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Posted

“The chemist who told us to put salt in our tea explains why she did it”

“While it might seem outlandish, the idea of adding a pinch of salt to tea in order to reduce the bitterness is rooted in science. Sodium ion is a key element of salt, and it interacts with the chemical mechanism that produces the perception of a bitter taste.”

https://www.newscientist.com/article/2414348-the-chemist-who-told-us-to-put-salt-in-our-tea-explains-why-she-did-it/

Posted
2 hours ago, Phi for All said:

And while I appreciate a little honey in tea sometimes, no sweetener ever touches my coffee. Bleh, just bleh!

Right on.  If coffee needs sugar, then someone has brewed some bad beans, probably cheap Robusta.  Good coffee from Arabica beans needs no sugar.  I also recommend Slippery Elm bark tea, for an infusion that needs no sugar.  Great for sore throat, too.  

Posted
10 hours ago, exchemist said:

How horrible.

My specialty! 

3 hours ago, Phi for All said:

If your doctor is after you about the fats and sweets, the bergamot in Earl Grey tea pairs really, really well with lemon, and not just because the British say so. In this case, they are spot on.

Not fats, just sweets, for some reason unsweetened tea is awful to me but sweet coffee is awful as well! I like iced coffee and iced tea but only coffee unsweetened! My own personal diet for type 2 diabetes includes fats, protein, and fiber but excludes as much carbs as possible. No seed oils, the only vegetable oils I use are olive and coconut oils. I mostly cook with lard and or beef tallow and all my blood parameters have gone back to nominal! My doc is amazed and I feel much better after losing 50 lbs!      

3 hours ago, TheVat said:

I think he's channeling Jean-Luc Picard.

 

YES! I actually tried Earl Grey Tea due to Captain Picard! I loved the taste, I even preferred it in iced tea!  

2 hours ago, zapatos said:

I considered posting this anonymously lest I bring down the wrath of the British Empire, but I guess I'll proudly show my American roots; I like my tea iced, with a bit of lemon juice. I only drink hot tea when I am cold or under the weather.

Iced sweet tea is the house wine of the south! I do miss it, along with bread, pasta, potatoes, and rice...😭 

Posted (edited)
3 hours ago, zapatos said:

I considered posting this anonymously lest I bring down the wrath of the British Empire, but I guess I'll proudly show my American roots; I like my tea iced, with a bit of lemon juice. I only drink hot tea when I am cold or under the weather.

The Italians do the same and it’s just the job on a hot day in Sicily. And the Arabs drink it “ahmar, red”, hot, in a glass in which it can indeed look red. There are different ways to drink tea. But what is in all cases essential is to brew it properly, which is where our continental and transatlantic cousins can get it a bit wrong, generally not using water that is hot enough.

Edited by exchemist
Posted
4 minutes ago, exchemist said:

our continental and transatlantic cousins can get it a bit wrong, generally not using water that is hot enough.

Bless their little cotton socks!

What do they miss out? The preheating the teapot bit, or the tea cosy to keep the heat in?

Posted
7 minutes ago, sethoflagos said:

Bless their little cotton socks!

What do they miss out? The preheating the teapot bit, or the tea cosy to keep the heat in?

Indeed, clearly they're all wrong bc my Gran made the best cuppa...

Posted
28 minutes ago, sethoflagos said:

Bless their little cotton socks!

What do they miss out? The preheating the teapot bit, or the tea cosy to keep the heat in?

All too often, giving you a cold teacup, a teabag and water in an urn at about 80C. 

Posted
7 minutes ago, exchemist said:

All too often, giving you a cold teacup, a teabag and water in an urn at about 80C. 

I read somewhere that when making tea the problem Americans had was confusing "boiling water" with "water that had once been boiled".

Posted
1 minute ago, zapatos said:

I read somewhere that when making tea the problem Americans had was confusing "boiling water" with "water that had once been boiled".

Haha. Well, it is an issue in a lot of places, not just the States. Continental hotels almost always offer a hot water urn and teabags. I resort to using one cupful of hot water to warm the cup as much as I can, then discard that and brew the teabag in the cup with a fresh cupful. In the US one issue seems to be the absence of electric kettles. When my late wife and I moved to Houston in 1999 for a couple of years we found it really hard to buy one, though we did manage in the end. Seems they heat a pan of water on the cooker if they want boiling water. One can get electric kettles in France without difficulty, however. It's just the hotels, apparently. 

Posted
1 hour ago, exchemist said:

In the US one issue seems to be the absence of electric kettles. When my late wife and I moved to Houston in 1999 for a couple of years we found it really hard to buy one, though we did manage in the end. Seems they heat a pan of water on the cooker if they want boiling water.

Saw my first electric kettle in Germany a few decades ago. I couldn't believe how much more efficient it was than a pan on the stovetop! Finally found them here in the US and haven't used anything else since. 

Posted
2 hours ago, exchemist said:

All too often, giving you a cold teacup, a teabag and water in an urn at about 80C.

It'd need a minute in the microwave otherwise you may as well be drinking bathwater.

Posted
25 minutes ago, sethoflagos said:

It'd need a minute in the microwave otherwise you may as well be drinking bathwater.

