ,

Place a green tea bag in a mug of hot water. Cover with a plate and leave it for two minutes. Remove the tea bag. Done.

xor ,

Bag of breakfast tea, boiling water, splash of milk

There's no improvement to be made on perfection

PilferJynx ,

Electric kettle to boil 2 cups of water.
4 twinnings earl Grey to a pitcher
Steep tea for about 5 minutes
1 large spoonful of lemon iced tea mix
Fill pitcher up to full
Chill and serve

devtoi ,
  1. Heat water to 70 degrees using electric kettle.
  2. Put loose leaf green tea in a strainer thingy. Leave room for it to expand 4 times as big
  3. Swoosh some of the 70 degree water around a glass kettle to heat it up, pour it out.
  4. Put strainer with tea in glass kettle.
  5. Pour water over tea.
  6. Let sit for a few minutes.
  7. Drink.
  8. Reuse the same leafs throughout the day using same steps.

I usually use unflavored green tea with decent quality. Very different from tea bags.

ShadowCatEXE ,
@ShadowCatEXE@lemmy.world avatar

Just a green tea bag in a mug with hot water. I leave the tea bag in the whole time. No milk or sugar. Sometimes I’ll drink celestial herbal tea, but it’s very strong if you leave the tea bag in too long.

TenderfootGungi ,

Boiling water. Kettle at home and Kuereg with no pod at work. A half teaspoon of sugar. A bit of soy milk. And usually ice.

Edit: not as common, but 90 seconds in microwave works fine.

stealth_cookies ,

I put loose leaf tea (usually a blended black tea such as English breakfast) in a basket in my mug and then pour boiling water from my kettle over it and let it sit for about 3-4 minutes. Remove the tea and add a bit of sugar and milk, stir and enjoy. I've got one of those "smart" mugs so my tea stays hot for the entire time I'm drinking it.

alcoholicorn ,

Big pinch from a cheap 1 kilo bag of black tea, in a pint glass, strain into other pint glass.

Mostly drink coffee, but some days I want something more relaxing.

jivandabeast ,

Cold brew over night, unsweetened

nayminlwin ,

I mostly drink Shan tea which has added toasted sticky rice flavour and a very strong black tea with milk and sugar, the way indians introduced back in colonial time.

Shan tea is simple. Just put it in a flask with hot water, wait a bit and drink slowly.

Black tea with milk has to be brewed hard though. Tannins are part of the flavour. I personally brew for about 15 to 30 mins. Actual tea stalls brew much longer, like hours long. Also tea leaves to water ratio is quite low as well. The tea needs to be fairly tart. Then we add evaporated milk and sweetener. A serving should be quite small because the tea is strong. May be around 100-150ml.

kindenough ,
@kindenough@kbin.social avatar

We have a hot waterdispenser for tea, we drink tea day and night. It saves electricity over a normal watercooker and it is convenient.

Fresh mint or fennel, ginger, camille, or tea in a baggy, earl grey I like best

JackiesFridge ,
@JackiesFridge@lemmy.world avatar

Loose jasmine tea in a tea ball, boil water on the stove in a kettle, pour over the tea & steep 3 minutes (more than that and it goes bitter). Remove tea ball, add a small spash of milk & enjoy.

My mum uses tea bags and adds the milk right over the bag as it steeps. For some reason that enrages me, so I turn away when she's up to that nonsense.

  • All
  • Subscribed
  • Moderated
  • Favorites
  • random
  • asklemmy@lemmy.ml
  • test
  • worldmews
  • mews
  • All magazines