Russian Tea
The alkaloid caffeine is necessary for sustaining the brain active
during nightly hacking sessions. A high-quality tea, however, stimulates
cathartic sensations even in those, who drink it for the very first
time. It is warming one’s body, mind, and soul. Various societies have
developed brilliant styles of making delicious tea. The Chinese, the
English, the Japanese, and many others have surmounted the art of this
delightful beverage. Here are the way of preparing, serving, and
consuming tea by the Russians.
Tea leaves and hot water do not
essentially make fine tea. In Russia, the tea prepared using tea bags
are called "the postman’s tea," since it comes in envelopes. This tea
generates a distinctive flavor of cellulose. If you cook the tea leaves,
you will get a liquid almost unlike tea, fit for leather tanning,
instead of drinking. The Russian process of tea making is a two-stage
one; first, you make the zavarka, the tea concentrate, and then water it
down with kipyatok, hot, boiled water. Whenever hot water is decanted
onto tea bags from a samovar, the outcome is still postman’s tea.
Before
any more action, you must keep enough amount of kipyatok, you need it
at various stages of the process. Kipyatok is the only water used in the
process of tea preparation. Even a little amount of raw water can spoil
the tea.
The essential steps of zavarka preparation are to put a
definite quantity of tea leaves into some pot, pour kipyatok onto them,
one cup for each five teaspoons, in one resolute spurt, stay until all
the leaves settle.
At present, you can make your first cup of
Russian tea. Pour some amount of zavarka into a teacup and dilute it
using kipyatok in approximately 10:1 ratio. The power of the tea reckons
on both this ratio and the strength of the zavarka. The tea color must
be alike a chestnut.
The choice is yours to choose the
ingredients. Different ingredients are used in the preparation of
Russian tea, which are water, tea leaves, additions, and utensils. Poor
quality water can spoil the best tea, at the same time as cautious
treatment and the exact choice of water in addition to the accurate
technology can make wonders with your tea. You must avoid poor quality
leaves, instead use best quality tea leaves. The additions can be
sweeteners, alcohol, and other stuffs. Different sweeteners are used to
prepare Russian teas, which are fruit jam, honey, saccharine, sugar, and
other artificial sweeteners. The alcohol includes rum, vodka, and other
liquors. The other stuffs include baking soda, cream, lemon, and milk.
Different utensils like the zavarka pot, the samovar, other
water-boiling utensils, the saucer, and the podstakannik are used in the
preparation of Russian tea. The average nutrient contents present in
Russian tea are calories 32–190, cholesterol 0 mg, dietary fiber 0–1.6
g, protein 0–16 g, sodium 1–75 mg, total carbs 8.4–48 g, and total fat
0–0.2 g.
Most of the procedures in the Russian method of tea
preparation are time consuming and might come out unessential at first
glance. To prepare a good Russian tea, you must have patience and
commitment; every crosscut cheapens the final product. Hence, do not
hurry to make it, take your own time. Please keep the Russian proverb in
mind: "If you rush, you just make people laugh."