Questions about milk in tea

Fully oxidized tea leaves for a robust cup.


Nov 5th, '12, 22:53
Posts: 9
Joined: Oct 6th, '12, 18:46

Questions about milk in tea

by mckenderson » Nov 5th, '12, 22:53

Just a few questions about milk in tea:

How much milk do you put in tea?

Do you add warm or cold milk?

Do you add the tea to the milk? Or add the milk to the tea?

I've only tried it once, and wasn't quite sure what I was doing, or if I was doing it right. I don't think I'd typically add milk to tea (say, like when I'm at work), but would like to try it with Irish Breakfast tea. I just want to do it the right way. :)

User avatar
Nov 15th, '12, 18:06
Posts: 35
Joined: Apr 8th, '12, 12:43
Location: USA

Re: Questions about milk in tea

by Milo » Nov 15th, '12, 18:06

There's no wrong way. Add milk as you please. Cold milk is great for cooling down a scalding cup of tea. If you're feeling decadent, cream is downright fantastic with Irish Breakfast (or any other Assam-heavy blend).

User avatar
Nov 15th, '12, 19:12
Posts: 5896
Joined: Jan 10th, '10, 16:04
Location: Los Angeles, CA
Contact: debunix

Re: Questions about milk in tea

by debunix » Nov 15th, '12, 19:12

I avoid drinking teas where adding milk seems like a good idea.

No need to dilute or mask bitterness with well-brewed green teas, oolongs, white teas, or puerhs, or with user-friendly yunnan gold & black ruby from Taiwan.

User avatar
Nov 15th, '12, 21:09
Posts: 35
Joined: Apr 8th, '12, 12:43
Location: USA

Re: Questions about milk in tea

by Milo » Nov 15th, '12, 21:09

Debunix makes a good point. If you like milk in your tea, that's one thing. If you're adding milk to tame the bitterness however, then either the tea has steeped too long or the tea itself is poor quality. If you like Irish Breakfast, then you'll probably love a high-quality Assam.

Jan 20th, '13, 10:22
Posts: 9
Joined: Oct 6th, '12, 18:46

Re: Questions about milk in tea

by mckenderson » Jan 20th, '13, 10:22

I like my tea without milk. I just add the milk on weekends for something different, more as a treat.

I use teabags and pour boiling water over it in my cup. I warm the milk for about 20 seconds in the microwave and add it to my cup of tea. If I'm using a 16 oz cup, I brew 2 teabags. Then add a shot (yes, as in a shotglass) of milk. If I'm using a standard size coffee cup, then I use one tea bag, and add a hal a shot of milk.

So far it seems to work. :)

User avatar
Feb 8th, '13, 19:21
Posts: 132
Joined: Feb 5th, '13, 07:52
Location: Melbourne, Australia

Re: Questions about milk in tea

by Maneki Neko » Feb 8th, '13, 19:21

When I make masala chai, I do it the proper Indian way by boiling the milk with the tea. That results in a creamy, well mixed brew.

It tastes very different from when you add milk to it later, whether that be cold or warm milk.

User avatar
Feb 9th, '13, 17:14
Vendor Member
Posts: 2084
Joined: Sep 24th, '08, 18:38
Location: Boston, MA

Re: Questions about milk in tea

by gingkoseto » Feb 9th, '13, 17:14

I add milk to the tea so that I could adjust how much more milk to add. I add cold milk to the tea, so that the mixture wouldn't be too hot to drink immediately. And I sometimes boil puerh or hei cha in milk (but that's a lot more cleaning work than mixing milk and tea).
I have barely found any Chinese black tea compatible to milk (a common problem is milk shadows tea flavors), but think Indian, Ceylon and Kenya black teas go pretty well with milk (they seem to have some flavors that can escape from being shadowed by the milk).

Feb 12th, '13, 02:13
Posts: 18
Joined: Feb 9th, '12, 14:14

Re: Questions about milk in tea

by Jadee » Feb 12th, '13, 02:13

I like my tea without milk. In the past I have experimented with adding milk to blacks, but I prefer my tea with no milk nor sugar. I haven't try masala tea, though some sample from our tea shop must be on my way to test it.

+ Post Reply