The following Dodgers have been smited by the JDK for their crimes against Jam:
All the girls! for picking on the JDK and damaging his already delicate self esteem!
The Basserd Who Nicked Copper's Stuff For the offense of nicking Copper's stuff. You are a tw*t, whoever you are and we all hope you get run over by a tram in Nottingham. Or Liverpool. Or whereever else they have trams!
Copper For the crime of playing with her Wii instead of her Jammie pals!
Now, I'm not actually going to rant about tea in this post, despite the title. Tea gives me no problem at all. In fact i love tea. It's an unreasonable level of love (and possibly entirely inappropriate) given that I am a man and tea is a hot beverage, but the truth of it is that if I could have it's babies, I would.
So we've established that I like tea.
So anyway. I was watching the news the other morning and there was an article on it about tea. Apparently if you add milk to it, it loses some of it's health benefits. I'm not going to rant about that either, cos I don't care. What I am going to rant about is Peppermint Tea. And Camomile Tea. And Fragrant Dandelion and Grass Clippings Tea.
Let me explain to everyone how tea is made. You take a tea plant. You cut its leaves off and you pour hot water on them You now have tea. Doing the same with nettles does not make tea. It makes some sort of nettle drink. Tea is called tea because it's made from tea. That's it's defining quality. That's what makes it different from cola or orange squash.
So could all these people who ponce around the office with their Rasberry Tea and their Daffodil and Floor Sweepings Tea please refrain from calling it something it's not. Otherwise we may as well start calling all our other drinks 'tea;. I'm off to the pub for a few teas and maybe a coupla tea chasers. I'd like a glass of merlot tea with my dinner.
And why stop with drinks? If we're in the business of calling non-tea stuff tea, lets just call EVERYTHING 'tea'. Gotta make a tea call. I'm on the Tea. On my way to tea. Lovely tea we're having. The Tea in Iraq is a worry. Did you watch tea on the tea tonight? Gotta take a tea.
It's ok Darren, deep breaths, clam(!) down. With any luck I'll be back in on Tuesday and then we can go on our tea run and I'll buy you a cup of tea and you can buy me a cup of tea and everything will be back as it should be.
Good points though and well made. Tea is an infusion of tea leaves like dandelion & arsebiscuit and all that other crap the lovies drink are infusions but WITHOUT THE TEA part.
Damn your rant made me angry - I'm going out to beat the crap out of a squirrel and scare a kitten... f*****g squirrels... f******g kittens...
__________________
I'll take arrogance and the inevitable hubris over self-doubt and lack of confidence.
"Everyone has a plan, until they get punched in the face" - Mike Tyson
Are you saying therefore that Stephen Fry should be horsewhipped for his irritating Twinnings adverts too then.
Really when all is said and done we should blame him to be honest.
Um, no because he is advertising tea - breakfast tea normally I think - and I drink that in the posh hotels I stay in. And it tastes like doo doo so I've started taking PG Tips
__________________
I'll take arrogance and the inevitable hubris over self-doubt and lack of confidence.
"Everyone has a plan, until they get punched in the face" - Mike Tyson
7. British. any meal, whether a light snack or one consisting of several courses, eaten in the late afternoon or in the evening; any meal other than dinner, eaten after the middle of the afternoon.
ddvmor wrote: As opposed to proper tea bags like the ones I favour...
Pffff, majority rule mate and not many people buy those namby pamby northern ones that you do. But you're right they are also fine - though you dont complain about the tea I make you.
__________________
I'll take arrogance and the inevitable hubris over self-doubt and lack of confidence.
"Everyone has a plan, until they get punched in the face" - Mike Tyson
Shaz - Dictionary.com can't be expected to know squat about something as institutionally British as tea on account of it being run by Americans who don't know squat about something as institutionally British as tea. My point still stands - if we're gonna call something that isn't tea, tea then we may as well call everything tea.
Stead - your tea is shit, but I don't say owt because you might cry like a girl (with pink ribbons in her hair and little dress and a pretty little barbie doll...).
