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General Cooking (rec.food.cooking) For general food and cooking discussion. Foods of all kinds, food procurement, cooking methods and techniques, eating, etc. |
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Hello,
I'm looking for a device that would make it easier and/or more efficient to make water extractions of "herbal tea" (in particular, Kratom). I make the extract by boiling the powdered leaf for an hour or so. I then strain the liquid and press the leaf to get as much liquid out as I can, and then re-boil the leaf and repeat the process a second time. Right now, I use a handheld "herb press" thingy, which works pretty well as far as getting all the liquid out, but it is messy and a pain to use. I've never used a French coffee press, but the concept seems to be what I'm looking for - you press down on the central strainer/press thing, and the coffee (or herb in my case) would stay at the bottom, allowing the liquid to be poured off the top. However, I've not seen one that is big enough for my purposes. Ideally, I would like to have a French coffee press (or something similar) the size of a large cooking pot. Any suggestions?? It doesn't have to be a cofee press, just a big pot that I can boil, strain, and press in without having to transfer the contents. Thanks! Mike |
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John wrote:
> Any suggestions?? Yes. Now stop cross-posting... ~john -- "Black holes are where God divided by Zero." - Steven Wright |
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Excuse me, but what is your problem? I cross-posted my message because
there are a number of different cooking-related newsgroups, none of which appeared to be any more relevant than the others. So, exactly what is the issue here? Regards, Mike "Levelwaveİ" > wrote in message ... > John wrote: > > > Any suggestions?? > > > Yes. Now stop cross-posting... > > ~john > > > -- > "Black holes are where God divided by Zero." - Steven Wright |
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On Mon, 19 Apr 2004 17:30:55 -0400, "John" > wrote:
>Excuse me, but what is your problem? I cross-posted my message because >there are a number of different cooking-related newsgroups, none of which >appeared to be any more relevant than the others. > >So, exactly what is the issue here? > >Regards, > >Mike Hey Mike, Perhaps I missed something, but why not use a French coffee press? It seems to me that it would do just what you want. HTH, -- Kenneth If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
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Kenneth > wrote in
: > On Mon, 19 Apr 2004 17:30:55 -0400, "John" > wrote: > >>Excuse me, but what is your problem? I cross-posted my message because >>there are a number of different cooking-related newsgroups, none of which >>appeared to be any more relevant than the others. >> >>So, exactly what is the issue here? >> >>Regards, >> >>Mike > > Hey Mike, > > Perhaps I missed something, but why not use a French coffee press? It > seems to me that it would do just what you want. > > HTH, > Do it on the cheap. a saucepan and a strainer. Get water to boiling , add strainer with tea inside. After tea is steeped ready remove strainer. -- Once during Prohibition I was forced to live for days on nothing but food and water. -------- FIELDS, W. C. |
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![]() "hahabogus" > wrote in message ... > Kenneth > wrote in > : > > > On Mon, 19 Apr 2004 17:30:55 -0400, "John" > wrote: > > > >>Excuse me, but what is your problem? I cross-posted my message because > >>there are a number of different cooking-related newsgroups, none of which > >>appeared to be any more relevant than the others. > >> > >>So, exactly what is the issue here? > >> > >>Regards, > >> > >>Mike > > > > Hey Mike, > > > > Perhaps I missed something, but why not use a French coffee press? It > > seems to me that it would do just what you want. > > > > HTH, > > > > Do it on the cheap. a saucepan and a strainer. Get water to boiling , add > strainer with tea inside. After tea is steeped ready remove strainer. Well, that's basically what I am doing now - I have one of those expensive fine-screen "cone" strainers (I needed a very fine screen because my leaves are finely powdered). After straining, I take the leaf material and squeeze it "dry"(ish) with the herb press thing. Now, I've gotten a few friends interested in this stuff (Kratom), so I find myself making quite a few big batches of it on a regular basis. The separate strainer and herb press are messy (I spill leaf material all over) and a pain to use (one scoop of material at a time.) I mean, my current mechanism works, but I'm hoping for something better! Thanks for the replies, Mike > > -- > Once during Prohibition I was forced to live for days on nothing but food > and water. > -------- > FIELDS, W. C. |
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If you want to make a large quanty, how about a stock pot with a professional
sized chinois (China cap) strainer? Put the herb in the strainer put the strainer in the boiling water. When finished, remove the strainer, pour off the first batch and start over with the herbs still in the strainer. |
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![]() "Kenneth" > wrote in message ... > On Mon, 19 Apr 2004 17:30:55 -0400, "John" > wrote: > > >Excuse me, but what is your problem? I cross-posted my message because > >there are a number of different cooking-related newsgroups, none of which > >appeared to be any more relevant than the others. > > > >So, exactly what is the issue here? > > > >Regards, > > > >Mike > > Hey Mike, > > Perhaps I missed something, but why not use a French coffee press? It > seems to me that it would do just what you want. Hi Kenneth, Well, I would just use a French coffee press, except for two things: 1. I've not been able to find one big enough. 2. In the ones I've looked at, you can't actually cook IN the press...you boil the water separately, then pour it into the press to steep. For the stuff I'm making, I need to use larger quantities, and, more importantly, I need the leaves to boil with the water for at least an hour, and then repeat the process. If I could find a really big French press that you can actually boil the water in, that would work dandy. Thanks, Mike > > HTH, > > -- > Kenneth > > If you email... Please remove the "SPAMLESS." |
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John wrote:
> Hello, > > I'm looking for a device that would make it easier and/or more efficient to > make water extractions of "herbal tea" (in particular, Kratom). I make the > extract by boiling the powdered leaf for an hour or so. I then strain the > liquid and press the leaf to get as much liquid out as I can, and then > re-boil the leaf and repeat the process a second time. Right now, I use a > handheld "herb press" thingy, which works pretty well as far as getting all > the liquid out, but it is messy and a pain to use. > > I've never used a French coffee press, but the concept seems to be what I'm > looking for - you press down on the central strainer/press thing, and the > coffee (or herb in my case) would stay at the bottom, allowing the liquid to > be poured off the top. However, I've not seen one that is big enough for my > purposes. Ideally, I would like to have a French coffee press (or something > similar) the size of a large cooking pot. > > Any suggestions?? It doesn't have to be a cofee press, just a big pot that > I can boil, strain, and press in without having to transfer the contents. > > Thanks! > > Mike > > > > How about a stockpot with a spigot on the bottom? http://tinyurl.com/2nl65 You might have to rig something to cover the hole on the inside because I don't believe these have any kind of strainer. Barbara |
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Barbara Wetherington > wrote in
: > How about a stockpot with a spigot on the bottom? > > http://tinyurl.com/2nl65 > > You might have to rig something to cover the hole on the inside because > I don't believe these have any kind of strainer. > > Barbara > One of those large coffee perculators. Where the tea would be filtered? -- Once during Prohibition I was forced to live for days on nothing but food and water. -------- FIELDS, W. C. |
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Hi.
