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Could well be off topic: better tea
In article o.uk,
Dave Liquorice wrote: On Tue, 04 Aug 2009 15:10:31 +0100, Jim Lesurf wrote: Although I found instant coffee also has its snags at 14,000ft asl. If you try to open a 'vacuum packed' jar, when you pierce the paper cover you get a fountain of coffee granules. :-) What counts for such packs as 'vacuum' at sea level seems more like a distinct overpressure at the top of a volcano. If I take an empty water bottle to work if I've put the lid on tight it will be a partly squished bottle at sea level, conversly coming up there will be a little hiss when opened. I also discovered that it was entertaining to take the top of a new tube of toothpaste at 14,000ft. Water may be 'incompressible', but I'd forgotten that tubes of toothpaste usually contain at least one internal air bubble. When you remove the cap the toothpaste comes squidging out. We are only at 1400' as well about 50mB lower pressure than sea level. At 14,000' you have about half normal atmospheric pressure. IIRC the pressure was around 2/3rd that at sea level. I did have a photo somewhere of one of the UKIRT[1] technicians holding a 'vacuum gauge' open to air and showing this. Not sure where it is now. I'll see if I can find it. But I'm talking about around 25 years ago, so no idea if it is still around! I also recall that when the telescope officially opened we had piper from the Black Watch come and play the bagpipes. This is quite a feat at such air pressures. Something of an 'iron man' to do it without fainting. Now I'm rambling about this I can recall that in one period of a week there we had a number of earhquakes big enough to break the shear pin for the telescope mounts. When this happens you jack up the telescope, move it back and put in a new pin. However at one point the same technician was frantically making up new pins as we'd run out! :-) Slainte, Jim [1] UKIRT = United Kingdom Infra-Red Telescope. -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
Could well be off topic: better tea
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Could well be off topic: better tea
In article , Terry
Casey wrote: I would suggest that anybody who wants to take one up to 14,000ft should break the seal at ground level ... I can testify that experimental results support your hypothesis here. :-) ....unless of course you *like* having your face covered with coffee granules. :-) Slainte, Jim -- Please use the address on the audiomisc page if you wish to email me. Electronics http://www.st-and.ac.uk/~www_pa/Scot...o/electron.htm Armstrong Audio http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/Armstrong/armstrong.html Audio Misc http://www.audiomisc.co.uk/index.html |
Could well be off topic: better tea
"The Old Man" wrote in message ... She had the biggest bush this side of Epping Forest and goosgogs the size of apples, Bill! |
Could well be off topic: better tea
Another thing I could have mentioned, is:
Milk in first, or not? I'd say with both tea and coffee, milk in first. This has the disadvantage that you have to guess the amount of milk correctly, which of course takes practice, but it tastes better. Does it really make any difference? After all if you mix two liquids at differing temperatures, they will end up at the same intermediate temperature in whichever order they are added, so it's tempting just to say: "It makes no difference!", and leave it at that. In fact, that's exactly what I used to say, and always used to put the milk in second, because then it's easier to get the amount right. Then one day, after a scolding from my mother, I tried putting the milk in first, and was surprised to find I could taste the difference. So how can it make any difference? The answer is that, though it is certainly true that the final intermediate temperature is the same, you have to look at what happens before it is reached. The crucial point being that if milk is held at a high temperature, it cooks, and therefore tastes different. Therefore, if you put the tea in first and then add the milk, the intermediate temperature is approached from above, and this cooks a high proportion of the milk, whereas if you add the tea to the milk, the intermediate temperature is approached from below, and a much smaller proportion of the milk is cooked. Hence, the latter method tastes better. One of the reasons why teabags tend to produce less good tea is that you have to add the milk to the tea. On Tue, 04 Aug 2009 14:42:55 +0100, Java Jive wrote: Tea bags tend to produce the least drinkable tea, I have no doubt about that. Their only advantage is convenience. It's a similar question between real and instant coffee, only there the difference is more pronounced, and the price differential is the other way. ====================================== Please always reply to news group as the email address in this post's header does not exist. Alternatively, use one of the contact addresses at: http://www.macfh.co.uk/JavaJive/JavaJive.html http://www.macfh.co.uk/Macfarlane/Macfarlane.html |
Could well be off topic: better tea
Java Jive said the following on 05/08/2009 22:08:
Another thing I could have mentioned, is: Milk in first, or not? I'd say with both tea and coffee, milk in first. This has the disadvantage that you have to guess the amount of milk correctly, which of course takes practice, but it tastes better. Does it really make any difference? After all if you mix two liquids at differing temperatures, they will end up at the same intermediate temperature in whichever order they are added, so it's tempting just to say: "It makes no difference!", and leave it at that. Osmosis anyone? |
Could well be off topic: better tea
Studying for A-Levels at what we'd now call a 6th Form College in SE
London, I was lucky enough to be taught by some very gifted teachers, one of whom was a dour, sarcastic Glaswegian who specialised in humorously elaborate deadpan insults. One day he stopped in the middle of his discourse and said: "I cannae understand this class, at all. Ye take nae notes whatsae-ever! Ye just sit there like ventriloquists dummies gawping at what I'm writing on the board, as though ye expect that, by some magical osmotic process, information will filter its way through from ma brain intae yer thick skulls!" After a minute or so's laughter, pens and paper were suddenly very much in evidence. On Wed, 05 Aug 2009 22:20:56 +0100, Richard Brooks wrote: Osmosis anyone? ====================================== Please always reply to news group as the email address in this post's header does not exist. Alternatively, use one of the contact addresses at: http://www.macfh.co.uk/JavaJive/JavaJive.html http://www.macfh.co.uk/Macfarlane/Macfarlane.html |
Could well be off topic: better tea
"Richard Brooks" wrote in message
... Java Jive said the following on 05/08/2009 22:08: Another thing I could have mentioned, is: Milk in first, or not? I'd say with both tea and coffee, milk in first. This has the disadvantage that you have to guess the amount of milk correctly, which of course takes practice, but it tastes better. Does it really make any difference? After all if you mix two liquids at differing temperatures, they will end up at the same intermediate temperature in whichever order they are added, so it's tempting just to say: "It makes no difference!", and leave it at that. Osmosis anyone? Where's the semi-permeable membrane? -- Max Demian |
Could well be off topic: better tea
Max Demian said the following on 05/08/2009 23:01:
"Richard Brooks" wrote in message ... Java Jive said the following on 05/08/2009 22:08: Does it really make any difference? After all if you mix two liquids at differing temperatures, they will end up at the same intermediate temperature in whichever order they are added, so it's tempting just to say: "It makes no difference!", and leave it at that. Osmosis anyone? Where's the semi-permeable membrane? If you've only got hot water in a cup you could have a problem. |
Could well be off topic: better tea
Richard Brooks wrote: Bill Wright said the following on 02/08/2009 03:55: If you have to make two cups or mugs of tea, get one 'one cup' teabag and hold it in a spoon. Make a small hole in the middle of the top surface of the bag. Pour the boiling water slowly onto the teabag (which is still on the spoon) putting about half a cupful into each cup, then do it again so you have gone cup 1, cup 2, cup 1, cup 2. You have to pour slowly so the water goes into the bag and doesn't just flow over its surface. The hole helps air escape from the bag. The results are wonderful. The tea tastes much fresher than normal, without being weak, and there is a doubling of economy. Bill Don't forget, they make special cupboards for drying them out too! I saw one once on Morcambe and Wise. Our Mechanical Workshop Technician in Broadcasting House used to have a "tea swindle" He dried out the used teabags on the radiators before re-use!! Mike |
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