Any recommend sites or things to look out for?
I would say that looseleaf green tea would be a big step up from teabags. A strainer basket that goes in a mug is a very low-fuss way to make looseleaf tea, as they are easy to clean and reusable. Looseleaf Japanese sencha was a game-changer for what I thought green tea could be.
I am personally not a huge fan of the mesh balls as tea tends to escape out from the gap along the middle, and for green tea especially, too much particulate can be bitter.
I also have a teapot with a strainer which functions much the same way, but for when I want to brew more than one cup.
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Thank you I’ll check them out.
Here is my advice:
- buy loose leaf and a tea strainer.
- Do not brew your tea in what you make you cofee as both beverage have a strong taste that affect the pot they are are sitting in with time.
If you brew coffee in a coffee maker, any pot with a top will do. You heat the water to the temperature indicated on the package, turn off the heat, add tea leaves and wait the time given. The leaves will have plenty of room to float and by not making tea in your mug, you make ot much easier to strain the tea leaves out: you pour the tea in a mug on which sit the strainer
You could also buy some tin box to store your leaves - especially if you only fond them in big quantities, and a tea pot to mix flavor as little as possible.
You don’t need gadgets! My on-the-go setup is a couple of disposable coffee cups and a strainer and with a source of hot water I’m all sorted. Brew in one cup, strain into the other, drink, repeat until the tea’s all brewed out.
Find a Chinese or Japanese tea shop. If you live in a city, there probably is one. Get yourself a nice tea set–just a pot and some cups. You’ll find a ginormous selection of teas there. Just try things out and see what you like.
Farmer leaf has some great oolongs.
Ippodotea is my go to for matcha since they have free shipping on orders over $49.
Where are you from? (Wrt. Shipping costs)
I grow my own tea and hand collect it and roll it before curing it.
It’s a lot of work but it enhances the flavour enough to be worth it in my opinion.
I admire the work here
But that is not really the next step from “grocery tea bags”, save for very specific people in specific circumstances.
OP would be better off finding a decent tea shop near them to grab loose leaf and some decent brewing equipment at home.