+1 . for all the talk about environmentalism amongst the creative crowd, there sure does seem to be a lot of bottled water, premade tea, etc. etc.....or maybe that's just the engineer's problem..to make sure the common folk can play with no cares of their own.
On a more serious note...I think cold tea came out of the South, where the hot, humid summers made the very thought of hot tea more revolting than you might imagine...Picture 85% humidity @ 80-90°F for a month or so straight.... fwiw, most restaurants in the US offer "Iced tea" as a standard beverage option... And as a general rule, we prefer our "tea" brewed using coffee beans. :)
Note: the section in my local grocery devoted to tea represents about /8th the space taken up by that gem of a brew, Kaf.
I go through a gallon a day and keep them cold while in rotation. It also keeps the air conditioned kitchen cool...... So it actually does become Arizona Tea.
The Arizona Ice Tea in 1 Gallon plastic containers are Bake in. I am sure there is a way to remove the color. If anyone knows a way to remove them please let me know.
I am planning to use a bunch in my garden---as OLLAS! Same material as milk jugs, but way stronger. I can poke little holes in the sides, bury them next to my tomato and pepper plants, and fill with water. I just wish I could find more AriZona Zero in gallon jugs besides the ginseng green tea. Nobody here has anything else, but I know there are other, awesome flavors.j
Comments
Best Answer 10 years ago
MAKE MORE TEA! I cold brew 5 bags about 6 hours..... but all tea is different.
Answer 10 years ago
+1 . for all the talk about environmentalism amongst the creative crowd, there sure does seem to be a lot of bottled water, premade tea, etc. etc.....or maybe that's just the engineer's problem..to make sure the common folk can play with no cares of their own.
Answer 10 years ago
Cold tea ? The colonists are revolting....
Answer 10 years ago
Hrumph! aw, go sit on a crumpet. ;-)
On a more serious note...I think cold tea came out of the South, where the hot, humid summers made the very thought of hot tea more revolting than you might imagine...Picture 85% humidity @ 80-90°F for a month or so straight.... fwiw, most restaurants in the US offer "Iced tea" as a standard beverage option... And as a general rule, we prefer our "tea" brewed using coffee beans. :)
Note: the section in my local grocery devoted to tea represents about /8th the space taken up by that gem of a brew, Kaf.
Answer 10 years ago
;-)
Answer 10 years ago
I like your new avatar, btw. very fuzzy.
Answer 10 years ago
I go through a gallon a day and keep them cold while in rotation. It also keeps the air conditioned kitchen cool...... So it actually does become Arizona Tea.
10 years ago
did you think I was kidding?
Reply 1 year ago
Yeah I know your were kidding
1 year ago
The Arizona Ice Tea in 1 Gallon plastic containers are Bake in. I am sure there is a way to remove the color. If anyone knows a way to remove them please let me know.
1 year ago
Anyone know how to remove the labels from the 1 gallon Arizona Ice Tea?
4 years ago
I am planning to use a bunch in my garden---as OLLAS! Same material as milk jugs, but way stronger. I can poke little holes in the sides, bury them next to my tomato and pepper plants, and fill with water. I just wish I could find more AriZona Zero in gallon jugs besides the ginseng green tea. Nobody here has anything else, but I know there are other, awesome flavors.j
10 years ago
You should definitely make a raft out of them. Bind them all together and float somewhere. It would be win.
https://www.instructables.com/id/Project-rRaft-Building-a-Raft-out-of-Water-Bottl/
Answer 10 years ago
Or an artifical island:
http://greenupgrader.com/1821/spiral-island-constructed-from-recycled-bottles/