nicoga3000
Saint Nic
Alright, let's brew this thing.
I cover this a little bit in the OP. I've used the Adagio utilitea for over 7 years now (no, really, I checked: I ordered in on January 23rd 2009) and it has always worked perfectly and given me absolutely no problems.
Having said that, between the two, I would spring for the varieTEA, with precise temperature control. While it's possible to get consistent and accurate temperatures with the utilitea, this will be an appliance you keep for years, so spring for the one with the most options.
This is also covered in the OP:
It's funny that the OP was written nearly 4 years ago and Teavana has even been bought by Starbucks since but they still haven't gotten their act together in regards to their literature.
I'd recommend following my guide up there, obviously. For blends that feature more than one type of tea, follow the tea that requires the colder temperature/shorter time first and increase both if necessary.
A lot of factors could contribute, including things as devious as them intentionally adding colorants to make the drink more attractive. Pure speculation on my part, of course.
If it tastes the same as when you brew it yourself, then I wouldn't worry too much about the appearance. If not, consider using more tea than they recommend and brewing for longer.
Add the sugar while the drink is hot. I feel like it takes forever for the rock sugar to dissolve in hot liquid let alone cold.
I'd also suggest moving over to sweeteners that are easier to dissolve and more consistent anyway, like honey, agave nectar, raw sugar, or even regular cane sugar.
As for preparation, also from the OP:
Adagio is decent quality and good for people coming off of Teavana, I'd say. There is better quality out there and I have a few suggested retailers in the OP as well, but Adagio offers a fairly wide selection as reasonable prices.
Matcha is a type of Japanese green tea that is literally ground-up tea leaves. It is traditionally prepared using hot water and a special device called a matcha whisk that actually creates a suspension of tea leaves in the water.
Hope that helps! Feel free to ask any more questions.
Thanks for all of this. I had read the OP already, but I guess I wanted some help on some of my specifics to make sure I was approaching things the right way! Some followup!
1) Teavana definitely doesn't make life easy when it comes to brewing. I mean hell - their website says one thing and the label says another. I will make a point to keep that chart nearby. Teavana does this thing where they suggest different steep times (and sometimes temps) for flavored vs unflavored? They also increase steep time for iced teas sometimes. I'm gong to just go the route of "follow the guidelines in the OP" since I'm more comfortable with that.
2) On sweeteners...I prefer my rock sugar for the sole reason that I don't like the taste that other sweetening agents impart on my tea. The rock sugar does take a bit to dissolve, but I don't really mind. When I'm drinking hot tea, I put a few rocks in, stir, and just let them dissolve as I drink. It's worked out well for me. Sweetening iced tea is the biggest hiccup in my plan. What I was doing before was 4 tsp tea + 8 oz water, filtering into a glass with sugar, dissolving sugar, add ice, stir. That seemed to work OK. But again - I wasn't sure if that's the "best" way (super subjective).
3) I'll be picking up the varieTEA because I want control over my temps and I don't want to have to sit there with a thermometer. That takes the enjoyment out of it all for me.
4) Let's go back to matcha. I'm fascinated by it. I'd like to try it. Does anyone make matcha at home?