Ah. I need to wait for it to cool down some before I can drink it, so one of the things I like about brewing tea in a teapot is that if the mug is a bit chilly, I can drink it right away.
I hate the taste of boiled milk. I don’t even like it warmed.
I can’t even remember the last time I had a bath. I’ve been in hot tubs and hot springs, but no bathtubs. Showers only.
I just finished reading an old (1934) Ellery Queen mystery. One of the characters is British, and she tells Ellery that Brits don’t take their tea with lemon. No? I swear I’ve seen it in British movies/TV shows.
On Boy Scout camping trips we would sometimes make something called “Russian tea” (Although I doubt there was anything actually Russian about it). It was basically tea with Tang powder in it. I actually forgot about that until after I started the tea poll.
No baths. Why would I want to sit in a soup of my own filth? I’m taking a shower to wash that away I don’t want to lounge in it.
Bleu cheese is ok along with a strong flavor like Buffalo sauce. I don’t like it on a salad. A very light sprinkling of bleu cheese crumbles is ok.
I drink tea more than anything. In general I put the tea bag in the cup and pour the water from the electric kettle over it. The teabag stays in until I’m done drinking. No milk. I find the idea of hot milk yucky. Lemon if available in most types of tea.
GOAT is at the top of my list for sure. The “greatest” GOATS of all time in baseball say would include Bill Buckner (and/or John McNamara), Grady Little, Mike Torrez (yes I am a Red Sox fan), Fred Merkle (or the umps who decided to finally strictly apply a rule they had been ignoring for years up to that point), Ralph Branca, and so on.
At some point however it started being used for the best players of them all, not for the screwups. Still bugs the living crap out of me when I see it.
I usually start filling a bath tub about 1/3 with really hot water, then let it sit a little, to warm up the tub. Then I continue filling it to the depth I want, with water that is at the temperature I like. I also use bubbles (something from LUSH, usually) to help keep the bath water warm.
Until you mentioned it, I had forgotten about “Russian Tea”. I had a receipe for it from Home Ec (about 1983/4). Tang sounds right, but I have no idea what else was in it.
A shower in the morning if needed (hair sticking up, gooey eyes, sweaty). A bath in the evening to relax muscles and scars before bed, with a book because otherwise I’ll be too bored. I just finished Randy Rainbow’s autobiography in the tub; next tub book is to get back to Ivory Vikings, which is about the Lewis chess pieces.