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The Tea Thread

I don't know about lime in tea or lime flavored tea....strawberry or raspberry tea is quite good. And any mint flavored tea is awesome for that matter...good for the sinuses or an upset stomach. I like to drink herbal tea for those times when I don't want/need caffeine.

And I think J.L. Picard would beg to differ about tea and wimps..."Earl Gray, hot" was a favorite line 🙂
 
We drink Ice Tea w/lemon here in the South. Maybe sometimes with a mint leaf. Also Camimile tea is said to be soothing as well as Peppermint tea
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Hey Drew.................How many lumps of sugar do you take with your tea?

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Even if I am a die-hard coffee drinker, I do like tea once in a while and it must strictly be served with NO sugar.
 
Tea is serious goddamn business.

Remember that the tea should never be brewed for less than 4 minutes, especially if you're planning on adding milk and sugar. You might as well drink hot water otherwise.

The other day, I saw a person adding milk to Earl Grey. Heresy.
 
I like Chai, English Breakfast, and Darjeeling. But my favorite tea is "Constant Comment" from Bigelow. It's black tea with spices and dried orange peel. Back in the day, it didn't come in tea bags, but rather as loose tea in a small metal canister who's lid you would pry off with a spoon. Nestle's Quik used to come that way too.
 
Tea is often thought of as being a quintessentially British drink, and we have been drinking it for over 350 years. But in fact the history of tea goes much further back.

The story of tea begins in China. According to legend, in 2737 BC, the Chinese emperor Shen Nung was sitting beneath a tree while his servant boiled drinking water, when some leaves from the tree blew into the water. Shen Nung, a renowned herbalist, decided to try the infusion that his servant had accidentally created. The tree was a Camellia sinensis, and the resulting drink was what we now call tea.

tea was first introduced to Japan, by Japanese Buddhist monks

It is impossible to know whether there is any truth in this story. But tea drinking certainly became establishedin China manycenturies before it had even been heard of in the west. Japanese tea gardenContainers for tea have been found in tombs dating from the Han dynasty(206 BC - 220 AD) but it was under the Tang dynasty (618-906 AD), that tea became firmly established as the national drink of China. It became such a favourite that during the late eighth century a writer called Lu Yu wrote the first book entirely about tea, the Ch'a Ching, or Tea Classic. It was shortly after this that tea was first introduced to Japan, by Japanese Buddhist monks who had travelled to China to study. Tea drinking has become a vital part of Japanese culture, as seen in the development of the Tea Ceremony, which may be rooted in the rituals described in the Ch'a Ching.



The growth of tea in Europe

So at this stage in the history of tea, Europe was rather lagging behind. In the latter half of the sixteenth century there are the first brief mentions of tea as a drink among Europeans. These are mostly from Portuguese who were living in the East as traders and missionaries. But although some of these individuals may have brought back samples of tea to their native country, it was not the Portuguese who were the first to ship back tea as a commercial import. This was done by the Dutch, who in the last years of the sixteenth century began to encroach on Portuguese trading routes in the East. By the turn of the century they had established a trading post on the island of Java, and it was via Java that in 1606 the first consignment of tea was shipped from China to Holland. Tea soon became a fashionable drink among the Dutch, and from there spread to other countries in
 
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