An American scientist has sparked a trans-Atlantic tempest in a teapot by offering Britain advice on its favorite hot beverage.
Bryn Mawr College chemistry professor Michelle Francl says one of the keys to a perfect cup of tea is a pinch of salt. The tip is included in Francl’s book “Steeped: The Chemistry of Tea,” published Wednesday by the Royal Society of Chemistry.
Not since the Boston Tea Party has mixing tea with salt water roiled the Anglo-American relationship so much.
The salt suggestion drew howls of outrage from tea-lovers in Britain, where popular stereotype sees Americans as coffee-swilling boors who make tea, if at all, in the microwave.
…
The U.S. Embassy in London intervened in the brewing storm with a social media post reassuring “the good people of the U.K. that the unthinkable notion of adding salt to Britain’s national drink is not official United States policy.”
Ok.
So make Tea in the microwave with plenty of salt.
I got it. Brits, you good? Boffins? Cheerio, pip, pip?
Tips hat
Evnin’ Govna’ !
Boffin is a slur
Hold on, about to have my morning cup o Yorkshire, will report back
Edit - it kinda just makes it… rounder. Tea is supposed to be a little bit bitter, the salt makes the softer flavours more pronounced so it kinda stops tasting like tea
Edit 2, second cuppa. Just realised the prof probably doesn’t realise that a pinch of salt is actually quite a bit, so I tried an actual tiny pinch. You know what, it actually does improve it a tiny bit, but no enough that I need more salt in my life.
Does that daft cow not realise how much tea we drink? This is diabolical
Thanks for your research, I was too lazy to get off the chair and try myself
Now don’t leave us hanging, won’t you?
You need to drink more (average modern human drinks too less). Then you need more salt.
Fun fact, the modern tea bag was invented by an American. We really know how to throw a tea party.
“agitating the bag”
If you want to create a better cup of tea at least begin with tea leaves, not tea bags.
I could not agree more. However, a lot of tea drinkers love their dust filled paper bags.
Care to elaborate? I don’t see how having the leaves in a bag is inferior to having them loose
A decent guide to tea grades here. Even with higher end teabags, any tea dust created (e.g. if the teabag gets squashed) gets trapped inside the bag. The tea dust makes for a more bitter cup.
With very few exceptions the tea used in teabags is of much lower quality than loose leaf tea. Often it´s just fannings and dust, swept from the floor.
Somehow I doubt tea companies are sweeping dust off the floor and putting it in tea bags. C’mon.
I am not an expert but I have read about such practices again and again over the years. It´s also common knowledge that food companies do much, much worse things.
Dust is what remains after the tea has passed through the grading machine. It is powdery in texture and is often swept off the floor. Dust is considered the lowest grade of tea.
I’ll just assume my bro Steven Smith is one of those exceptions.
Sure looks like it.
Whats next britain giving advice on how to most effictivly shoot ur fellow shoolchildren?
Nice one. 👍
One joke
It’ll stop being funny when it stops being true
There is a reason everyone calls them the worlds greatest 3rd world country. They are always making it the greatest just never specified at what.
I think you’re doing pretty well in that regard without outside help.
Therr is always room for improvement
Now I’m curious how that would taste.
We are not talking about Tibetan butter tea salt levels here. In the article it is recommended to use just enough salt to tone down the bitterness by blocking the bitterness receptors on the tongue, not so much that the tea actually tastes salty.
Yeah ‘make a better tea by making it taste less like a tea’. I have seen a lot of that from people who just don’t like tea.
Though, for me that also include Brits, who spoil a good tea by adding milk ;-)
Though, for me that also include Brits, who spoil a good tea by adding milk ;-)
🤨 Breathe and count to ten. Stop grinding your teeth. No one needs to die. Breathe…
as far as I’ve heard the amount salt blocks bitterness is very individual, and doesnt work at all for some
Yeah, seems silly to discount something you’ve never tried just because it isn’t what you’re used to, but hey, that’s the English way.
Uh no, hanging on in quiet desperation is the English way.
Oh bollocks. Any country with traditions are unlikely to respond well to beibg told they’re doing it wrong. Tell Italians how to make pizza and see how they respond. Or try to tell the French anything
Well tea comes from China and Italian cuisine wouldn’t be jack-shit without the stuff they got from Meso-America.
