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Tea (rec.drink.tea) Discussion relating to tea, the world's second most consumed beverage (after water), made by infusing or boiling the leaves of the tea plant (C. sinensis or close relatives) in water.

Inexpensive tins, cans, canisters etc. for oolongs, keemuns, and reds.....



 
 
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Old 26-01-2007, 01:47 AM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Shen
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Posts: 113
Default Inexpensive tins, cans, canisters etc. for oolongs, keemuns, and reds.....

I've really gone a little overboard with 2 oz of this, 4 oz of that and
need and expensive source for storage. I'm a little afraid of glass -
we have a bright kitchen and that's the tea area, as well. Any
suggestions are appreciated.
Thanks in advance.
Shen

  #2 (permalink)  
Old 26-01-2007, 03:02 AM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Will Yardley
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Posts: 84
Default Inexpensive tins, cans, canisters etc. for oolongs, keemuns, and reds.....

On 2007-01-26, Shen wrote:

I've really gone a little overboard with 2 oz of this, 4 oz of that and
need and expensive source for storage. I'm a little afraid of glass -
we have a bright kitchen and that's the tea area, as well. Any
suggestions are appreciated.


I saw a recommendation somewhere (teachat, I think) for specialty
bottle. The big advantage is that they are very cheap. Shipping works
out to about $10 flat rate, and the stuff I ordered from them came
pretty fast.

They have a number of (food grade) tin containers that might work:
http://www.specialtybottle.com/index...n=Custom&ID=41
http://www.specialtybottle.com/index...n=Custom&ID=25

The first page has a special "tea" container.

I'm not quite sure if the seal on the rest is as tight as might really
be ideal (a second lid would be the best) - I ordered some and have been
relatively happy with them, though. Haven't used the special "tea" tins
yet, but I imagine those will work pretty well.

You can buy some better / tighter ones (often with a double lid) from
tea shops (brick and mortar or online) or asian markets, but they'll
probably be more in the $3-8 each range.

I love the bee-house canisters, but they are a bit expensive if you
need a ton of them. You might be able to get away with packaging
multiple samples in their own bags in a single canister.

w

  #3 (permalink)  
Old 26-01-2007, 05:42 AM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Shen
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 113
Default Inexpensive tins, cans, canisters etc. for oolongs, keemuns, and reds.....

Perfect! Thank you!
Shen

On Jan 25, 6:02 pm, Will Yardley
wrote:
On 2007-01-26, Shen wrote:

I've really gone a little overboard with 2 oz of this, 4 oz of that and
need and expensive source for storage. I'm a little afraid of glass -
we have a bright kitchen and that's the tea area, as well. Any
suggestions are appreciated.I saw a recommendation somewhere (teachat, I think) for specialty

bottle. The big advantage is that they are very cheap. Shipping works
out to about $10 flat rate, and the stuff I ordered from them came
pretty fast.

They have a number of (food grade) tin containers that might work:http://www.specialtybottle.com/index...n=Custom&ID=25

The first page has a special "tea" container.

I'm not quite sure if the seal on the rest is as tight as might really
be ideal (a second lid would be the best) - I ordered some and have been
relatively happy with them, though. Haven't used the special "tea" tins
yet, but I imagine those will work pretty well.

You can buy some better / tighter ones (often with a double lid) from
tea shops (brick and mortar or online) or asian markets, but they'll
probably be more in the $3-8 each range.

I love the bee-house canisters, but they are a bit expensive if you
need a ton of them. You might be able to get away with packaging
multiple samples in their own bags in a single canister.

w


 




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