Tea Accessory: Tea Ball Infuser

One of my favourite tea accessories is my tea infuser, which I use with loose leaf teas at home. My first tea infuser was purchased online and was this silicone strawberry-like shaped thing. The basics of it is to remove the stem, fill with tea, insert the stem back in and then steep. The problem with it is that the holes were much too large. Every single type of tea I tried in it would come out and I’d wind up with tea leaves in my tea. While that isn’t the end of the world, it’s still not doing it’s job so I had to find something else.

The tea infuser I use now at home is this one:

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It’s stainless steel, doesn’t hold onto any scents or flavours of previously steeped tea, and the mesh sides clean really easily. It’s fairly good about keeping the tea in the ball, I have very minute of tea leaves in my tea (it’s almost never leaves, but just small bits of the loose tea). It opens when I press the handles together, and closes when I let go. If you let go, it will snap close – which is something to note if you’re snapping it close after filling up one half of the ball – tea leaves will go everywhere and it may make you sad (or annoyed).

The nice bonus about this fantastic tea infuser (that I love and use constantly at home, when not drinking bagged tea) is that it can be found in dollar stores! It fits well in most average sized mugs, I can see people running into trouble with the handle not being large enough if you’re prone to using those very large mugs, but for most mug sizes it should be suitable.

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I’ve had this tea infuser for a while now, so I no longer have the packaging to show you, but I do recall that I had purchased it at Daiso. If you don’t have a Daiso near you, don’t despair – you can find many similar ones online or probably in local shops. I know that some people don’t like tea balls because it doesn’t allow for as much room for the tea leaves to expand as they do the infusers that sit in the cup and look like a metal basket. When the tea infuser is $1-2 vs. $10+, it’s much more budget-friendly solution. I will likely get a tea infuser in the future that can sit in my mug and allow for optimal tea leaf expansion and unfurling, but for now I’m using my budget-friendly tea infuser.

Tea infusers come in all shapes and sizes! What’s your favourite tea infuser? Let me know in the comments below!

Stash Tea Company’s Earl Grey

Earl Grey by Stash Tea Company
Black Tea/ Flavoured
$2.50 for 38g

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First Impressions

I got my Stash Tea when it was 2 boxes for $5. Each box of Earl Grey contains 20 tea bags, which works out to be 1.9g of tea per tea bag which isn’t bad at all. The box for the Stash Tea Company’s Earl Grey makes me smile. It’s a very simple card stock box with two perforated openings to choose from. I opted for the opening at the bottom, so I can sit the box upright and the tea is accessible out the bottom. The other way to open it is to use your finger to punch in the side, and one whole side of the box lifts up (and can be tucked back in. Stash Teas come in individually packaged tea bags. For those that love loose leaf teas, you may be frowning at me right now but that’s okay. Tea bags can be useful! Especially if you’re travelling and don’t want to deal with spoons and infusers – or if you don’t want to make up your own tea bags with filters.

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The foil wrapper for the tea bags are a nice touch. While it does result in more waste, it does keep the tea bag in a sealed environment that protects it from air and light. There’s a handy cut at the top of the packaging which makes it easier to rip that sucker open. Almost instantaneously, I can smell the fragrant bergamot oil – one of my favourite parts of any good Earl Grey tea. Stash Tea’s Earl Grey lists the following as ingredients: premium black teas with oil of bergamot. The bright citrus smell with the scent of the black tea makes me eager about what is coming up next.

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DavidsTea’s Birthday Cake

Birthday Cake by DavidsTea
Rooibos Tea / Flavoured
$7.75 for 50g

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First Impressions

This is another tea that I purchased from DavidsTea in one of their ‘rainbow’ tins. It is 85g of Birthday Cake tea in a red tin, which worked out to be $15 per tin or 3 tins for $30. I find that this lid is a bit tougher to remove than the tin for my Cream of Earl Grey, also by DavidsTea. I had a lot of high hopes for this tea because of it’s name and I had read reviews about it before online. The tea comes in a sealed plastic bag that is resealable. There is a very in-your-face vanilla cake smell that reminds me of boxed cakes or grocery store sheet cakes. The smell almost has a bit of a pancake syrup or artificial maple syrup quality to it. The sprinkles are very pretty addition to the vanilla cake-scented tea.

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Birthday Cake has a lot of ingredients. It contains: red and green rooibos, honeybush, sprinkles, ice cream bits, natural and artificial flavouring. If you’re allergic to any colouring additives, this tea contains: Yellow 5 Lake, Blue 1 Lake, Red 40 Lake, Red 3, Blue 1, Red 40.

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