David Bowie wrote a song about changes. It’s good. You should listen.
Woosh
Wow! Did hear that?!?! Something flew right past my head!!!
Yup
Shut up you tit.
I am a bit of a tit. And an arsehole.
Yeah, is it? I somehow don’t feel like that’s the case.
If there only was a way to find out.
oh well, back to chewing dry tea leaves
Meanwhile China is over there watching the west argue about a drink it invented millennia ago.
I don’t doubt this works because it definitely makes acidic/bitter coffee more palatable.
Kinda surprised this is just now coming up for tea drinkers. 3rd wave coffee nerds have been using saline solution to cut down on bitter flavors for like a decade now.
What’s wrong with the microwave? Heat is heat (except the 1995 movie which has little to do with heat or thermodynamics at all).
You could easily over steep it if you microwave it with the bag in it, but if you’re just boiling water it shouldn’t make a difference, other than being inefficient vs a kettle.
This is probably a US vs UK thing on power supply. Microwave is way faster to heat water than a kettle because the max voltage is lower in the US
My electric kettle heats water super fast. I don’t know where the idea that 120v electric kettles are slow came from. Maybe kettle tech used to be worse but I have zero complaints about my kettle speed and I have used European kettles too.
Its possible to make your house 220v here, but we dont because everything sold here is shitty ass 115v
I don’t think I would steep it in the microwave, but I could see myself boiling or reheating tea in it.
Reheating tea? U wot?
Don’t knock it til you try it. Cold water and bag goes in a mug in microwave. 1-2 mins later tea comes out. No forgetting about hot water or letting things cool and forgetting about it. I dont care if it’s correct. It tastes good to me.
Isn’t microwaving the bag bad? Wouldn’t it add microplastics and such?
I had no idea but a quick search shows most teabags have plastics.
Not sure if there’s a difference between microwaving a bag in water or letting a bag sit in hot water
Barbarian!
I’ve never tried it but considering there’s 3 different boil levels for steeping tea called inventively first, second and third boil.
Also the levels of oxygen in the water can affect the taste of the tea I would hazard a guess that microwaving water will create a fucking cupped abortion.
A microwave - no matter how clean - will probably imbue the water with ‘extras’. Tea is extremely delicate. I swore I hated tea until one day aged 21yo a friend made me a cup and it turns out I’d been drinking tea wrong the previous 21yrs. It took another 5-6yrs for me to find my preferred tea making method. Everything from the cup to teapot and water hardness level. Whether it has additives in the water and how much. How long to steep for. Each tea can require different steeping times to get the right colour and taste.
Making GOOD tea right isn’t as easy as people think.
It overheats it.
The water in a microwave when boiled forms small pockets of gaseous water whose temperature is more than 100 deg C, so it basically cooks the guts out of the tea.
You boil the water in the microwave. Then pour it. Not with the leaves or the pouch in.
Nothing. My two cents is just the microwave to heat up you water and add your tea of choice to steep afterwards.
Salt in tea … Your having a giraffe
My what?
This is the best summary I could come up with:
LONDON (AP) — An American scientist has sparked a trans-Atlantic tempest in a teapot by offering Britain advice on its favorite hot beverage.
Bryn Mawr College chemistry professor Michelle Francl says one of the keys to a perfect cup of tea is a pinch of salt.
The salt suggestion drew howls of outrage from tea-lovers in Britain, where popular stereotype sees Americans as coffee-swilling boors who make tea, if at all, in the microwave.
The U.S. Embassy in London intervened in the brewing storm with a social media post reassuring “the good people of the U.K. that the unthinkable notion of adding salt to Britain’s national drink is not official United States policy.”
The product of three years’ research and experimentation, the book explores the more than 100 chemical compounds found in tea and “puts the chemistry to use with advice on how to brew a better cup,” its publisher says.
She also advocates making tea in a pre-warmed pot, agitating the bag briefly but vigorously and serving in a short, stout mug to preserve the heat.
The original article contains 398 words, the summary contains 177 words. Saved 56%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
I like the idea of using molten salt to heat up the water and leaves.
What about tea in the wave?
Do you even have a tea pot? Neanderthal.
I steam tea in a moka pot, am I doing it right?
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