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What is your favourite type of tea? 
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English Breakfast and Twinings Everyday are what I tend to have at home. I do like the odd cup of Assam.

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Fri Feb 12, 2010 8:11 am
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Yorkshire Tea for me please.

Ben, was this what you were after:

Hugh Fearnley-Wittingstall wrote:
Now, to make my tea, I need two good-sized mugs. I boil the kettle. The hot water goes into one mug first, stays for a few seconds so the mug is heated, then goes into the second mug. The tea bag goes into the first, hot, mug, boiling water is poured in, to within a couple of millimetres of the top, and the two mugs, one containing brewing tea, and the other containing hot water, are left to stand. After about five minutes, the mug of brewed tea is placed in the sink, where some new hot water (freshly re-boiled) from the kettle, is sloshed into it, so it overflows by about half a mug. This is to stop the well-brewed tea being too strong. The full-to-overflowing mug is now tilted a little bit, so it spills out enough tea to allow room for some milk.
Remember the second mug, full of the hot (now not so hot, but still quite hot) water that was used to warm the first mug? That is now emptied. The tea bag is fished out from the first 'brewing' mug, and placed in the bottom of the empty 'warm' mug, where a small splash of milk is poured over it. The effect of the hot tea bag, and still-warm mug, is to take the chill off the milk - and impregnate it with a mild tea flavour. To encourage both these objectives, the mug is picked up and swirled, put down for a few seconds, picked up and swirled again, and left to stand for a short while longer. The tea-coloured, warm milk is now poured from tea-bag mug to brew mug, which is given a stir.
The resulting colour is observed. A little more milk may be necessary, in which case it will go via the still-warm tea bag mug, into the brew mug. When the colour is exactly right, I will stir in exactly one rounded teaspoonful of golden caster sugar. The tea, which at this point is still far too hot to drink, will now be left to stand for at least five minutes, before a sip is attempted.
Incidentally, my tea of choice is Clipper's Organic, and has been for some years now. Ridgeways Fair Trade is an acceptable alternative, and in other people's houses 'breakfast' teas, 'afternoon' teas and big brand builders' teas are always preferable to varietals. I no longer drink Earl Grey, ever. I sometimes drink Lapsang Souchong, but only after four o'clock.

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Fri Feb 12, 2010 8:22 am
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On a day to day basis I have Co-op Fair Trade (for ethical reasons) tea, but I will have one of the Twinings specialities as an occasional treat.

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Fri Feb 12, 2010 8:32 am
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+1 for Assam.

Although, my missus brought back some Harrods branded teas, the last time she was in London. The English breakfast and Afternoon teas are very nice - not so much the Earl Grey.

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Fri Feb 12, 2010 9:06 am
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^^^ fussy and unefficient

i drink coop fairtrade everyday tea usually. I do enjoy some Chai every now and then


Fri Feb 12, 2010 9:19 am
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forquare1 wrote:
I seem to recall Alex posted a method to create the 'perfect' cup of tea back on the Dennis boards...It would be interesting to read that again...
The spiced winter tea tasted a lot like Chai tea, which I also quite like.

I think that was me. :D

http://www.pcpro.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=290663

This one I think

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Fri Feb 12, 2010 9:21 am
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Earl Gray, Black

I now have a proper tea pot at work and my own loose lef tea so I can have better tea than that which come out of the machine - which is a hot brown liquid of indeterminate origin – not 100% sure if it makes any difference if you ask it for Tea, Coffee or Hot Chocolate – oh yes wait a min the hot choc does have fairy liquid in it as its frothy!

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Fri Feb 12, 2010 9:30 am
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hifidelity2 wrote:
Earl Gray, Black

I now have a proper tea pot at work and my own loose lef tea so I can have better tea than that which come out of the machine - which is a hot brown liquid of indeterminate origin – not 100% sure if it makes any difference if you ask it for Tea, Coffee or Hot Chocolate – oh yes wait a min the hot choc does have fairy liquid in it as its frothy!

Machine tea is so variable. In the past I have come across such tea that is undrinkable, bordering on British Rail standard. The hot chocolate was always the safe option, though the machine versions are getting better.

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Fri Feb 12, 2010 9:39 am
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I gave up drinking 'black' tea some years ago, very bad for you (and stains the teeth). These days the tea I mostly drink is Twinings Craberry, Raspberry and Elderfower. Very refreshing.

