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Tea bag

For the sexual slang term, see teabagging.
Image:Tea bags.jpg
Image:Turkish teabag.jpg

A tea bag is a small bag that holds tealeaves or herbal teainfusions, either the amount needed to brew a single cup of tea; popular in countries such as the United States, or a larger one, of which one or two are used for a whole teapot; found in countries such as Canadaand the United Kingdom. The tea is brewed still inside the bag, making it easier to dispose of without a tea strainer.

The tea bag was accidentallyinvented by Americantea importer Thomas Sullivanin 1908. He had sent samples of his tea out to customers packaged in silk bags. His customers put the entire bags into the pot, thinking that was what Sullivan had intended.

Tea bags were commercially produced in America by the 1920s. The silk was replaced by gauzeand later paper. Tea bags took off in the United Kingdom by the 1960s—today in the UK 85% of tea consumed is brewed using a tea bag.

A well-produced tea bag, with enough space for the tea to infuse properly, is a convenient alternative to loose leaves. However, tea bags are often let down by being filled with poor quality tea—small, dusty leaves from many different sources which tend to release tanninmore quickly, making the tea taste harsh.

Traditionally, tea bags have been square or rectangular in shape. More recently circular and pyramidal bags have come on the market, and are often claimed by the manufacturers to improve the quality of the brew.

However, some tea drinkers claim that loose leaves brew a superior cup of tea, and believe that the ritualof leaves is part of the experience of your tea. Many blends of tea are not available in tea bags, and with loose leaves you are free to experiment with your own creations.

The concept of pre-measured portions to be infused in disposable bags has also been applied to coffee, although this has not achieved such wide market penetration (similar to the market penetration of instant teaas compared to instant coffee).

The term tea bag is also used for the paper or foil wrapper that surrounds the actual teabag. They are usually square or rectangular envelopes with the brand name and flavour printed on them. Many people collect tea bag envelopes, with some collections containing over 20,000 teabags.

See also

  • tea infuser
  • teabag problem

de:Teebeutel ja:ティー・バッグ nl:Theezakje zh:袋茶




This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
It uses material from the Wikipedia article Tea bag.

 
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