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Treczoks , to casualuk in How I (US) make tea when my British friend comes over to visit

That is only a bit worse than what British people do with their tea. OK, theirs is reasonably fresh, but they let the teabag sit in the pot for ages and they commit the serious, undefendable crime of adding milk.

Dkarma ,

Milk only belongs in chai tea

DAMunzy ,

Chia … tea. Chia … tea.

not_woody_shaw ,

Chai literally means tea. So chai tea is tea tea. It’s like pizza pie or ATM machine.

QueriesQueried ,

Yes and but that’s just how the distinction is made. Prime example: Shiba/Akita “Inu”. Inu is literally dog. Yet it refers to the purebred dog of Japan, not the american shitmix (no shade, theres just not much consistency with what they’re mixed with). Language evolves over time, even the dumb evolutions.

Tvkan ,

I don’t think they’re engaging in etymological reductionism.

Their argument is that instead of saying “milk only belongs in chai tea”, one could’ve just said “milk only belongs in chai”.

smeg ,

pizza pie

Those two things are not remotely the same

echodot ,

The Americans seem to have a very wide definition of the word Pie and none of them seem to be pies.

Threeme2189 ,

It’s the same with brits and the word pudding…

MrMcGasion ,

What about boba? Although I guess that’s arguably tea in milk, rather than milk in tea.

crapwittyname ,

Watch it. Builder’s tea is the literal backbone of the British economy.

Oh, wait.

retrolasered ,
@retrolasered@lemmy.zip avatar

Hungary?

Rubanski ,

Milk in Earl grey with honey is just amazing

Treczoks ,

You drown the flavour of the bergamote oil with the honey, and kill off most of the beneficient ingredients of the tea with the milk. What’s the point in using a tea bag in the first place?

Arrakis , to casualuk in How I (US) make tea when my British friend comes over to visit

“friend”

oneiros , to casualuk in How I (US) make tea when my British friend comes over to visit
@oneiros@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Also, make sure to ask “Fancy a cup of?” with extra emphasis on “of”. It is a classic British phrase

Grass ,

I feel like I need to hear a recording of this

Hardeehar ,

I think another proper word/phrase is “fancy a cuppa”

oneiros ,
@oneiros@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

You must be “having a laugh” as they say! I’m 1000% sure it’s “cup of”

Hardeehar ,

I’m sure they’re both correct. Maybe it depends on where the speaker is from?

I had a friend in undergrad who was British and always phrased it like “cuppa”.

“I could reeeeally go for a cuppa” she would say like every other hour.

oneiros ,
@oneiros@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

(You seem sincere, so at the risk of killing the joke, I want to point out that both of my comments are deadpan humor! The phrase is indeed “fancy a cuppa”, and I’m intentionally getting it wrong, like the tea preparation instructions in the OP.)

AdamHenry ,

I thought that was Aussie lingo.

Hardeehar ,

It could be, too!

thelastknowngod , to casualuk in How I (US) make tea when my British friend comes over to visit

Someone call the ICC. This is a crime against humanity.

Kusimulkku , to casualuk in How I (US) make tea when my British friend comes over to visit

Also just leave the tea bag in the tea. How else will anyone know what you’re drinking!

FooBarrington , to casualuk in How I (US) make tea when my British friend comes over to visit

Why did you forget to open the tea bag?

TimewornTraveler , to casualuk in How I (US) make tea when my British friend comes over to visit

Do Brits really never drink coffee? I have both

killeronthecorner ,
@killeronthecorner@lemmy.world avatar

I’m British and I only drink coffee, but I don’t meet many other people who do. Gotta bear in mind that most people only drink either disgusting freeze-dried instant coffee, or posh boutique coffee from, at worst, Starbucks and, at best, a decent independent coffee place.

Olhonestjim ,

Uncouth wretches. I get mine from the gas station!

Knightfox ,

Watching Sorted Food (London based food channel on YouTube) it does seem that some Brits enjoy both or one over the other. The majority seem to drink just tea, the next group enjoys both but for different events, and the smallest group is coffee only.

For the middle group it’s people who have coffee in the morning and tea at noon/afternoon.

Sylvartas , to casualuk in How I (US) make tea when my British friend comes over to visit

Ewww fake pyrex

Lesrid ,

We lost our smaller measuring cup in the move, so one of my first purchases when I got my first job was a pyrex measuring cup. I learned the hard way that the only thing pyrex about it is the logo

Sylvartas ,

Heh, no worries, I just wanted to spread awareness about this issue in a cheeky way ! Though it does legitimately feels weird seeing these as a European because we only get the “real” ones here.

DacoTaco ,
@DacoTaco@lemmy.world avatar

Fake pyrex? Thats a thing?

Aremel ,

“True” Pyrex is made of borosilicate glass and is very resistant to changes in temperature, making it excellent for lab or kitchen use. You can tell when it’s “true” Pyrex if the lettering is in all caps. If it’s not, it’s just regular glass.

calypsopub ,

TIL

GnothiSeauton ,
@GnothiSeauton@lemmy.world avatar
AdamHenry ,

Damn it, now you are making me get up from my bed and head out to the kitchen.