Well yes, but microwaving hot water isn't a great idea. If the cup is clean you can get superheating, bumping and a trip to hospital when you take the cup out again. Though if you mean microwave it with the teabag already in it, that could work, I suppose.  

55 minutes ago, Phi for All said:

Saw my first electric kettle in Germany a few decades ago. I couldn't believe how much more efficient it was than a pan on the stovetop! Finally found them here in the US and haven't used anything else since. 

Yes, it's strange they don't seem to be part of the culinary culture in the USA - or not 20 years ago. I use the kettle all the time time, not just for tea. If I need boiling water for cooking vegetables, or pasta, or something like that, I boil the kettle, as it is so much faster. But it is true that in the UK the primary purpose of a kettle is to provide actually boiling water, to pour over the tea leaves in the (prewarmed) teapot. So, having bought a kettle primarily for that, it makes obvious sense to use it for other purposes too. Not sure what the primary purpose of a kettle would be in a coffee drinking nation like Germany. But they may just appreciate the speed and efficiency. 

Posted
10 minutes ago, exchemist said:

Though if you mean microwave it with the teabag already in it, that could work, I suppose.  

It does. Been recycling tepid tea that way for years.

Posted (edited)
32 minutes ago, sethoflagos said:

It does. Been recycling tepid tea that way for years.

But tea (-making)is a social occasion ,a ritual of sorts I always felt.

Do you offer up warmed up old tea to your friends and visitors?

 

Edited by geordief
Posted
15 minutes ago, geordief said:

But tea (-making)is a social occasion ,a ritual of sorts I always felt.

Do you offer up warmed up old tea to your friends and visitors?

 

I haven't heard that since I was about 8, in 1962 or so. Brings back memories of primary school.

Posted

I fund it interesting that the pushback I’ve seen on this is that it goes against tradition rather than evaluating whether or not it makes for better tea.

Posted (edited)
59 minutes ago, swansont said:

I fund it interesting that the pushback I’ve seen on this is that it goes against tradition rather than evaluating whether or not it makes for better tea.

That is because it is (apparently) only of very incremental interest to the consumer of the beverage whereas the cultural significance of the drinking of the tea is far more  important.

There is also the humour involved in the Boston Tea Party  where the English and the Americans are free to have a good laugh at each other if they want to.

You kicked us out of your country using the "tea issue" at  the outset but we are the ones who (in our minds at least) actually know how to use the stuff.

Any coincidence that the phrase "a storm in a teacup" is still fairly widely used?

The Japanese also hold tea in high estime(not so sure about other countries)

Don't see what "pushback" you mean.

I am sure it may well make a difference in the taste but ,personally speaking I have never added sugar to tomatoes even though it is well known that it makes it taste better and is often recommended in recipes.....

Edited by geordief
Posted
1 hour ago, swansont said:

I fund it interesting that the pushback I’ve seen on this is that it goes against tradition rather than evaluating whether or not it makes for better tea.

It is kind of odd! 

Posted
7 hours ago, swansont said:

I fund it interesting that the pushback I’ve seen on this is that it goes against tradition rather than evaluating whether or not it makes for better tea.

Well I at least have evaluated it and reported my findings in this thread.

But any pushback you may have read about elsewhere is far from odd, actually. Culinary  tradition is often something people have strong views about. Just think of the arguments in Italy about Bolognese, or whether to use Marsala or Amaretto in tiramisu. Or in Spain about paella.

Posted (edited)
10 hours ago, geordief said:

But tea (-making)is a social occasion ,a ritual of sorts I always felt.

Not here. Within the circles I move in, beer is the social brew of choice.

10 hours ago, geordief said:

Do you offer up warmed up old tea to your friends and visitors?

Only to geordies who ask daft questions.

9 hours ago, swansont said:

I fund it interesting that the pushback I’ve seen on this is that it goes against tradition rather than evaluating whether or not it makes for better tea.

More the chutzpah of those who believe their taste in tea is somehow superior to anybody else's. There is no universal 'perfect cuppa'. Just an individual's preference.

The similarity of sugar cellars to salt cellars in many establishments has caused most of us to have conducted unplanned experiments with salty tea.

Edited by sethoflagos
Posted
13 minutes ago, dimreepr said:

Of course there is, my Gran made it...

And thus the language of our noble ancestors lies dying in the no man's land of post-modernist chutzpah 

Posted
7 minutes ago, sethoflagos said:

And thus the language of our noble ancestors lies dying in the no man's land of post-modernist chutzpah 

One has to wonder...  

Posted
5 hours ago, sethoflagos said:

More the chutzpah of those who believe their taste in tea is somehow superior to anybody else's. There is no universal 'perfect cuppa'. Just an individual's preference.

Sugar in tomato sauce, however, remains wrong.  Universally.

Brands like Newmans Own marinara have no added sugar and are far better than the sugared brands on American supermarket shelves.  

(this post guaranteed chutzpah-free)

 

4 minutes ago, geordief said:

Some strange brew going down  in this thread,man

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hftgytmgQgE

 

"A  witch of trouble in an electric blue" 

yes ,blue crockery does it for me.

So it's okay to add Cream to a forum thread?

sorry 

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