Tea strainer

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A tea strainer with a bamboo handle
A tea strainer on a teacup

A tea strainer is a type of

tea leaves
.

When

filter
them out with a tea strainer. Strainers usually fit into the top of the cup to catch the leaves as the tea is poured.

Some deeper tea strainers can also be used to brew single cups of tea, much as teabags or brewing baskets are used – the strainer full of leaves is set in a cup to brew the tea. It is then removed, along with the spent tea leaves, when the tea is ready to drink. By using a tea strainer in this way, the same leaves can be used to brew multiple cups.

Despite the fact that tea strainer use has declined in the 20th century with mass production of the tea bag, it is still preferred among connoisseurs, who claim that keeping the leaves packed in a bag, rather than freely circulating, inhibits diffusion. Many assert that inferior ingredients, namely dust-quality tea, are often used in tea bags.

Tea strainers are usually either sterling silver, stainless steel, or china. Strainers often come in a set, with the strainer itself and a small saucer for it to rest on between cups. Tea strainers themselves have often been turned into artistic masterpieces of the silver- and goldsmith's craft, as well as rarer specimens of fine porcelain.

Brewing baskets (or infusing baskets) resemble tea strainers, but are more typically put in the top of a teapot to keep the tea leaves contained during brewing. There is no definitive boundary between a brewing basket and a tea strainer, and the same tool might be used for both purposes.

A mug of rooibos tea with a tea strainer

Other uses

Tea strainers may also be used for separating milk solids from ghee.[1] A further use is to separate the liquid from the solid when preparing Béarnaise sauce.

Tea strainers or a similar small

kidney stone.[2]
The patient urinates through the strainer, thereby ensuring that, if a stone is passed, it will be caught for evaluation and diagnosis.

See also

References

  1. ^ "Ghee Strainer: 3 Best Facts to Guide Ghee Storage Setting". 9 August 2021.
  2. ^ "How to Strain your Urine (Aftercare Instructions)".