Tea-based discussion goes here.
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StealthyCake
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by StealthyCake » 07 Jun 2012, 06:59
HOW MUCH SUGAR DO YOU LIKE IN YAW TEA?

see what i did, Its
MR T (hurhurhur)
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Wildwill002
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by Wildwill002 » 07 Jun 2012, 07:09
I have a wee sweet tooth so uhh generally 4-6 :3
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StealthyCake
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by StealthyCake » 07 Jun 2012, 07:12
Would you like tea with your sugar?

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SneakyPie
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by SneakyPie » 07 Jun 2012, 08:01
Psh, us Americans take our tea with High Fructose Corn Syrup.
Tastes like patriotism.
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StealthyCake
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by StealthyCake » 07 Jun 2012, 08:09
Tastes like patriotism.
Looks like petrol,
smells like victory,
Feels like death!

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aflycon
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by aflycon » 07 Jun 2012, 08:51
SneakyPie wrote:Psh, us Americans take our tea with High Fructose Corn Syrup.
Tastes like patriotism.
It tastes like 'merica is what it tastes like. I'm having some of our favorite petrol tea right meow.
*to 'mericans*
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Ninjawoman
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by Ninjawoman » 07 Jun 2012, 08:53
So very uncivilised.
Women who behave rarely make history.
Four for you Glen Coco...YOU GO GLEN COCO!!
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aflycon
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by aflycon » 07 Jun 2012, 09:04
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Ninjawoman
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by Ninjawoman » 07 Jun 2012, 09:06
winston_churchill_victory4-280x300.jpg
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Women who behave rarely make history.
Four for you Glen Coco...YOU GO GLEN COCO!!
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SneakyPie
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by SneakyPie » 07 Jun 2012, 09:13
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Ninjawoman
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by Ninjawoman » 07 Jun 2012, 09:18
bulldog.jpg
A much more elegant creature.
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Women who behave rarely make history.
Four for you Glen Coco...YOU GO GLEN COCO!!
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SneakyPie
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by SneakyPie » 07 Jun 2012, 09:27
burr.png
I think you got the animals mixed up.
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Ninjawoman
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by Ninjawoman » 07 Jun 2012, 09:44
The brown bear (Ursus arctos) is a large bear distributed across much of northern Eurasia and
North America
Wow, funny where these bears live and get their 'hurr durr-ness' from, huh?

Women who behave rarely make history.
Four for you Glen Coco...YOU GO GLEN COCO!!
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697134002
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by 697134002 » 07 Jun 2012, 09:53
Ninjawoman wrote:The brown bear (Ursus arctos) is a large bear distributed across much of northern Eurasia and
North America
Wow, funny where these bears live and get their 'hurr durr-ness' from, huh?

Except that the brown bear is exclusively old world.
The grizzly bear, often mistaken for the brown bear, is exclusively new world.
Richard Dawkins wrote:I am against religion because it teaches us to be satisfied with not understanding the world.
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Ninjawoman
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by Ninjawoman » 07 Jun 2012, 09:56
697134002 wrote:Ninjawoman wrote:The brown bear (Ursus arctos) is a large bear distributed across much of northern Eurasia and
North America
Wow, funny where these bears live and get their 'hurr durr-ness' from, huh?

Except that the brown bear is exclusively old world.
The grizzly bear, often mistaken for the brown bear, is exclusively new world.
The grizzly bear (Ursus arctos horribilis), also known as the silvertip bear, the grizzly, or the North American brown bear, is a subspecies of brown bear (Ursus arctos) that generally lives in the uplands of western
North America.
I still keep to my point, god damn 'Mericans.
Women who behave rarely make history.
Four for you Glen Coco...YOU GO GLEN COCO!!
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SneakyPie
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by SneakyPie » 07 Jun 2012, 09:57
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697134002
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by 697134002 » 07 Jun 2012, 09:59
Ninjawoman wrote:697134002 wrote:Ninjawoman wrote:The brown bear (Ursus arctos) is a large bear distributed across much of northern Eurasia and
North America
Wow, funny where these bears live and get their 'hurr durr-ness' from, huh?

Except that the brown bear is exclusively old world.
The grizzly bear, often mistaken for the brown bear, is exclusively new world.
The grizzly bear (Ursus arctos horribilis), also known as the silvertip bear, the grizzly, or the North American brown bear, is a subspecies of brown bear (Ursus arctos) that generally lives in the uplands of western
North America.
I still keep to my point, god damn 'Mericans.
All of the ones with brown bear in their names are old world.
Richard Dawkins wrote:I am against religion because it teaches us to be satisfied with not understanding the world.
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Ninjawoman
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by Ninjawoman » 07 Jun 2012, 10:01
So....
fancy a brew tea towl museum of london giftshop.jpg
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Women who behave rarely make history.
Four for you Glen Coco...YOU GO GLEN COCO!!
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Milo_Windby
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by Milo_Windby » 07 Jun 2012, 12:14
for me it depends on the tea I am drinking, green tea for example I take plain.
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Bluesteak
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by Bluesteak » 07 Jun 2012, 13:32
Oh, Americans drink there tea funny, they tend to make it in a cup... THAT'S NOT HOW TEA SHOULD BE DRUNK! it should be drunk from a mug and saucer after being brewed in a teapot with a funny but not rude tea cosy then pureed into said mug with milk already in place.
I wonder who would win with a fight of wolves and pigmen...
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The Bum
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by The Bum » 07 Jun 2012, 16:09
Two sugar cubes.

Non sibi sed patriae
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aflycon
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by aflycon » 07 Jun 2012, 22:05
Operation: Turn This Thread into a Picture Thread was successful.
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Darktaint
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by Darktaint » 08 Jun 2012, 02:26
3-4 depending on how much i need waking up

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TyrasEngineer
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by TyrasEngineer » 08 Jun 2012, 03:54
0-1/2 a teaspoon for me. But I used to have loads, like two or three, particularly in the morning.
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welwyn
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by welwyn » 08 Jun 2012, 05:41
2 level spoons, with just enough milk to colour it. Perfect. Also none of your funny 'green tea'.
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StealthyCake
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by StealthyCake » 08 Jun 2012, 07:45
Milo_Windby wrote:for me it depends on the tea I am drinking, green tea for example I take plain.
I agree! if its flavoured tea, plain is best!

But when its normal tea! 2 teaspoons does the job!

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Jake55778
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by Jake55778 » 08 Jun 2012, 08:26
697134002 wrote:Ninjawoman wrote:The brown bear (Ursus arctos) is a large bear distributed across much of northern Eurasia and
North America
Wow, funny where these bears live and get their 'hurr durr-ness' from, huh?

Except that the brown bear is exclusively old world.
The grizzly bear, often mistaken for the brown bear, is exclusively new world.
Entirely moot since the brown bear has been extinct in Britain for over a millennium, making it a poor choice as a representation of our nation's derpiness.
On topic:
One slightly heaped teaspoon is generally enough I find. Any more than two is just overkill.
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