Oh, Tea! As an American from sorta-the-South (Texas), my first exposures to tea were iced tea. Being in Austin, rather than Houston or the proper South, the tea was rarely sweet tea. As a result, I found it bitter and unwelcoming. The tea I encountered was always cruddy bagged stuff, and never actually tasted good. I did like sweet tea, but more because omg sugar than tea.
But one day, my boyfriend decided we needed to order some proper, loose leaf tea, and a maker for it, from Adagio. I'm not sure what inspired him, but I insisted on green teas, as I wanted to drink the tea as a healthy alternative to soda, so no sugar, but I want sugar in black teas. I would drink White Monkey (a green) hot, and the Spiced Green from Adagio (from back then) as an cold tea I'd put in a bottle and take to work. But I returned back to my Dr Pepper (I'm a Texas girl, what can I say).
Finally, I decided a touch of sugar and milk were better for me than the large amounts of HFCS in the sodas. I started drinking black teas (Irish Breakfast and flavored varieties, mostly) with sugar and a touch of milk. In the summer, I'll also make a sweet tea from Golden Monkey (which makes an absolutely fantastic sweet tea). I wanted to bring this to work, but the stains the black tea leaves on the clear plastic ingenuiTEA wouldn't go over well there. I decided to make an $11 risk (not much, is it?) and get Adagio's white teapot (through Amazon, thus the cheaper price) and give it a try. Now, almost every day, I make at least one pot. I have a purple pot I use for blacks and oolongs at work, and a white pot for greens and whites. As these are glazed pots, they are not specific to teas. But I do not want to have to scrub out all the tannin deposits from the pot the few times I want a lighter tea, and I have space to store both pots, so I do. I'm drinking about 24 oz of tea a day, these days!
I do not like Earl Grey, no matter how I try to prepare it. I just cannot like the bergamot. I do, however, like the spiced teas (we call them chai, though I'm sure that's not correct elsewhere) with some sweetened condensed milk. I'm also really fond of Adagio's "Foxtrot", which is a mix of rooibos, peppermint, and chamomile (herbal, of course).
Last edited by equiraptor (December 12, 2012 1:49 am)