I also rarely drink coffee but my opinion is when I do it has to be good. So I largely avoid high street coffee shops as most of the time they really don't put all that much care into it. At home, I have a rather expensive coffee machine (a gaggia classic) and I use Jamaican Blue Mountain ground coffee, which I get from a coffee/tea merchants in an old arcade in Wigan of all places, who source all their own produce direct from growers. I've no idea how they stay in business. However the coffee you end up with if you start with the best quality coffee beans you can find, make it yourself and do it properly makes your Starbucks or Caffe Nero stuff taste like mud.

Sorry, I went off on one there a bit didn't I?

Jon


Last edited by jonbwfc on Fri Feb 12, 2010 1:11 pm, edited 1 time in total.



Fri Feb 12, 2010 9:50 am
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forquare1 wrote:
it said something about leaving the tea bag to stand for two minutes and not bashing it against the side of the mug...


That's pretty obvious though! That said, tea should always be made in a pot. I don't particularly have a favourite, myself.

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Fri Feb 12, 2010 9:54 am
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No-one's made any Hitch Hiker's references yet, so I won't either.

We have the world's most disreputable teapot, black as pitch inside from all the tannins. Into it goes two Co-op Dividend 99 tea bags, followed by boiling water. The bags are mashed gently against the side of the pot to get the water into them, then left to stand for between four and seven minutes.

A splash of milk in the bottom of each mug, and then the tea is poured after a final swish with the spoon.

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Fri Feb 12, 2010 10:02 am
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Rintons tea.. mmm lovely and strong :D
failing that when the missus and I are feeling posh, loose brakfast tea from Babbibgtons tea rooms. The best tea room in the world 8-) though a bit expensive to pop down for a cuppa.

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Fri Feb 12, 2010 10:03 am
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HeatherKay wrote:
A splash of milk in the bottom of each mug, and then the tea is poured after a final swish with the spoon.


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Milk goes in last!

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Fri Feb 12, 2010 10:13 am
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jonlumb wrote:
Ben, was this what you were after:

Hugh Fearnley-Wittingstall wrote:
Now, to make my tea, I need two good-sized mugs. I boil the kettle. The hot water goes into one mug first, stays for a few seconds so the mug is heated, then goes into the second mug. The tea bag goes into the first, hot, mug, boiling water is poured in, to within a couple of millimetres of the top, and the two mugs, one containing brewing tea, and the other containing hot water, are left to stand. After about five minutes, the mug of brewed tea is placed in the sink, where some new hot water (freshly re-boiled) from the kettle, is sloshed into it, so it overflows by about half a mug. This is to stop the well-brewed tea being too strong. The full-to-overflowing mug is now tilted a little bit, so it spills out enough tea to allow room for some milk.
Remember the second mug, full of the hot (now not so hot, but still quite hot) water that was used to warm the first mug? That is now emptied. The tea bag is fished out from the first 'brewing' mug, and placed in the bottom of the empty 'warm' mug, where a small splash of milk is poured over it. The effect of the hot tea bag, and still-warm mug, is to take the chill off the milk - and impregnate it with a mild tea flavour. To encourage both these objectives, the mug is picked up and swirled, put down for a few seconds, picked up and swirled again, and left to stand for a short while longer. The tea-coloured, warm milk is now poured from tea-bag mug to brew mug, which is given a stir.
The resulting colour is observed. A little more milk may be necessary, in which case it will go via the still-warm tea bag mug, into the brew mug. When the colour is exactly right, I will stir in exactly one rounded teaspoonful of golden caster sugar. The tea, which at this point is still far too hot to drink, will now be left to stand for at least five minutes, before a sip is attempted.
Incidentally, my tea of choice is Clipper's Organic, and has been for some years now. Ridgeways Fair Trade is an acceptable alternative, and in other people's houses 'breakfast' teas, 'afternoon' teas and big brand builders' teas are always preferable to varietals. I no longer drink Earl Grey, ever. I sometimes drink Lapsang Souchong, but only after four o'clock.

Yes! That was the one!
I was reading through this thread yesterday trying to find it...Good times:
http://www.macuser.co.uk/forum/viewtopic.php?t=227498

ProfessorF wrote:
HeatherKay wrote:
A splash of milk in the bottom of each mug, and then the tea is poured after a final swish with the spoon.


Heathen!
Milk goes in last!

Not when you've used a tea pot!


Fri Feb 12, 2010 10:19 am
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ProfessorF wrote:
HeatherKay wrote:
A splash of milk in the bottom of each mug, and then the tea is poured after a final swish with the spoon.


Heathen!
Milk goes in last!


Fool!It goes in first! ;)

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Fri Feb 12, 2010 10:21 am
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