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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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Posted to uk.d-i-y
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Just like the old days. The tea bag burst, I remembered that one used to
let the tea settle so that the leaves dropped to the bottom, this worked, also I remembered to leave a little tea at the bottom of the cup! Nothing beats experience! ;-) |
#2
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On 05/02/2019 10:56, Broadback wrote:
Just like the old days. The tea bag burst, I remembered that one used to let the tea settle so that the leaves dropped to the bottom, this worked, also I remembered to leave a little tea at the bottom of the cup! Nothing beats experience! ;-) I think someone has just invented a novel device to help you out - it's called a tea strainer. |
#3
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![]() "Broadback" wrote in message ... Just like the old days. The tea bag burst, I remembered that one used to let the tea settle so that the leaves dropped to the bottom, this worked, also I remembered to leave a little tea at the bottom of the cup! Nothing beats experience! ;-) what was your reading ? ...... |
#4
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On 05/02/2019 10:56, Broadback wrote:
Just like the old days. The tea bag burst, I remembered that one used to let the tea settle so that the leaves dropped to the bottom, this worked, also I remembered to leave a little tea at the bottom of the cup! Nothing beats experience! ;-) I put gravy granules in the cafetiere two days running. After that I did the gravy granules from myself. Bill |
#5
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A nearby cafe we frequent provides milk and gravy in very similar jugs. In a senior moment I reached out for a jug without looking and you guessed it poured gravy in the tea, I cannot recommend the concoction but it did put a smile on all the waiting staff.
Richard |
#6
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On 05/02/2019 12:52, Tim Streater wrote:
In article , Broadback wrote: Just like the old days. The tea bag burst, I remembered that one used to let the tea settle so that the leaves dropped to the bottom, this worked, also I remembered to leave a little tea at the bottom of the cup! Nothing beats experience! ;-) Why aren't you using leaf tea? Tea bags contain 25% plastic. I no longer have a tea pot or strainer! |
#7
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On 05/02/2019 12:52, Tim Streater wrote:
In article , Broadback wrote: Just like the old days. The tea bag burst, I remembered that one used to let the tea settle so that the leaves dropped to the bottom, this worked, also I remembered to leave a little tea at the bottom of the cup! Nothing beats experience! ;-) Why aren't you using leaf tea? Tea bags contain 25% plastic. Teabags are a lot more convenient when you only want a single cup. SteveW |
#8
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Broadback wrote:
On 05/02/2019 12:52, Tim Streater wrote: In article , Broadback wrote: Just like the old days. The tea bag burst, I remembered that one used to let the tea settle so that the leaves dropped to the bottom, this worked, also I remembered to leave a little tea at the bottom of the cup! Nothing beats experience! ;-) Why aren't you using leaf tea? Tea bags contain 25% plastic. I no longer have a tea pot or strainer! Wierd! I find making tea with a tea-bag a right faff in comparison with using a small (two cup) pot and leaf tea. All that fishing about for the tea bag and squeezing it, uses a teaspoon as well which I don't otherwise use. (There's a measure permanently in the tea caddy for spooning tea into the pot) -- Chris Green · |
#9
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Chris Green wrote:
Broadback wrote: On 05/02/2019 12:52, Tim Streater wrote: In article , Broadback wrote: Just like the old days. The tea bag burst, I remembered that one used to let the tea settle so that the leaves dropped to the bottom, this worked, also I remembered to leave a little tea at the bottom of the cup! Nothing beats experience! ;-) Why aren't you using leaf tea? Tea bags contain 25% plastic. I no longer have a tea pot or strainer! Wierd! I find making tea with a tea-bag a right faff in comparison with using a small (two cup) pot and leaf tea. All that fishing about for the tea bag and squeezing it, uses a teaspoon as well which I don't otherwise use. (There's a measure permanently in the tea caddy for spooning tea into the pot) We use a teapot that has an integral strainer ,nothing fancy it looks like a normal china pot rather than one of the designer types that have a similar arrangement at greater cost. But we also have a Lakeland tea tool as well https://www.lakeland.co.uk/12644/Tea...eviews/12/20.2 Much easier to use than dunking and messing about with a spoon or fingers. Can get the best use out of a teabag as well. The plastic reinforcing/sealing has or is about to reduce a lot with several of the big names having or are in the process of going to fully biodegradable bags and there are less well known ones that always have been ,hot a box or organic Clipper in the cupboard which definitely are.Havent tried it yet , it was on offer from the milkman. GH |
