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UL tea strainer NOT disposable
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Home › Forums › General Forums › Food, Hydration, and Nutrition › UL tea strainer NOT disposable
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Oct 9, 2011 at 4:45 am #1280345
I'm looking for a diy or market available really lightweight small reusable tea strainer. Any creative ideas?
Thanks!
Oct 9, 2011 at 5:49 am #1788330a simple mesh style would probably be your lightest… or… what I use most often is a little cheesecloth baggie. These are designed for bouquet garni when making soups and stews. I take one for each person and just give them a rinse with water after I dispose of the leaves and I keep it in a ziplock bag. Eventually they will wear out and they will hold flavors if not rinsed right away, however it is not really noticeable. I do carry one extra just in case one starts to fall apart.
Here is a link…
You could always make your own with cheesecloth or loose weave muslin.
Edited to add… these seem like they'd be light and I am quite curious to how well they'd be for infusion (I like my leaves to have lots of room to steep). Silicone Tea Infusers
Oct 9, 2011 at 7:25 am #1788350I've used noseeum netting as a coffee filter. Would work equally well with tea.
Oct 9, 2011 at 8:01 am #1788360As Laurie points out with the cheesecloth one can make their own bag. One note – look for higher end cloth, the stuff imported from Thailand is nice, just not the cheap loosely woven junk used in crafts! It dries quickly and one can shake the leaves out.
Or you could go primitive and put the leaves in your mug and let them settle….has worked for many centuries ;-) Not so elegant but it works!
Oct 9, 2011 at 8:29 am #1788365I bought a Tuffy Steeper from The Tea Spot about three years ago and use it in the kitchen and on the trail. You can get one in a nice range of colours – easy to find when it slips down to the bottm of your pack. It works with coffee or tea, just be sure to clean it after use.
Oct 9, 2011 at 11:38 am #1788421Laurie Ann,I already have some cheesecloth,so I will try that and Sarah, I really like your idea of au natural….why didn't I think of it :)I'm going to try both. At home I use half of a broken mesh tea ball that fits perfectly on the rim of my favorite cups, and it's reasonably light, but doesn't fit Ti trail cup :)
Oct 9, 2011 at 2:17 pm #1788487I might add that I have seen some tea balls these days that are SO light! But honestly….I have done the loose leaf in the cup method and if it doesn't bother your LNT ethics to scatter (it doesn't bother mine to say the least!) you can scatter, rinse and go :-)
Oct 9, 2011 at 3:07 pm #1788507Sarah says:
"Or you could go primitive and put the leaves in your mug and let them settle….has worked for many centuries ;-) Not so elegant but it works!"Plus you can read your fortune in the leaves!!!!
I like using loose tea leaves without a strainer/bag/infuser too – no weight, and I have a mustache (multi-use) for straining out any floating leaves!
Oct 9, 2011 at 4:40 pm #1788545Fortune says "Today will be hot n' sweaty" ;-)
Oct 13, 2011 at 12:19 pm #1790093Materials: smallest size aluminum tubing, from the Ace hardware hobby/craft metals rack (smallest tubes come ina 3 pack). Do NOT try to find this in Home Depot, you will only get blank stares and ignorant responses. Aluminum wire, less than 1/16th inch thick. Aquarium filter bags, nylon. 1/16" drill bit and drill. Pliers, to squeeze tube ends flat and bend aluminum wire.
I was using a normal large sized tea ball, but it took too much room in my narrow pot with the other stuff in it, so I wanted something smaller. Obviously the 18 grams I saved makes no real difference to anything in the real world, but the size did. The mesh dries super fast, stick that on a rock after you dump the tea and it will be dry by the time you pack up your breakfast/dinner stuff. That's why I didn't use a cotton, plus cotton will stain and retain flavors, which is of course undesirable for teas of all types. Also, polyesters I believe should not be used in boiling water, or near boiling, too close to their melting points. Nylon mesh and nylon thread. For this prototype I used polyester thread, but for a better one I'd use nylon thread too. I researched the temp ratings of the different materials, and it turned out nylon is the only practical choice.
This mesh material is hard to sew (much harder than silnylon), and the way the stuff folds isn't intuitive, so it's worthwhile making a pinned mockup with muslin or something, I wish I'd done that. This is a raw prototype, I didn't really test the sewing tensioning, as you can see, but it works well enough for me to use it. Made this yesterday after being bugged by tea ball for a while.
Tea ball has annoying habit of opening when you pull it out, thus spilling its contents, and it also doesn't really have enough room to let tea expand and really soak in the water. I'd make the above bag bigger next time, it's easy to make new bags, just slit them, then slide them on rods.
I wanted to use titanium rods, but the local bike shop didn't have titanium spokes and finding rods is too time consuming so I just used the softer and more flexible aluminum tubing, which is super easy to work, and drill through.
I may, if I get motivated, make these for sale if I can clean up the design and sewing parts, and if I can find titanium rods, this aluminum is fine but you cannot treat it non-gently.
I believe 1.4 grams qualifies for 'really lightweight', and it is reusable, so this would meet the specs. It's tricky to make it though, the previous prototype got swallowed by my sewing machine and almost destroyed the machine, had to take it all apart to get the stuff turning again, had to pull out the ripped and shredded material with pliers, then dismantle the machine. So be careful with it.
Oct 13, 2011 at 12:54 pm #1790120I don't use a strainer with loose leaf in the field nor at home. I just heat the water then put in the tea. It will settle. It works.
Oct 13, 2011 at 1:01 pm #1790124I've never liked that, for many reasons, one, and probably primary, is that teas have an ideal steep time, too long, and it gets bitter. At least decent green teas do. Good black teas I find really are best with a few minutes steep, then remove the leaves. And some black teas tend to have pretty fine grains, that just don't taste good swirling around the cup. English breakfast, irish breakfast, earl grays are all like that to me. Plus I just dislike that last dregs of crud and gunk in the tea cup. Plus the person here is asking for a lightweight tea strainer.
At home I throw the leaves in the pot (regular, not tea pot, cleaning tea pots is a total pain in the butt that I gave up on decades ago) I boil the water in, and let it steep, then use a strainer to strain them out when pouring it into cup.
Oct 13, 2011 at 2:00 pm #1790157You could get a chakoshi from your local asian market:
They're relatively light compared to the MSR tea caddie, are stainless and don't hold odors/tastes and can double as a gunk prefilter for your water…
Nov 4, 2011 at 7:06 pm #1798685Last year I found the same bags Laurie showed. I rinse 'em out after each coffee.
Nov 5, 2011 at 3:19 pm #1798886Harald, that's very cool! And Tohru, that's cool too, what's it weigh?
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