AdamHenry ,

I could swear I bought a Pyrex measuring cup. It has the red lettering and measurements just like a Pyrex. It’s called Anchor Cooking!

DacoTaco ,
@DacoTaco@lemmy.world avatar

And did it have the pyrex name on it too?? O.O

AdamHenry ,

No it didnt. It had the red printing and I made an assumption. I hate shopping and just tend to grab items blindly.

DacoTaco ,
@DacoTaco@lemmy.world avatar

You were bamboozled!

titter , to casualuk in How I (US) make tea when my British friend comes over to visit

To be fair it’s better than my process for making tea for myself.

Tea bag, sugar, cold water all go into a mug and into the microwave for three minutes. I forget about it for roughly an hour, then drink it as is.

MadBob ,

That’s not tea. That’s an insult to those who came before us.

ParsnipWitch ,
pirat ,

You could give it another short spin after the hour has passed.

What I usually do (for ~4 cups) is boiling 1,1 liters of water in a kettle, filling a teabag with 3-4 teaspoons of tea, rinsing the thermo bottle with the 0,1 liter of water, brewing the tea, then forgetting about it for 15-30 min, suddenly exclaiming “Oh, the tea!” (but in my own language) which, to me at least, is funny because (short story long) I once ordered a bunch of free Christian bumper stickers online, which I, long ago, before I even had this habit of forgetting the brewing bottle, had cut out into different words and letters of said christian bumper stickers and stuck onto the thermo bottle, reading (exactly) “Oh, the tea!”.

On a sidenote, no matter how long I usually forget it while it’s brewing, it’s always still too hot - and even never too strong. Pure Earl Grey - no milk, no sugar!

aesopjah , to casualuk in How I (US) make tea when my British friend comes over to visit

TUSA on Sunrise on the Sufferbus

vsh , to casualuk in How I (US) make tea when my British friend comes over to visit
@vsh@lemm.ee avatar

Microwaving water is the real crime here

open_world ,
@open_world@lemmy.world avatar

Hey you know, sometimes you don’t have a kettle on hand and even if you do, it’s all crusty and gross looking. Plus, it takes forever to boil the water. Microwaves on the other hand: you just put the water in it, wait a little bit, bada bing badda boom, it’s done and ready to go. So like, if microwaving water is a crime, then lock me up

Accuaro ,

Sometimes you can superheat water in the microwave that explodes when taken out scalding you in the process. Fun science experiment.

pirat ,

Heating up food using microwaves does exactly that. It works because the waves are emitted within a certain frequency range that affects the water content within it, from which the heat spreads to the rest of the food over time.

calypsopub , to casualuk in How I (US) make tea when my British friend comes over to visit

How to make Southern (US) sweet tea: put about a quart of water in a saucepan, plus 4 cups of sugar and the number of Orange Pekoe teabags you would use to make a gallon (for me it’s about 8 normal or 4 family-sized). Bring to a boil and immediately remove from heat. Steep 2-3 minutes. Remove bags and stir to make sure sugar is dissolved. Fill a gallon container with ice. Pour the hot tea over ice and add cold water to fill up. Serve over more ice.

scottywh ,

Gross…

I’m also from the South.

The recipe I grew up on (thanks to my Mom) is half as many tea bags and a quarter as much sugar and it’s delicious.

Hell, you’re using twice as much sugar as McDonald’s does in their sweet tea.

That’s excessive, amigo.

scottywh ,

Also, be sure to use Lipton (which is orange pekoe but so are some other brands so specificity helps)… Anything else is subpar for sweet tea (iced Southern US style).

AdamHenry , to casualuk in How I (US) make tea when my British friend comes over to visit

Out of milk and coffee? Never mind Sugar, we can watch the early movie.

Oha , to technology in This took me 4 months

context?

Vitaly OP ,
@Vitaly@feddit.uk avatar

I made a program that converts images to ascii art

neumast ,

Am i stupid or is there an example of an ascii image somewhere?

Vitaly OP ,
@Vitaly@feddit.uk avatar
Nighed ,
@Nighed@sffa.community avatar

They are asking for an example of what your app does. Very few people here are ever going to run up your app.

Vitaly OP ,
@Vitaly@feddit.uk avatar

I uploaded some examples to my github

Vitaly OP ,
@Vitaly@feddit.uk avatar

Thanks for the explanation

ripcord ,
@ripcord@kbin.social avatar

This is ANSI art, not ASCII art, right? ASCII doesn't define colors and stuff for example.

Vitaly OP ,
@Vitaly@feddit.uk avatar

I mean it’s technically symbols, the program can also use only symbols like .:-=+*#%@

ALERT , to technology in This took me 4 months
@ALERT@sh.itjust.works avatar

Any practical applications for this except for fun? :)

Vitaly OP ,
@Vitaly@feddit.uk avatar

It’s a good programming practice, and fun as well)

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