While I have said quite a few bad things about the heat and the lack of rain we have had here in southwest Michigan all summer long. There is one good thing that is coming from it, the 300 gram tin of Dong Ding tea I got at a Chinese grocery store about 3 years ago is finally starting to get worked through on a consistent basis.
I never thought the tea was that great any time I tried brewing it how I would brew any other dong ding tea. not to mention just about all my teaware for brewing items warm would only use a few grams of the tea at a time. I don't have to tell any of you how hard it is to get through 300 grams of a tea you do not like only 4-6 grams of tea at a time.
The solution, hot summer days, a french press that has never been used for coffee, water, the tea and a refrigerator. Simply layer the bottom of the french press a few layers deep with the old and not so great oolong, add water, then stick it into the fridge, wait over night or 7 or so hours, then stick the plunger in, push down and its actually a surprisingly nice iced tea. Better yet, while I haven't tried my hand at doing 3 infusions with a given set of leaves ( worried a bit to much about the threat of bad bacteria), but after drinking the tea down to the plunger level, pulling out the plunger and waiting another 7 hours or so, produces a second great brew from the same leaves.
Not to mention, at the grocery store I also picked up a box of loose leaf Lipton black tea, which is another not so great tea that makes a tasty iced tea. In fact my believe is a tea that comes across as overly bitter or astringent would make a nice cold brewed iced tea.
2 comments:
I'm using my not so great black tea for making masala chai, but iced tea is another great solution that I haven't had for a long time.Nice reminding :)
I've never thought of brewing iced tea with a French press in this way...innovative idea!
I have sometimes found though that teas that I don't like as much hot, I often prefer iced. I have yet to produce good results cold-brewing anything though. I still prefer to brew it hot, dilute, and then let it cool and chill it later.
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