The onlything I could think of that would be good too, but still not big enough tho, is a vacuum coffee brewer. I have used it before to extract flavours. Just an idea Jon John wrote: > Hello, > > I'm looking for a device that would make it easier and/or more efficient to > make water extractions of "herbal tea" (in particular, Kratom). I make the > extract by boiling the powdered leaf for an hour or so. I then strain the > liquid and press the leaf to get as much liquid out as I can, and then > re-boil the leaf and repeat the process a second time. Right now, I use a > handheld "herb press" thingy, which works pretty well as far as getting all > the liquid out, but it is messy and a pain to use. > > I've never used a French coffee press, but the concept seems to be what I'm > looking for - you press down on the central strainer/press thing, and the > coffee (or herb in my case) would stay at the bottom, allowing the liquid to > be poured off the top. However, I've not seen one that is big enough for my > purposes. Ideally, I would like to have a French coffee press (or something > similar) the size of a large cooking pot. > > Any suggestions?? It doesn't have to be a cofee press, just a big pot that > I can boil, strain, and press in without having to transfer the contents. > > Thanks! > > Mike |
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In article >, DaCook >
wrote: > Hi. > The onlything I could think of that would be good too, but still not big > enough tho, is a vacuum coffee brewer. I have used it before to extract > flavours. But the OP wants to boil the mixture for an hour--regardless of the size, a vac pot would be inappropriate. -- to respond, change "spamless.invalid" with "optonline.net" please mail OT responses only |
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John wrote:
> Hello, > > I'm looking for a device that would make it easier and/or more efficient to > make water extractions of "herbal tea" (in particular, Kratom). I make the > extract by boiling the powdered leaf for an hour or so. I then strain the > liquid and press the leaf to get as much liquid out as I can, and then > re-boil the leaf and repeat the process a second time. Right now, I use a > handheld "herb press" thingy, which works pretty well as far as getting all > the liquid out, but it is messy and a pain to use. > > I've never used a French coffee press, but the concept seems to be what I'm > looking for - you press down on the central strainer/press thing, and the > coffee (or herb in my case) would stay at the bottom, allowing the liquid to > be poured off the top. However, I've not seen one that is big enough for my > purposes. Ideally, I would like to have a French coffee press (or something > similar) the size of a large cooking pot. > > Any suggestions?? It doesn't have to be a cofee press, just a big pot that > I can boil, strain, and press in without having to transfer the contents. > > Thanks! > > Mike An hour of boiling ruins any infusion I can think of. Imagine coffee, for one. Do you want the extract for its flavor, or for some other purpose? Jerry -- Engineering is the art of making what you want from things you can get. ŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻ ŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻŻ |
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>> "I. Shitumuch" writes:
>> >> I'm looking for a device that would make it easier and/or more efficient to >> make water extractions of "herbal tea" (in particular, Kratom). I make the >> extract by boiling the powdered leaf for an hour or so. I then strain the >> liquid and press the leaf to get as much liquid out as I can, and then >> re-boil the leaf and repeat the process a second time. Right now, I use a >> handheld "herb press" thingy, which works pretty well as far as getting all >> the liquid out, but it is messy and a pain to use. >> >> I've never used a French coffee press, but the concept seems to be what I'm >> looking for - you press down on the central strainer/press thing, and the >> coffee (or herb in my case) would stay at the bottom, allowing the liquid >to >> be poured off the top. However, I've not seen one that is big enough for >my >> purposes. Ideally, I would like to have a French coffee press (or >something >> similar) the size of a large cooking pot. >> >> Any suggestions?? It doesn't have to be a cofee press, just a big pot that >> I can boil, strain, and press in without having to transfer the contents. Have you considered a septic system? ---= BOYCOTT FRENCH--GERMAN (belgium) =--- ---= Move UNITED NATIONS To Paris =--- Sheldon ```````````` "Life would be devoid of all meaning were it without tribulation." |
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