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Food

Making tea

(57 Posts)
CanadianGran Tue 09-Jan-24 21:47:16

I figure this is the best place to ask!

I tend to drink one cup of tea in the morning, and one in the afternoon when I'm at work. I know I can get two cups of tea from one teabag.

Would you:
Make a pot for two cups, take the bag out and reheat the second cup later?

Do the same as above, but keep second cup in a thermos?

Make one cup (teabag in cup), then re-use wet teabag later?

Just use two teabags? This is what I've been doing, but it seems a waste.

flappergirl Wed 10-Jan-24 07:12:30

I like strong tea, builder's tea as it is known, and I use 2 new tea bags for each cup I make. Oh yes, I know how to live!

fancythat Wed 10-Jan-24 07:17:53

Reuse teabag.
But I am not a food or drink conniseur[probably not a speller either!].

NotSpaghetti Wed 10-Jan-24 07:35:02

flappergirl grin

Whitewavemark2 Wed 10-Jan-24 07:38:50

I use a teapot - always have done. I use 2 fresh teabags each time. I use loose tea for speciality tea I may drink in the afternoon. At the moment it is orange-infused tea which goes down well with a piece of fruit cake.

shysal Wed 10-Jan-24 09:32:01

My grandmother used to save her used tea bags and hang them on the washing line to dry for re-use. They were not only used twice! I don't drink tea, so never had to taste the results!

Witzend Wed 10-Jan-24 09:40:10

RosiesMaw

Oh go on, be a devil, use two teabags and *hang the expense*

Yes!

BigBertha1 Wed 10-Jan-24 09:46:58

Oh dear always a separate bag and freshly drawn water-- throw out whatever is in the kettle especially if it has been boiled several times!!

petra Wed 10-Jan-24 09:50:44

You could always unwrap the spent tea bag and use it as a fertiliser, then you haven’t wasted it. Sorted.

Juliet27 Wed 10-Jan-24 09:51:31

This has highlighted just how extravagant I am. I like strong tea and use two teabags in my mug first thing in the morning and sometimes a second cup with new teabags. It’s just one bag in my afternoon cup of tea.

Juliet27 Wed 10-Jan-24 09:52:59

Oh good, I’ve just seen I’m not alone flappergirl

nanna8 Wed 10-Jan-24 09:59:35

We used to laugh at one of my old Yorkshire aunties because she re- used teabags. She was quite well off but as mean as muck . She also used to get tinned tuna and dye it pink to look like salmon. Actually she was quite nice as a person, she was always kind to me. This thread brought back memories of her. I have to say she was born around 1910 so probably remembered hardship.

Bella23 Wed 10-Jan-24 10:08:21

We always drank"Pit mans tea" our mines were so warm if cold tea was taken down with milk, the milk curdled", tea was always black with or without sugar and in a "Seasoned" pottery teapot so strong you could stand a spoon in it . The leftover tea was put in a flask for the men's bait the next day.
I worked with someone who drank hot chocolate out of a sachet and had two mugs she made one cup in the morning and a second at lunch the third was the dregs of both mugs. It looked like dishwater.
Cut loose as others have said and enjoy a fresh one every time, your working treat your self you've earned it.

henetha Wed 10-Jan-24 11:00:15

The thing is, I don't like strong tea, so my use-twice method works well for me.

MiniMoon Wed 10-Jan-24 11:06:09

This is how to make tea.
www.yorkshiretea.co.uk/our-teas/how-to-make-a-proper-brew

Witzend Wed 10-Jan-24 11:12:38

petra

You could always unwrap the spent tea bag and use it as a fertiliser, then you haven’t wasted it. Sorted.

My mother used to put the contents of used tea bags around her azaleas. She always had a truly spectacular display of flowers, so they evidently liked it!

pascal30 Wed 10-Jan-24 11:49:04

RosiesMaw

Tea making - is it really the British secret weapon?
When I was on an exchange to France years ago I remember my host “mum” stressing about getting tea just right. She would heat the water in a saucepan and sought reassurance that she was on the right track when she asked “and of course you don’t let the water boil do you?”

I always take teabags to France with me.. theirs are so weak in my experience

V3ra Wed 10-Jan-24 12:39:50

When I was seventeen I went to stay with a German family for three weeks. I'd had a long train journey to get there so they let me sleep in.
I woke up to find they'd made a pot of tea in my honour and had been keeping it hot on the hob for hours. They served it to me with condensed milk...
They didn't drink any of it, I politely struggled some down 😖

The next morning I offered to make tea the English way, and they all tried some.
They were amazed how nice it was, they'd always thought they didn't like tea but realised they'd just been making it wrong!

NotSpaghetti Wed 10-Jan-24 13:02:23

I remember the shock, aged 10, of milky tea over bread( ?) with butter and jam at breakfast shock

Stansgran Wed 10-Jan-24 13:48:47

Large pot,two teabags of twinings Assam .let it brew and fish out the teabags ,squeeze them over the pot. This gives me three to four cups in the morning reheated in the microwave. With tealeaves I use the Chinese mandarin method,let it brew,strain into pot number two and after the first cup reheat subsequent cups in the microwave. This I’d for me on my own as DH drinks coffee. If I have visitors I’m much more civilised.

Stansgran Wed 10-Jan-24 13:49:25

I must add I have a lot of teapots.

Esmay Wed 10-Jan-24 14:04:52

I drink a lot of tea .

I really love coffee , but it doesn't love me .
When I was younger , I ended up in hospital and nearly had a laparotomy due to drinking instant coffee .

So tea is my special drink and I prefer Yorkshire tea made with freshly boiled water and drunk immediately .
The milk has to be right as well - some supermarkets sell milk that doesn't taste nice in tea .
I keep a themos of tea for emergencies , but it doesn't taste nice .
I don't like using old tea bags .
They go on the garden .

Gwyllt Wed 10-Jan-24 14:18:53

I drink ginger or camomile tea.
I just top up a large mug throughout the day The flavour seems to improve till it runs out of steam
Revolting I can hear some scoff

Kittycat Wed 10-Jan-24 14:23:30

If you’re at work-not at home-do they supply the tea bags? If they do use a fresh teabag everytime and enjoy your well deserved lovely cup of tea.

CanadianGran Wed 10-Jan-24 17:58:13

Thanks all... I drink Rooibos tea, since I find black tea bitter, so I buy it myself for work. It really needs about 30 seconds in the cup to make a nice brew, with a tiny bit of sugar, no milk.

I'll try the two-cup method, putting the wet bag in another cup for later, or try to find some loose tea. That somehow seems like more work (lazy me!)

Kim19 Wed 10-Jan-24 18:23:58

I've never drunk tea but my husband used to make a bag last seven times. Never understood it nor got worked up about it. To each his own.