Infuser

A tea infuser is a device in which loose, dried tea leaves are placed for steeping or brewing, in a mug or a teapot full of hot water; it is often called a teaball or tea maker, and sometimes a tea egg.[1] The tea infuser gained popularity in the first half of the 19th century. Tea infusers enable one to easily steep tea from fannings and broken leaf teas.[2]

Use

A tea infuser performs a similar function as a tea bag, a later American invention. The infuser is generally a small mesh or perforated metal container or covered spoon that holds tea leaves, in varying sizes to steep single or multiple servings at once. Common shapes for infusers include spherical, conical and cylindrical. One style of infuser is a split sphere with tong-like handles to open its mesh container.[3]

The infuser is placed in a cup or pot of hot or boiling water, allowing the tea to brew without loose tea leaves spilling into the pot or cup. A rod or chain is commonly attached to the container of the infuser to simplify retrieval from the pot or cup. Infusers with large holes may not catch all the leaves, requiring the use of a tea strainer to remove the remaining pieces.[4]

An infuser that produces more gravity than the buoyancy of floating material it carries will sink. And pressure increases with depth as a result of the weight of the overlying fluid. Thus, the pressure at the bottom of a tall container of fluid is greater than at the top of the container.

Quick water imbibition

Water imbibition takes half the time for material that floats with half its area above the water surface when they are submerged with an infuser.

Seeds are often pre-treated before sowing in order to verify that they will sprout. Imbibition of water through the membrane of the seed shell is the first step in the germination process in most seeds. Seeds can be submerged with an infuser, including hot water scarification treatment for tolerant species. Seeds can be weighed with a milligram scale before and after they have been submerged to find out when they don't need to be exposed to more water imbibition. Floating seeds can be inspected when they have to sink inside mesh infusers submerged in transparent containers by shaking them. Seeds who don't absorb water will not germinate and must be modified with further scarification.

Also, hot water treatment at 90 degrees C for 90 seconds followed by dip in cold water for 30 seconds can be an effective seed decontamination method against escherichia coli O157:H7 and salmonella.[5]

Types

Ball

A mesh tea infuser ball
Tea-making spoons

Ball infusers are removed along with the tea leaves from the pot.

Snap ball

A snap ball tea strainer.

Snap ball tea strainers are automatically sealed with the force of the end of the handle that is circulated like a spring. The spring handle requires more metal to manufacture, thus they are usually a bit more expensive than regular infuser balls.

The handle in snap ball tea strainers make them more practical:

  • They can be used as a spoon to swirl solutions that will dissolve their content faster than tea infusers without a handle.
  • Air inside a snap ball infuser can easily be eliminated by shaking the handle once it has been put into liquid, to make sure everything inside the ball becomes submerged.

Shut-off infusers

Shut-off infusers[6] are left in the pot after the brewing process is complete.

French press

While not common, a French press may be used as a tea infuser. However, most teas are infused only for a limited time and then removed from the water so that the drink does not become bitter.[4]

In gōngfu chá (功夫茶), a modern method to infused tea in China, tea can be infused through a gàiwǎn (盖碗), a tea pot (茶壶) or a gōngdào bēi (公道杯).[7]

See also

References

  1. Perry, Sarah; Miksch, Alison (2001). The New Tea Book: A Guide to Black, Green, Herbal, and Chai Teas. San Francisco, CA: Chronicle Books. p. 63. ISBN 0-8118-3053-5.
  2. Cooper, Felix (19 February 1943). "Tea Balls for Conservation". The New York Times. p. 18. Retrieved 23 January 2011.
  3. Johnson, Dorothea; James Norwood Pratt (2002). Tea and Etiquette: Taking Tea for Business and Pleasure. Sterling, VA: Capital Books. pp. 70–71. ISBN 1-931868-00-X.
  4. Zijderveld, Annelies. "How to Brew a Cup of Tea". About.com: Coffee/Tea. About.com. Archived from the original on 4 February 2009. Retrieved 16 February 2009.
  5. Bari, ML; Inatsu, Y; Isobe, S; Kawamoto, S (April 2008). "Hot water treatments to inactivate Escherichia coli O157:H7 and Salmonella in mung bean seeds". Journal of Food Protection. 71 (4): 830–4. doi:10.4315/0362-028x-71.4.830. PMID 18468042.
  6. "Patented terminology". BonJour Products/Meyer Manufacturing. Archived from the original on 25 May 2013. Retrieved 23 May 2013.
  7. "Modern Gongfu Cha infusion". Goût Thé. Retrieved 13 March 2022.
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