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Tea time
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Tejas Janet
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Dec 29, 2014 12:16PM

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I did not know it is the only tea growing operation in North America. I also did not know that green, black, and oolong teas all come from the same plant. The difference is in the way it's processed. And they have the coolest machine that harvests the tea. It was a very educational tour. Even on a dreary wet day.
We managed to leave with only three kinds of tea - all black and all loose. Charleston breakfast, governor gray, and cinnamon spice. And a bunch of souvenir-y goodness. Tea spoons, mugs, infusers, etc. they had lots of cute things. I managed to control myself enough to keep away from the tshirts and jewelry. Maybe when I am back home on my laptop I can figure out how to post pics.

Have you used photobucket? I upload pics there and copy them to posts


Bleck!
I like licorice. But apparently not in tea.

Sorry never actually heard of noni but thats the first thing to pop in my head.


One of my tea of the month teas is a chai with star anise which is very licorice-y. I'm not especially fond of it either but I can take it with a little cream and the other flavors.

One of my tea of the month teas is a chai with star anise which is very licorice-y. I'm not especially fond of it either but I can take it with a little cream and the other flavors.


yes, and the noni sounds interesting too.
Nuri is the seaweed you are thinking of, Janice.

Stash makes a Licorice tea. I really like it. I had a friend who used to keep it just for me.
I have a stove top whistling tea kettle too and a glass teapot with the plastic infuser basket for loose tea. I admit that my granddaughter uses it more than I do. The microwave and a tea bag is my go to extent when I get home from work.





I decided to treat myself with a tea today and got this one from Republic of Teas (through amazon though using some gift card $):
http://www.republicoftea.com/lemon-ch...


Next comes your white and oolong teas followed by green tea. Ceylon black tea comes next (so watch this if you after full leaded black tea) followed by Jasmine tea and a specialist tea called Pu-erh tea (not tried this myself but I've heard good things).
Then finally there are the herbal teas which generally have no caffeine and taste like hot squash but I have seen some blends that include green and black teas so check if avoiding caffeine altogether.
And don't forget to give loose leaf teas a try, complete with full pot brewing experiences as this is what tea is all about, the ceremony as well as the drinking.
Enjoy! :-)




I drink normal black tea with soya milk most of the time. When I visited Poland, my friends there introduced me to having tea without milk but with the addition of fruit syrup. I vaguely remember raspberry and loganberry was very nice and they had a spicy orange one too. Our local shop sells quite a bit of Polish produce so I'm able to get a small selection of the flavours so I have that on occasions now.
I really like Earl Gray, Lady Gray, Green Tea, Chai and Dahjeeling too. Not sure on the caffeine content of any of these though.
I used to drink coffee at home and we buy decaff. When we went to Croatia in the summer we drank a lot of coffee there and it was so good. Since coming back I have become a coffee snob so the shop bought coffee just doesn't cut it any more so I've stopped drinking it and only drink tea at home. We have started going out for coffee more now and I'll have a macchiato to get my fix.

Coffee, you want short with about 1//3 coffee, 2/3 milk. Heated, starting of a foam. A microfoam in fact. In a normal cup. Like a tea cup. This is called a flat white. You should all embrace it.
Apparently Starbucks started making this yesterday. They call it a flat top. Apparently it's okay but weak. To quote a well known Aussie over there who was asked to review it - "It's not coffee, but you know. They are giving it a go."
...



Lattes have more milk to coffee. Flat whites have more coffee to milk. Latte's should be layered (coffee on bottom, milk floating on top) as well but no one bothers. And then yes, flat whites shouldn't have a layer of foam on top, but should be slightly foamed so you have a creamier texture to the milk all the way through.
Flat top is made up nonsense to deal with sensitivities that we don't have here in Australia. (the name is nonsense, not the sensitivities). We don't blink at ordering long blacks, short blacks, flat whites. We're talking about coffee, and it describes what we want. We say that in the States and we're likely to get killed.

lol so true.

I love my tea but I still like just one cup of coffee in the morning to wake up. Usually on my long commute to work, then I'll have tea the rest of the day. I don't care for a lot of sweetness in my tea or coffee but have never been able to take either straight (except rare occasions in desperate need of caffeine and/or warmth). I usually use artificial sweetener, habit I've had for many many years. I know, everything causes cancer. I figure something's gonna get me sooner or later. But perhaps I will try some honey with some of my teas... I don't generally care for the aftertaste of sugar (that's how messed up I've let myself become) but maybe honey wouldn't be too bad.
Anyway, it is freakin' cold here in Georgia today so the tea is just the right thing to have. I have tried some if the pu-ehr teas with mixed results. I think of them as being very earthy, not with the kind of brightness of regular tea - maybe it is a lower tannin content? I have one that was gifted to me by way of a business trip to china - I like it best but still not as much as my regular tea. The one from China comes in little pods and I haven't figured out the exact ratio of water to add.
And I love earl gray and lady gray both. Adagio has a lavender gray that is nice if you like lavender. Also an earl gray moonlight which is very nice. When we were at the tea plantation on vacation we bought Governor gray but if it is meant to be a variation on regular earl gray it has escaped me. I think I have spelled all these grays wrong but not changing them now!!

Thank you for explaining this! It sounds like a Misto in Starbucks speak (reformed barista here) - one-half to two-thirds drip coffee, the rest steamed milk, yes? Lattes, on the other hand, are a few oz of espresso with lots of milk.
Number one on the list of things I learned today. ^^

Two espresso shots rest with steamed milk in a tea cup. Lattes are in bigger glasses, with one shot and rest milk.
Ex-barista here too. Although not Starbucks. Australia is the one place in the world Starbucks has failed. Our coffee and cafe culture was too established with Italian and Greek style cafes, that there was no market for sweet and syrupy Starbucks coffee. I believe there are less than 10 shops left in the country, most of them in the international airports.
To highlight how serious we are about coffee in this country, this is our set up at home (although two ex-baristas, Lexx was much better than I ever was and had people come from all over town for his coffee). Please excuse the coffee grinder being such a mess


Getting back to tea in a roundabout way - I ordered a chai the other day and instead of extra syrup they put in four espresso shots! That woke me up quick. -_^

I hate how much milk gets put in coffee here in the UK. I don't like milk that much anyway (which is why I drink soya at home). But I can't do black coffee like I can do black tea.



Lexx used to make hot chocs with soy. The nuttiness worked a treat with the choc. Must say, never tried soy. He was a hard task master though. If you wouldn't drink your own coffee, you weren't allowed to sell it to customers. Entirely agree. But meant many hours working out the machine.
Don't you know it Mariab :P

I didn't liked coffee for ages but started drinking it some months ago. Only with lots of milk though, and perhaps some extra flavour, so lattes or machiato's. The Netherlands is not much into special coffees either, so in most places there's not much choice. I'm lactose-intolerant and can only drink coffee with soy milk (I never had it curdled!), but they only have that in special coffeebars. Luckily there's one at work, although the coffee is not that good, and another one that's really good a 5-10 minute walk from work, and there's going to be one in the city where I live soon. Other than that, I'm stuck to drinking coffee at home, from our Nespresso machine with a milk-heating/foaming thingy.
Books mentioned in this topic
Rob Roy (other topics)The Martian (other topics)