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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. |
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"A venti transparento? Coming right up, sir. That'll be $3.52 with
tax. Have a nice day." Blair P. Houghton wrote: Carmen wrote: At Starbucks you get a previously unused cup of hot water and a Tazo teabag. I'm curious, how do you manage to mess that up and get coffee in it? :-P~ Starbucks would come up for a name for "previously unused cup of hot water" implying it's a variety of coffee. The "Transparento," perhaps. And Tazo sure ain't tea... what do boiled coffee leaves taste like? --Blair |
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Blair P. Houghton wrote: Carmen wrote: At Starbucks you get a previously unused cup of hot water and a Tazo teabag. I'm curious, how do you manage to mess that up and get coffee in it? :-P~ Starbucks would come up for a name for "previously unused cup of hot water" implying it's a variety of coffee. The "Transparento," perhaps. And Tazo sure ain't tea... what do boiled coffee leaves taste like? laughing Let me guess, you're replying from the tea group? I enjoy tea, but what sort varies widely with my mood, the weather, my hairstyle (just kidding about the last one). On a cold brisk windy day I might well go for an ill-mannered but brawny cup of good old Lipton tea. On a cold winter's evening I might opt for a Celestial Seasonings herbal tea and on cool morning in early spring go for some Wedgwood Darjeeling. My true love (see also: obsession) is coffee, but teas definitely have their place. Carmen |
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Pretty damned popular in the Chinese restaurant dives of
Brooklyn, where you'll have no trouble at all finding it. Comes with lots of half and half, to add insult to injury. Michael I've heard this same rumor but I've never seen it served. I don't know if it is an urban legend or not. I understand that mixing coffee and tea in the same cup is widely popular in many Asian countries. Wondering if anyone in the news group has encountered this sort of beverage -- are there standard ways of preparing this beverage, etc. |
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Lars wrote:
On Wed, 07 Jun 2006 15:31:37 -0400, wrote: I understand that mixing coffee and tea in the same cup is widely popular in many Asian countries. I have had that in Nepal once. I was on a nightbus from Kathmandu to the Indian border. At some nameless place were we had a brief stop this "Coffee-Tea" concotion was the fad of the town. Several guys were pushing it to bus passangers. I had a cup. It was heavy on milk and dark brown. Then I don't remember any more. ;-) And when you woke up all your money was gone? --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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I don't believe that mixing coffee and tea together tastes good. If
someone does have a recipe for one of these mixed drinks that tastes good, I would be interested in hearing it as well. wrote: I understand that mixing coffee and tea in the same cup is widely popular in many Asian countries. Wondering if anyone in the news group has encountered this sort of beverage -- are there standard ways of preparing this beverage, etc. |
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