Yes. I'm not sure the time savings are significant enough to justify it. Not only is it a bit lazy but it's also wrong. 12 kinds of wrong. Possibly more, but I stopped counting at 12.
ahh a subject close to my heart (yes, i carry tea bags around in my shirt pocket )
anyway, i, rather unusually, agree entirely with the jdk and steadman.. about tea, gravy, granules and little girls crying
i'd consider myself a relatively hardcore straight up normal-tea drinker *ahem* so getting used to drinking it cold, with ice and sugar even took me a few years.. i'm there though (as long as think of it as not tea at all)
We ran a marketing campaign once where we posted a tea bag to our customer and said "Have a cuppa on us while you call for an insurance quote" - nice idea (well tacky really) only there was one problem. We didnt wrap the bag in plastic so when it rained and the envelope got wet with the postman, the tea leaked out of the bag and stained peoples carpets. We werent popular. We suck.
__________________
I'll take arrogance and the inevitable hubris over self-doubt and lack of confidence.
"Everyone has a plan, until they get punched in the face" - Mike Tyson
Not that I have lost all my marbles you understand. My rant about steven fry was in the new advert he is advertising those fruit infusion things as tea.
That's what made me go grrrr.
As for granules of tea? They suck, but not as much as decaf tea. Simply evil stuff.
We even got a petition at work so we could have PG Tips instead of some cheapy stuff.
__________________
Your benefits have been assessed by.......The Assessor! (not available in Northern Ireland)
1. Regarding decaf my wife is pregnant and therefore watching her caffine intake, so while I and she would agree with all the comments - it's better than her having no tea at all!
2. I have no excuse for using granuals - except in a stange way I have grown to like them I only started on them because they were all that was available that wasn't decaf.
__________________
I aint no wide eyed rebel, but I aint no preachers son.
I suspect he may only be telling a half truth and that his post should have read something like this:
I have no excuse for using granules - except in a strange way I have *developed an immunity to their foul taste and odd gritty texture*. I only started on them because *I couldn't be arsed to go and buy some real teabags*. Halo - you do know that they make tea granules out of dried vomit and sawdust, don't you?
Problem is... every time I see this thread I have a tea craving... I'm off to the canteen...
i've taken to making a pot of tea and pouring two cups .. both for myself..
this is because if i drink one then fancy another - the second cup is always a bit stewed when i pour it outta the pot, this way, i just drink them both at the same time and they are perfect!
sharkjf115 wrote:somone made a tea for me at work the other day. He put sugar in it.
That is frankly criminal. We must hunt him down like a dog!
sharkjf115 wrote:I also have a friend who barely introduces the bag to the water before removing it...
It's not one of my parents is it?
Here's another tea related thing that really p*sses me off:
When you go into a cafe or canteen these days, the hot beverages are produced with the aid of a coffee machine thing like this:
So you go in and you get charged about £1.20 and what do you get in return for your hard earned cash? I'll tell you shall I? You get a paper cup with a teabag in it onto which they have poured water which, due to health and safety regulations cannot be more than sixty degrees in case someone scalds themself on it.
1. Tea should be made with water that is as close to boiling as you can get it. That's how you get all of the tasty tea goodness out of the tea-leaves. 60 degrees is quite a long way from boiling. Can't argue with tea science.
2. I've just paid a bloody fortune for a cup of tea. The least the basserds could do is actually make it for me instead of just handing me the component parts. It's like going into Burger King, asking for a burger and being given a couple of bits of bread and a beef patty and being told to make it myself.
ohhh yes, this irks me too - i don't like coffee but i really really begrudge paying a shop the same amount for a crap cup of tea i could pay for a box of 160 bags!
For years all you had in this country was tea shops & while you tea drinkers got a nicely brewed pot of char all us coffee drinkers got was a dodgy cup of lukewarm Nescafe, if we were lucky. We now have coffee shops & at last we can get decent cups of fresh coffee, made from freshly ground beans (&, incidently, often steam, which is by definition at 100 degrees C). We don't force you to drink in them you know.
don't get me wrong, i fully respect the rise of the coffee empires - and indeed, i've never liked tea in any establishment anywhere - be it a posh hotel or a old timey cafe.. nobody seems to be able to make it just the way i like it (*alert* tea snob in the house *alert*)
i go in, because i'm usually forced, arm behind my back, by kingbilly
sha76jam wrote:(&, incidently, often steam, which is by definition at 100 degrees C).
I don't think you'll find that the 'steam' that you see in coffee shops is actually steam on account of steam being a clear gas. What you are referring to is water vapour... which by definition isn't at 100 degrees c on account of it being in a suspended liquid state.