Real Tea
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Can't drink the stuff and have never liked it. It's strictly copious amounts of Caffeine for me
My flickr pictures are herehttp://www.flickr.com/photos/phill_dvsn/Because lunacy was the influence for an album. It goes without saying that an album about lunacy will breed a lunatics obsessions with an album - The Dark side of the moon!
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- Leodian
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We all have our own taste and mine is for very weak tea (watery weak, not milky weak) in a mug with 2 spoonfuls of sugar. It's probably sacrilegious to say on a Yorkshire forum but I use tea granules so I can more readily make weak tea. It really is weak and no doubt would be called some unflattering names by most (if not all) normal strength tea drinkers! I still find though that it has a pleasant taste and is refreshing. Oddly, though I like the smell of coffee I do not like the taste of even weak coffee to drink! The coffee smell when going by the Kardomah on Albion Street was nice.
A rainbow is a ribbon that Nature puts on when she washes her hair.
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It was the morrisons red label loose leaf I tried and it was good. I heard a radio programme with a buyer for supermarket tea saying that there is a very weak loose leaf with very little tannin in it. That might be worth trying for the weak preference. I like mine golden colour. There was also a debate on whether milk should be added before or after pouring? I've always put mine in first, something tells me that I was taught to do this to stop the china cup from cracking? Or was it to stop the tea leaf rising if a strainer wasn't used?It's good to be back to basics.
Is it me or has Leeds gone mad
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Hi BookI agree with the others above, I drink leaf tea at work and I prefer Morrison's own brands, my personal favourite is their Assam.I have a special mug at work which you can brew leaf tea or ground coffee in, I bought it at least ten years ago in Lakeland Plastics in York, and it's been in daily use since; Lakeland don't seem to sell them anymore, but a quick search found the same item on on the website below, it looks like they now do a travel version with a lid as well. Fantastic product, you can make one cup of tea or filter coffee anywhere you can get hot water, with the filter built in.http://www.pots-and-pans.co.uk/acatalog ... e.htmlEdit: this picture shows a bit more clearly how it workshttp://www.sebastianconran.com/project-44
The older I get, the better I was.
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There is nothing more refreshing than a mug of tea. I drink Yorkshire tea as a standard, although I like Redbush tea, a South African tea that has a Red colour when brewed.I was once asked by one of my friends from over the border in Lancashire about ourYorkshire tea and where it came from. I answered him that we grow the tea on bushes on the south facing slopes of the fells in the Yorkshire Dales. John
Lived in Leeds all my life, Cookridge Headingley