How to make iced tea

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On the weekend, a small group of bloggers and one two-and-a-half-year-old girl relaxed in the leafy and floral courtyard of the Travelling Samovar Tea House to chat, giggle, taste tea, and learn about how to brew and blend and make the best of all the (non-alcoholic) summer drinks: iced tea.

Scout had begged to come with me and I was proud as punch to bring her along, but she did make it somewhat more difficult to listen and concentrate on everything we were learning. In between supervising toilet stops and watching her twirl around a garden umbrella and having half-an-ear on the shutter-click of 555(!) photographs (of the ground) being taken on my phone, here is what I learned about how to make a delicious iced tea.

Step 1: Choose your “base” (for example, black tea, green, yellow, or something herbal)

Step 2: You might want to blend some fresh or dried herbs in at the brew stage for flavour. For example, perhaps you’d like to add rose buds or peppermint

Step 3: Brew up the tea. Make it a fair bit stronger than you otherwise would because if you’re going to pour it over ice, that will dilute it

Step 4: A good tip the Travelling Samovar gave us was to pour strong, HOT, freshly-brewed tea over ice, which will immediately cool and dilute it. Alternatively, you can store brewed tea in the ‘fridge for several days, as long as it’s properly sealed and you haven’t yet added anything else like fruit or sugar

Step 5: Does your tea need sweetening? Experiment with fruit, sugar, honey, fruit cordial… To the yellow iced tea you see Scout making in these photographs, we added a strawberry coulis and some squares of mango for sweetness. It looked extravagant and tasted delicious

Step 6: Try to make your tea pretty. Apparently, we drink with our eyes as much as we eat with our eyes. The ladies at the Travelling Samovar suggest serving the cold tea with frozen fruits instead of ice: not only will it look beautiful, the tea won’t become diluted as it warms up

Are you an iced-tea drinker? I confess that before the Travelling Samovar opened its doors in our neighbourhood, I wasn’t a big fan.

I mean, there was THAT TEA I’d had in New Orleans that was pretty close to perfection, but other than that, the pre-bottled stuff you can buy at service stations really didn’t float my boat. But the subtle, sweet, refreshing and gorgeous-looking teas these ladies serve up (there’s easily half a dozen iced teas on the menu on any given day in summer) have completely won me over.

A big thanks to the Travelling Samovar for hosting such a fabulous event, and to all the ladies who came along and made it so much fun. I loved learning more about the history of this drink, and how to make it at home. And at 36 degrees by later that afternoon, you couldn’t get a day better suited to the drinking of iced beverages. Just ask Scout, who got home and announced to her father “I DID MAKE THE ICED TEA” along the lines of “I JUST INVENTED PERPETUAL MOTION.”

ps. This was not a sponsored event – we all paid our own ways

16 comments

  • Sandra F

    I had some iced tea when we were on holidays last year, and ever since I have been trying to find tips on how to make it as perfectly as the people who served it to hot and bothered tourists on arrival at our destination.
    Oh and yes, couldn’t agree more about that bottled stuff you buy at the shops and servos. Nothing like the real thing.
    I look forward to giving it a try. x

  • Deb @ Bright and Precious

    Beautiful photos, Naomi. I love that place.

  • Kate @ One Small Life

    It was such a pleasure to meet you Naomi, thank-you so much for organising. It was certainly a very refined way to spend a morning and I will certainly be back to the Travelling Samovar. Perhaps I can meet you there again for an iced tea (because you know, I didn’t get to try their cake!) x

  • Viv

    It was too much fun Naomi! Thanks for organising and for introducing us to Travelling Samovar – perfect place to sit and read with a cuppa! x

  • Zoya

    I love iced-tea (non bottled variety), but somehow I never think of making it myself. My sister-in-law makes lovely one with rooibos tea and apple juice – I should ask her for the recipe.

  • Clare

    What a lovely meet up! Thanks for photographing and recording it so beautifully Naomi. I like the tip about adding frozen fruit. I will be doing that to my iced tea in the summer.

    • Naomi Bulger

      It was so special. Wish you could have been there!! Yes, I’m going to try the frozen fruit idea too – I think it’s genius!

  • Karen

    I love iced tea! About 18 months ago, they opened a T2 shop very close to me so who was I not to taste test everytime I passed the store? I bought the iced tea kit and have tried many times but my efforts have never lived up to my expectations. I hear great things about the iced tea made in “the South” and New Orleans would have made it to perfection. x

    • Naomi Bulger

      I was the same Karen, which is why I was so keen to learn from the experts! Having lived in the US and travelled in the south, I was spoiled by REALLY good iced tea. Now it’s time to experiment until I get it right myself!

  • Carly Findlay

    I just loved that Saturday! Thank you or organizing it. You and your daughter are wonderful :)
    I have to tell you – I had some overripe blackberries that I crushed up to make a tea. I feel very knowledgable!
    See you soon!

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