I drink a lot of tea!
British Food
Re: British Food
Ah, I understand now. I used to live in a hard water area, and just bought cheap kettles and replaced them when they furred up. But, I am not a coffee drinker, so I neveer consider that strange brew!Dannie Boy wrote: ↑Tue Oct 04, 2022 1:22 pmI live in a very hard water area so it protects the kettle (and coffee machine) from scaling up with calcium.
Lesson learnt.
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Re: British Food
Kettles are relatively cheap so on its own I might not bother, but I have a Sage Barista Express coffee machine that costs £600 so I want to preserve it for as long as possible.caller wrote:Ah, I understand now. I used to live in a hard water area, and just bought cheap kettles and replaced them when they furred up. But, I am not a coffee drinker, so I neveer consider that strange brew!Dannie Boy wrote: ↑Tue Oct 04, 2022 1:22 pmI live in a very hard water area so it protects the kettle (and coffee machine) from scaling up with calcium.
Lesson learnt.
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Re: British Food
I remember my father telling me about my grandfather who had an old style grocers shop in a small Nottinghamshire market town. At that time they sold loose leaf tea and he used to blend his own to suit the local water. He would order several teas by the chest and mix them in the relevant proportions to get the right taste.
I don't think you get that kind of service from Big C!
I don't think you get that kind of service from Big C!
- Dannie Boy
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Re: British Food
Yes we’ve gained a lot over the years and lost a lot too!! I’m still a loose tea fan and normally bring a mix of teas back from the UK (Sainsbury’s, Asda, Brooke Bond etc) and blend my own - but no consideration to the water!!