#10
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In article ,
Tricky Dicky wrote: A nearby cafe we frequent provides milk and gravy in very similar jugs. In a senior moment I reached out for a jug without looking and you guessed it poured gravy in the tea, I cannot recommend the concoction but it did put a smile on all the waiting staff. Richard at school in the 1950s, we lost our cook and, for a short time, had our lunch from the local school meals service. Each course has with it the contents of a container with a thick grey liquid - one marked 'gravy' and the other 'custard' . I reckon they simply made grey sauce and added either salt or sugar as appropriate. -- from KT24 in Surrey, England "I'd rather die of exhaustion than die of boredom" Thomas Carlyle |
#11
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Chris Green
for the tea bag and squeezing it, uses a teaspoon as well which I don't otherwise use. (There's a measure permanently in the tea caddy for spooning tea into the pot) Has it got the instructions on it? My gran had one of these, made in their thousands and bought as seaside gifts etc. https://goo.gl/images/j8jU3V GH |
#12
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and an old tea strainer.
Brian -- ----- -- This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from... The Sofa of Brian Gaff... Blind user, so no pictures please Note this Signature is meaningless.! "Broadback" wrote in message ... Just like the old days. The tea bag burst, I remembered that one used to let the tea settle so that the leaves dropped to the bottom, this worked, also I remembered to leave a little tea at the bottom of the cup! Nothing beats experience! ;-) |
#13
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![]() "Steve Walker" wrote in message ... On 05/02/2019 12:52, Tim Streater wrote: In article , Broadback wrote: Just like the old days. The tea bag burst, I remembered that one used to let the tea settle so that the leaves dropped to the bottom, this worked, also I remembered to leave a little tea at the bottom of the cup! Nothing beats experience! ;-) Why aren't you using leaf tea? Tea bags contain 25% plastic. Teabags are a lot more convenient when you only want a single cup. SteveW They're also a lot more convenient if you need more cups of tea at any one time, than your customary teapot can provide. Unless of course someone is looking for an excuse to acquire a whole range of differently sized but matching teapots, which can then be proudly displayed on a shelf of the newly acquired Welsh dresser. Not forgetting the set of matching tea cosies, all kept in the left hand drawer. michael adams .... |
#14
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On Tuesday, 5 February 2019 14:16:04 UTC, Chris Green wrote:
Broadback wrote: On 05/02/2019 12:52, Tim Streater wrote: In article , Broadback wrote: Just like the old days. The tea bag burst, I remembered that one used to let the tea settle so that the leaves dropped to the bottom, this worked, also I remembered to leave a little tea at the bottom of the cup! Nothing beats experience! ;-) Why aren't you using leaf tea? Tea bags contain 25% plastic. I no longer have a tea pot or strainer! Wierd! I find making tea with a tea-bag a right faff in comparison with using a small (two cup) pot and leaf tea. All that fishing about for the tea bag and squeezing it, uses a teaspoon as well which I don't otherwise use. (There's a measure permanently in the tea caddy for spooning tea into the pot) -- Chris Green · I had one of the metal sphere's you can put loose tea in and dunk it as a tea bag, which was my prefered method when making single cups of tea using 2/3 sainsbury red lable. 1/3rd early grey. Trouble was the dust or very fine leaves that still got through the holes. |
#15
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On 05/02/2019 13:31, Broadback wrote:
