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In praise of iced tea

Posted May 19 2008, 11:26 AM by Donna Freedman
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The temperature hit 88 degrees on Saturday, which is warm for Seattle, or anywhere else. My apartment has tall south- and west-facing windows and no air conditioning.

So I cranked the blinds inside out to reflect the sun, dragged the pedestal fan ($4, rummage sale) out of storage and made a big pitcher of iced tea. Sweet relief, the Smart Spending way.

If I lived in a humid climate, I'd probably be screaming for an air-cooled environment. But Seattle summers are fairly dry, and usually not quite this toasty. Besides, I have horizontal-sliding windows that won't easily accept an air conditioner.

Iced tea is the only possible response. And homemade tea is the only way to go.

Up to three times more than gasoline
Ever read the unit-price label on your favorite bottled tea? I have. Even the cheapest stuff runs $3.28 to $5.02 per gallon, and the flavored or "all natural" bottled teas cost $8.32 to $13.28 a gallon.

If gasoline cost $13.28 a gallon, people would riot.

Just a few aisles over from the bottled tea are boxes of tea bags. At a supermarket near me, the 100-count box of the Shoppers Value brand regularly goes on sale for a buck. That nets me 25 two-quart batches of tea, which works out to 8 cents per gallon. Those of you who swear you can taste a difference between generic and brand-name products should watch for loss leader/coupon combo deals. I've paid as little as $1.39 for Lipton tea, the brand my mom always used.

Even after adding sweetener and lemon, I'm paying practically nothing for my beverage. Besides, I have a couple of frugal hacks for those two products. I trade spent ink cartridges in at Office Max to get Sweet'n Low for free. Instead of using real lemons, I add a splash of Wyler's Light lemonade, which sells for three packets for $1 at Walgreens, or about 33 cents for a two-quart pitcher.

If you can heat water, you can make tea
Don't like artificial sweeteners? Use sugar, but add it to the hot water as the tea steeps so it dissolves completely. Unless, of course, you're one of those heathens who drinks unsweetened tea.

Everyone has a favorite tea recipe. Here's what works for me: To a cup of not-quite-boiling water I add four tea bags and let the brew steep for 14 minutes. Yes, that's strong enough to stand a spoon in, but afterward I dilute it with enough cold water to fill a two-quart pitcher.

When the pitcher is half empty, I steep another four bags, then remove them and put the cup in the fridge. Although it looks cloudy after a day, the taste is not affected, and adding water turns it that perfect pale amber. Having a cup of this elixir on hand at all times ensures that you never run out of tea, an important consideration on hot days.

You can get much fancier, of course. This MSN article has recipes for spectacular sips like peach mint green tea, minted mango tea, cranberry ginseng tea, and sparkling red and green tea.

Tea contains antioxidants, and some studies indicate that tea is good for your cardiovascular system, may stabilize blood sugar and can help guard against osteoporosis. What I know for sure is that it tastes good, it's very cooling and it's extremely cheap. That is, unless you're determined to pay $13.28 a gallon for the stuff.

Comments

 

So, the best way to save money and stay cool is to make ice tea?  I have heard of everything now.  What about svaing money on air conditioning, or how to make your swamp cooler function better, or how to actually cool your home without air conditioning.

Besides, doesn't tha caffine from drinking tea all day long to stay cool keep a person up at night, add to their hypertension, and increase their heart rate, thus making it more difficult to cool off?

Even in the hottest of temperatures and the most humid climates, take damp (not soaking wet) towel and place it in the refridgerator for a few minutes.  After it cools, roll it up and place it around the back of your neck and froward over your shoulders and it will ACTUALLY cool you body down for quite a while without running up your electric bill, or causing you to lay awake warm all night from a caffine buzz.

I make sun tea with Constant Comment, and I'm a purist, no sweetener or other flavors.  I haven't been able to drink straight Lipton in many years, it's so bitter for me and no amount of additives helps.

I place 3 bags in the gallon jar and fill with cool tap water.  The temps were over 100 yesterday here in Phoenix so we can make tea very quickly.  A nice tall glass of ice cubes with tea poured over it ......... yummy

Steven, my friend, is the heat getting to you? Lighten up a little and enjoy summer

I was hoping it was an article on how to keep your house cool while saving money, not on how to make iced tea. Lame

"The temperature hit 88 degrees on Saturday, which is warm for Seattle, or anywhere else."

Funny. I was in WA State a few years back, during the summer. Absolutely beautiful weather...sunny, 85 degrees. People were going, "Oh, it's so hot." I told them, "Ya'll would die if ya'll came to Texas."

When it hits 115, then tell me it's hot. It'll be getting close then.

What with being an Alabamian, I know all about some sweet tea during the summer.  Good grief, we practially LIVE on the stuff.

But I cannot get over the fact that there are some areas of the country where lodgings, especially apartment buildings, don't have central air conditioning.  That completely blows my mind.  Then again, where have I lived during my lifetime?

Alabama, New Orleans, Mississippi, South Carolina (for college), and back to Alabama.

I'm just praying we don't have a summer like last year, with a month of daily 100+ temperature weather, and almost no rain.  We lost too many folks to heat stroke last year, and I don't know what we'd do with another year of those kinds of drought conditions.  Some parts of the south still haven't recovered from lack of rainfall.

I think anything that saves money and gets people thinking about financial thrift is a good idea.  We all should be passing along the ways that we save money and make things taste better on less cash.  Thanks for the ideas, folks, and keep 'em coming!   That mention of sun tea makes me remember growing up in the southwest with that gallon of tea so hot you can barely touch it until it cools.  Makes a great beverage without heating up the house.  Works well with the lemonade mixture and honey to flavor it too.

Harry, LMAO!  Point well taken on the assorted liquid/gasoline comparison.

Hi Donna,

Thank you for this article. While some may roll their eyes, I have always found your articles to be quite enjoyable. This iced tea article reminded me that even though times are tough for my family, there are always simple pleasures that can be enjoyed without bending our budget. Thanks again and keep up the good work!

better than boiling water, put tea bags in  a glass jar, set in the sun for 4-5 hours in the morning sun is best , it takes 8 bags per gallon, and no electric to make it. bring in and add sugar and ice, try it not as strong as boiled tea

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