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Tea (rec.drink.tea) Discussion relating to tea, the world's second most consumed beverage (after water), made by infusing or boiling the leaves of the tea plant (C. sinensis or close relatives) in water. |
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On 26 Mar 2004 02:09:37 GMT, Beth > wrote:
> ideas? Chris Roberson does a FAQ for this group: <URI:http://pages.ripco.net/~c4ha2na9/tea/faq.html> Water temperature probably makes the biggest difference in flavor -- far too many coffee shops serve green tea that tastes like boiled spinach. Here are some heuristics: black: 100C steam-wand the water from "hot water" button dark oolong: 85-90C "hot water" button white: 80-90C "hot water" button mixed with a little cold water green: 80-85C "hot water" button mixed with more cold water You could measure the temp with one of the milk thermometers or something a couple of times to get a feel for it, but it's pretty easy to get used to, and not a lot of effort. Storage is very important for unflavored teas. While it's tempting to keep tea in glass jars so customers can see them, this is not the best for the tea; keep them in opaque, airtight containers, except perhaps for ones you go through very quickly. A better way to let people see and smell the teas is to keep samples of each in little bowls -- it won't matter if those degrade since they won't be brewed. None of the ones in your list look like they'd need refrigeration. While many of us on this newsgroup don't drink a lot of flavored teas, they do seem to be popular with cafe-goers, so it's likely sensible to focus on them as heavily as you do. Fruit flavored teas make great iced tea, which may be more significant in summer. Earl Grey is probably the most popular flavored black tea in the US. Steaming the chai blend with milk and water makes a passable imitation of the real thing, though unfortunately boxed chai seems to have spoiled most cafe-goers' tastes for the real thing. The "no added sugar" aspect might be a good way to spin that, if your clientele includes low-carb folks. I seem to remember Divinitea offering an organic whole-leaf Assam from Banaspati estate (a local c*ffee shop buys from them), which is quite tasty, with a great honeyed aroma, etc. N. |
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