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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

 

Yeah, when it's ninety degrees out, a glass of teas is all you need.....

Seriously, somebody got paid to write this?

I make sun tea, 6-8 bags for a gallon of water. Set in sunshine, a sunny window will do. Leave no longer than 4 hrs. Add ice and drink.

On the subject of saving a buck or two, I've learned how to make my own lattes, using either a one-cup (manual) coffee maker, or a French Press, and frothing the milk with a battery-operated milk frother.  It works wonderfully.  I usually nuke the milk for at least 30secs  to 1min depending on the volume.  I haven't figured out the cost per cup, but it is definitely way less than buying at SBUX, and helps me not feel guilty when I do treat myself every now and then to an actual, honest-to-God commercially made latte.  

Tee-hee...or is that "Tea Hee"?  I WISH it was 88 degrees here.  Yes, in Arizona it was 110 today.  I don't drink tea so that's not an option.  Staying indoors is the only option and it will be a long, hot summer again.  Amazing how "cool" 80 degrees in the house is!

Oh, WOW! They just discovered ice tea!!! What will they think of next? Sundials?

"Yeah, when it's ninety degrees out, a glass of teas is all you need.....

Seriously, somebody got paid to write this?"

Why are you reading this? Why do the trolls always have to come out in places like this? I'd think Todd et al. would be at the Investing sites  and not here

I was going to go out to dinner and spend $5. I made myself a sandwich instead.

Harry:

You DO have a point. However, I am sure somebody somewhere drinks gallons of coffee each week.  

I think the point is that it's all about perspective. The cost of a gallon of gas makes many people mad (primarily because they were used to low gas prices for decades).  Some of those grumbling about the cost of gas would think NOTHING of dropping 4 dollars or more each day on 16 oz (or larger) coffees or sodas or even bottled water (yes, there are bottled waters out there that cost $4 per bottle).  If they did the math in gallons, they might see the inconsistency between what they say and how they spend

Assuming one of the specialty drinks at Starbucks cost 4 dollars  (I do know it's at LEAST this much) for 16 oz (and that I did the math correctly) that means a gallon of that drink would cost 32 dollars a gallon.

Donna - Frugal is good.  I love a quart mason jag with 6 tea bags & sweetner put in the sun - it even works on overcast days. P.S. you don't use your stove energy or heat up the house.

To the critics, have you heard about these teas that have NO caffeine? And some of those teas have other ingredients that have great health benefits.  Seriously, I am NOT making this up. If you don't believe me, just go to your grocery store (it doesn't even have to be a "health" food store) and browse the tea aisle.  It's usually next to  the coffee.

And if you don't like tea, there's always good old H20.

As for cooling mechanisms, evaporative cooling is much more efficient than A/C, which puts heat into the environment rather than "removing it" as evaporative cooling does. I would LOVE to have a swamp cooler, but right now it's a little out of my price range.

I do line dry some of my clothes. In the bathroom. The cooling effect when I do this is very apparent and the coolness feels much more natural than cooling from A/C (which makes me feel like I am in a walk-in cooler).  

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