I'm a brit living in America.
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@spacehobo @virbonus @fesshole we also enjoy boiling the colour out of vegetables, we’ve all got our quirks.
In more seriousness it’s more of a whole affair, generally you can diffuse a dispute between people by angrily and silently watching the kettle boil then being more chilled out by the time the tea is at a drinkable temperature before recommencing. Generally the monster sugar thing is what we call a builders tea
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Yes, it appears to be something of a myth or perhaps advances in electric kettle design ie heating element has made this no longer relevant.
The cultural fact that tea is not consumed in US as it is in much of the world also plays a role in the absence of electric kettles in most US households.
I remember being in the US in the early 90s and noticing the lack of electric jugs everywhere I stayed and the difficulty of finding somewhere to buy a cuppa.
One cafe in downtown NYC did offer to make me a cup of tea when I enquired then after a long wait presented me with a tepid cup of weak milky tea complete with tea bag still in the mug which tasted like it was at least 10 years old.
@jeremy_pm @jeroen @fesshole in the South, we actually drink a ton of tea, but it's brewed very strong in large batches and served over ice.
People usually get this out at restaurants or from a fast food drive through. When we do make it at home, typically it makes more sense to just heat water in a pot and drop the bags in there to steep.
Another tradition is sun tea, which again requires a large vessel for a batch brew.
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I'm a brit living in America. At my office there's no kettle, but we have a hot water dispenser. Today it's broken. When I lamented I can't make a cup of tea, a colleague suggested I microwave the water. Trump is not the only thing that makes this place a hellscape.
@fesshole
Come on, this actually works! -
@jeremy_pm @jeroen @fesshole in the South, we actually drink a ton of tea, but it's brewed very strong in large batches and served over ice.
People usually get this out at restaurants or from a fast food drive through. When we do make it at home, typically it makes more sense to just heat water in a pot and drop the bags in there to steep.
Another tradition is sun tea, which again requires a large vessel for a batch brew.
Yes, in my childhood it was always traditional to make a pot of tea in an aptly named tea pot which was then poured into cups with or without milk.
Loose tea leaves were used in the teapot and tea would usually be poured through a tea strainer but not necessarily hence the history of reading the tea leaves that remain at the bottom of a cup once drunk.
The advent of tea bags destroyed a lot of tea traditions although loose tea and teapots are still used particularly by tea aficionados.
The best cup of tea I have ever enjoyed was in the Sri Lankan tea lands where the tea served was extremely fresh and served with fresh milk from cows that were farmed locally. Dairying was possible due to the high altitude of the tea lands providing a warm but not tropical year round temperature of approximately 25°C.
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I wondered the same. It can’t affect the taste. Is it a principle thing? I boil a kettle on a stovetop every morning for coffee I make in a French press because that’s how I like to do it, but I’d microwave a cup of water for tea in a pinch.
Also don’t really trust the hot water from the tap. Idk why.