On 05/02/2019 12:52, Tim Streater wrote: In article , Broadback wrote: Just like the old days. The tea bag burst, I remembered that one used to let the tea settle so that the leaves dropped to the bottom, this worked, also I remembered to leave a little tea at the bottom of the cup! Nothing beats experience! ;-) Why aren't you using leaf tea? Tea bags contain 25% plastic. I no longer have a tea pot or strainer! PG Tips bags may not have plastic because they seem to disintegrate more easily than say Twinings, and I guess this is the reason why ? :- https://www.theguardian.com/environm...adable-teabags |
#16
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On 05/02/2019 15:06, Marland wrote:
Chris Green wrote: Broadback wrote: On 05/02/2019 12:52, Tim Streater wrote: In article , Broadback wrote: Just like the old days. The tea bag burst, I remembered that one used to let the tea settle so that the leaves dropped to the bottom, this worked, also I remembered to leave a little tea at the bottom of the cup! Nothing beats experience! ;-) Why aren't you using leaf tea? Tea bags contain 25% plastic. I no longer have a tea pot or strainer! We use a teapot that has an integral strainer ,nothing fancy it looks like a normal china pot rather than one of the designer types that have a similar arrangement at greater cost. I have a Bodum Tea Press Teapot - £2 from a charity shop. (The spherical glass ones with a plunger and filter cylinder.) Handy but you have to wait for the water to go through while adding it. -- Max Demian |
#17
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On 05/02/2019 13:29, Tricky Dicky wrote:
A nearby cafe we frequent provides milk and gravy in very similar jugs. In a senior moment I reached out for a jug without looking and you guessed it poured gravy in the tea, I cannot recommend the concoction but it did put a smile on all the waiting staff. I was told to help myself to tea and coffee when working in a pub kitchen. It did not take me long to realise that it was a teaspoon of salt I had put into the coffee. -- Adam |
#18
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On 05/02/2019 20:32, ARW wrote:
On 05/02/2019 13:29, Tricky Dicky wrote: A nearby cafe we frequent provides milk and gravy in very similar jugs. In a senior moment I reached out for a jug without looking and you guessed it poured gravy in the tea, I cannot recommend the concoction but it did put a smile on all the waiting staff. I was told to help myself to tea and coffee when working in a pub kitchen. It did not take me long to realise that it was a teaspoon of salt I had put into the coffee. Some friends and I were at a conference and at the communal meal at lunchtime, my mate Dave hadn't clocked that the main course and the desert were already on the buffet table so managed to pour custard over his ham salad instead of mayo. He said it was quite nice but I've never been tempted to try it myself. I swigged some Coke from the bottle and poured peanuts into my hand and ate them. I swigged some Coke from the bottle and poured peanuts into my hand and ate them. I swigged some Coke from the bottle and poured peanuts into my hand and ate them I was sitting in my car outside a music shop, waiting for the time of my appointment with the owner. I poured some peanuts into my hand then swigged some Coke from the bottle. I poured some peanuts into my hand then swigged some Coke from the bottle. I poured some peanuts into my hand then swigged some Coke from the bottle. I poured Coke into my hand..... "Hi Nick. Come on in. Do you want to take your coat off?" "No, I'm fine as I am, thanks" Nick |
#19
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On 05/02/2019 21:23, Nick Odell wrote:
On 05/02/2019 20:32, ARW wrote: On 05/02/2019 13:29, Tricky Dicky wrote: A nearby cafe we frequent provides milk and gravy in very similar jugs. In a senior moment I reached out for a jug without looking and you guessed it poured gravy in the tea, I cannot recommend the concoction but it did put a smile on all the waiting staff. I was told to help myself to tea and coffee when working in a pub kitchen. It did not take me long to realise that it was a teaspoon of salt I had put into the coffee. Some friends and I were at a conference and at the communal meal at lunchtime, my mate Dave hadn't clocked that the main course and the desert were already on the buffet table so managed to pour custard over his ham salad instead of mayo. He said it was quite nice but I've never been tempted to try it myself. I swigged some Coke from the bottle and poured peanuts into my hand and ate them. I swigged some Coke from the bottle and poured peanuts into my hand and ate them. I swigged some Coke from the bottle and poured peanuts into my hand and ate them I was sitting in my car outside a music shop, waiting for the time of my appointment with the owner. I poured some peanuts into my hand then swigged some Coke from the bottle. I poured some peanuts into my hand then swigged some Coke from the bottle. I poured some peanuts into my hand then swigged some Coke from the bottle. I poured Coke into my hand..... "Hi Nick. Come on in. Do you want to take your coat off?" "No, I'm fine as I am, thanks" Nick Folk song? -- Adam |
