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Southern Sweet Tea

A recipe and a video to demonstrate how to make the table wine of the South.

 
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Southern Sweet Tea
Southern Sweet Tea
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To assimilate into Southern culture, there's two things you should know.  First, when you see someone you know, you say,"How's yo mama-nem?" Don't ennunciate, for Pete's sake, and ask, "How is your Mother and the rest of your family?' Oh, no. This whole sentence only has four syllables. That's all you need. We understand it perfectly. The curious thing is that when we answer back, we say, "Mama-nem's fi-i-i-i-i-ne." We put three extra syllables in a word that only has one. That's just how we are. We can't help ourselves.   

The other thing you need to know is that we drink sweet tea. Not sweetened tea. Not tea with sugar. Not tea with sweetener. It's sweet tea. Plain and simple. It's the table wine of the South.  

There is a raging debate concerning the brand of tea that makes the best sweet tea.  Just as fierce as the rivalry between Alabama and Auburn football is the rivalry between Luzianne and Lipton. I throw my support squarely in the Luzianne camp.  

Making good sweet tea is easy. There's just a couple of tips that makes it makes it turn out the best. I will take you step by step. For this batch, I'm only making a quart.

First, start with cold water. That's important. Add two cups of cold water to a saucepan. After it begins to boil, remove from heat and place one family-style teabag in the pot.  

Cover, remove from heat and steep tea for 3 to 5 minutes.

Pour the hot tea into a pitcher. Add sugar while the tea is still hot and stir until dissolved.  

Next, add two cups cold water and stir. Some folks like to add ice in the pitcher. I prefer to fill the glass with ice and pour the tea over it. It's a matter of choice. Putting ice in the pitcher can dilute the whole pitcher too much if you don't drink it right away.  

Serve with lemon slices, mint or just plain.  

Click here to watch the video.  

I hope you enjoy some good Southern Sweet Tea  during this awful heat that we are "enjoying" right now.  

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About this column: Valrico resident Jackie Garvin shares her homespun Southern recipes and the stories behind them. Related Topics: Southern Sweet Tea and Syrup and Biscuits

Andy Warrener

10:09 pm on Saturday, June 25, 2011

You know it's funny. I lived in LA for 8 years and they have never even heard of sweet tea. They hand you tea and a sugar packet when you ask or they say, "we have raspberry tea". Yeockk! Gimie summa that sweet southern nectar, baby!

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Jackie Garvin

4:48 pm on Sunday, June 26, 2011

Andy,
We do have very definite ideas about good tea. I raise my glass of Southern Sweet Tea to you!

Connie Wilson

6:48 am on Sunday, June 26, 2011

Exactly how I was taught as a child to make "sweet tea". I learned the lovely taste of lemon added much later in my life!! However, having lived in the 'North" where they have no clue what tea should taste like, I have come to appreciate real "sweet tea" - thanks Jackie for reminding us what a treasure we have in"sweet tea".

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Jackie Garvin

4:52 pm on Sunday, June 26, 2011

Connie,
Thank you for your comment about our Southern treasure! I agree that lemon does give it a nice flavor. It seems to make the tea even more refreshing during our loooooong hot summer. Speaking of refreshing, I have an article coming up about foolproof fresh squeezed lemonade.

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