Originally posted by d000hg
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Reply to: Best TeaPot
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Previously on "Best TeaPot"
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I've always wanted a vacuum (thermos) glass teapot. Every teapot I ever used is cold by the time you want a second cup.
I have some nice glass vacuum cups which are lovely
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Originally posted by BR14 View Postmy trusty old teapot has developed a hairline crack.
What do you guys think is the best replacement? i want a nice strong brew without too much faffing.
oh, and money is no object.
Example, albeit the company are sold out:
https://www.palmerstores.com/product.../2806/#reviews
Edit: I see amazon have them. The company has changed name from Grunwerg to Cafe Ole, for some reason.
https://www.amazon.co.uk/dp/B003CB9T...ing=UTF8&psc=1
Try a Grunwerg Rondo. Good for strong tea. Avoid glass teapots - they are aesthetically pleasing whilst infusing, but dissipate heat far too quickly and ruin the leaf infusion process.
I drink black, white, green and herbal teas using teapots, and this one is the best of any I've used. The pot-for-one is good for the office.
Main reasons to get this one: nobody wants to steal it, looks unusual; bakelite handle, lasts forever, and means you will not get burned whilst carrying it around; wire mesh infuser, rather than a metal tub with holes drilled in, so tea infuses properly.Last edited by contractorinatractor; 6 October 2017, 13:44.
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Originally posted by BR14 View PostIrony seems to be lost here. - oh, well
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Originally posted by BR14 View PostIrony seems to be lost here. - oh, well
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Originally posted by BR14 View PostWhat do you guys think is the best replacement? i want a nice strong brew without too much faffing.
oh, and money is no object.
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Originally posted by northernladyuk View PostAh. Thanks. Must try. Sloe and damson gins are my regulars.
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Originally posted by NotAllThere View PostWhen you go shopping for a teapot, take a bottle of water and a bowl with you. Then you can check easily if the teapot is a dribbler.
Frankly I wouldn't bother buying any teapot made after about 1950 for that reason, as it will dribble like an incontinent two year old!
Your best bet is to try and find an old one in a charity shop. (I have several, although I don't generally use them.)
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Originally posted by northernladyuk View PostAh. Thanks. Must try. Sloe and damson gins are my regulars.
Word has it that one shouldn't pick the sloes until after the first frost.
Now, years ago that meant you could have them steeped in a kilner jar by the end of September but these days one can count the number of pre-Christmas frosts on something I haven't got.
So, onto a baking tray for a night in the deep freeze they go...
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Originally posted by WTFH View PostYou suspend the botanicals over the vodka so that they flavour the vapour, then you condense it.
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