#20
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On 05/02/2019 21:37, ARW wrote:
On 05/02/2019 21:23, Nick Odell wrote: On 05/02/2019 20:32, ARW wrote: On 05/02/2019 13:29, Tricky Dicky wrote: A nearby cafe we frequent provides milk and gravy in very similar jugs. In a senior moment I reached out for a jug without looking and you guessed it poured gravy in the tea, I cannot recommend the concoction but it did put a smile on all the waiting staff. I was told to help myself to tea and coffee when working in a pub kitchen. It did not take me long to realise that it was a teaspoon of salt I had put into the coffee. Some friends and I were at a conference and at the communal meal at lunchtime, my mate Dave hadn't clocked that the main course and the desert were already on the buffet table so managed to pour custard over his ham salad instead of mayo. He said it was quite nice but I've never been tempted to try it myself. I swigged some Coke from the bottle and poured peanuts into my hand and ate them. I swigged some Coke from the bottle and poured peanuts into my hand and ate them. I swigged some Coke from the bottle and poured peanuts into my hand and ate them I was sitting in my car outside a music shop, waiting for the time of my appointment with the owner. I poured some peanuts into my hand then swigged some Coke from the bottle. I poured some peanuts into my hand then swigged some Coke from the bottle. I poured some peanuts into my hand then swigged some Coke from the bottle. I poured Coke into my hand..... "Hi Nick. Come on in. Do you want to take your coat off?" "No, I'm fine as I am, thanks" Nick Folk song? Hehehe. Editing went wrong: didn't see the bit left at the top of the writing frame. Let's try that story again. ___________________________________________ I was sitting in my car outside a music shop, waiting for the time of my appointment with the owner. I poured some peanuts into my hand then swigged some Coke from the bottle. I poured some peanuts into my hand then swigged some Coke from the bottle. I poured some peanuts into my hand then swigged some Coke from the bottle. I poured Coke into my hand..... "Hi Nick. Come on in. Do you want to take your coat off?" "No, I'm fine as I am, thanks" _____________________________________________ Nick |
#21
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![]() "James Stewart" wrote in message ... "Broadback" wrote in message ... Just like the old days. The tea bag burst, I remembered that one used to let the tea settle so that the leaves dropped to the bottom, this worked, also I remembered to leave a little tea at the bottom of the cup! Nothing beats experience! ;-) what was your reading ? ...... The world implodes on the 30-March-2019 |
#22
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![]() "Bill Wright" wrote in message ... On 05/02/2019 10:56, Broadback wrote: Just like the old days. The tea bag burst, I remembered that one used to let the tea settle so that the leaves dropped to the bottom, this worked, also I remembered to leave a little tea at the bottom of the cup! Nothing beats experience! ;-) I put gravy granules in the cafetiere two days running. Thats just the dementia, nothing to worry about. After that I did the gravy granules from myself. |
#23
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On Wed, 6 Feb 2019 10:32:42 +1100, 2987fr, better known as cantankerous
trolling senile geezer Rot Speed, wrote: The world implodes on the 30-March-2019 PLEASE, spare everyone your senile "humour", senile Rot! -- Sqwertz to Rot Speed: "This is just a hunch, but I'm betting you're kinda an argumentative asshole. MID: |
#24
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On Tuesday, 5 February 2019 23:38:54 UTC, Rod Speed wrote:
"Bill Wright" wrote in message ... On 05/02/2019 10:56, Broadback wrote: Just like the old days. The tea bag burst, I remembered that one used to let the tea settle so that the leaves dropped to the bottom, this worked, also I remembered to leave a little tea at the bottom of the cup! Nothing beats experience! ;-) I put gravy granules in the cafetiere two days running. Thats just the dementia, nothing to worry about. luckily he's not yet reached your stage. |
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