How To Make Iced Sweet Tea (Video)
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A lot of folks have asked me how I make my sweet tea so today I’m bringing you a video showing you exactly how I do it. Hope you’ll join me for a glass!
This is how we make our sweet tea but everyone has their preference. If you prefer a weaker tea, use fewer tea bags. If you like it sweeter, taste it and then add more sugar to suit you. Note: Most restaurants use a much more sugar than this :). We always go through a full gallon a day (at least) but if you have any left you can just store it in the refrigerator and enjoy over the next day or two!
Sweet Tea
- 5 Tea Bags*
- 3/4 Cup sugar (more if you prefer)
- Water
Remove tags from teabags and place in small pot. Fill up pot most of the way with water (exact amount doesn’t matter as long as the tea bags are covered and then some). Place on medium to medium high heat and bring just to a boil. Remove from stove eye and prepare your pitcher.
Fill pitcher halfway (or so) with cold water. Add your sugar**. Add hot tea. Stir until sugar is dissolved and fill remainder of pitcher with cold water. Serve over ice.
*We use Orange Pekoe tea but you can experiment with making iced tea with other teas as well. Earl Grey makes a delicious iced tea!
**I prefer to use Splenda or Ideal Sweetener in my tea but use the same amount as I would were I using sugar.
The trick to having a good smooth tasting tea is to avoid adding hot tea directly to the sugar or sugar directly to the hot tea. This scorches the sugar and creates a very bitter taste in your tea. To avoid this, place cold water in your pitcher first, add your sugar to that, and then pour in your hot tea.
If you have a traditional coffee maker, I talk about how to make sweet tea in that in this post.
Funny Family Stories of Sweet Tea
One time my mother was watching a television talk show and they were talking about how much Southerners love sweet tea. The host said “Well it’s no wonder, they’ve probably been drinking it since they were four!” Mama took objection to this and huffed “Four? I was putting it in your baby bottles by the time you were two!” ~giggles~
My Grandmother Lucille spent a great deal of time at the elbow of my Great Grandmother (Mama Reed) after she was married learning how to cook. A lot of the daughters in law and mothers gathered at Mama Reed’s house on Sundays to help prepare the big meal. Shortly after Grandmama joined the clan she was given the task of making the Sweet Tea. Back then it was made in a large glass recycled pickle jar. Grandmama poured the hot tea directly into the jar and set to stirring it up vigorously with a long handled metal spoon. A few clinks later and the jar shattered, sending sticky sweet tea all over Mama Reed’s clean kitchen floor. Everyone had a good and gracious laugh about it but Grandmama said “I liked to never got the sticky off’n that floor!”
How young were you when you started drinking sweet tea?
Do you have any special or funny memories of Sweet Tea in your family?
I’ll pick one of the comments below to win a Luzianne Prize Pack
Winner announced on this post and notified tomorrow evening. Giveaway closes at noon central time Friday, July 1st.
This Giveaway is now closed. Congratulations to Joan Whitaker! I’ve been in contact with Joan and given her directions on how to claim her prize. Have a great day and thank you!
Disclaimer: This post was not sponsored by Luzianne nor was I compensated for doing it. I just think it’s awfully good tea. I also think y’all need to go make some right now.
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I’m in Ontario Canada and always add lemon to my sweet tea. Only we call it iced tea. I make tea the way my mother did, she spent most of her childhood in Dublin and London so she learned from the pros. Never never never boil your tea. Put your tea bags in once you have the boiled water in the tea pot and let it steep. She always boiled the water as the last step for supper. As she was putting supper on the table. she plugged in the kettle. Her tea was always just right. I tried to make sun tea a few times and it never turns out for me. I
Did you know that it is near impossible to get plain tea when ordering it in a restaraunt in London England. You have to order it with the milk and sugar on the side. They don’t seem to understand that some people don’t like to hide the flavor of their hot tea in condiments so they put the sugar and milk in it before it leaves the kitchen.
Sounds like excellent sweet tea! Glad to know I can have sweet tea without sugar as I must watch my sugar intake now. I love sweet tea!! Have never heard of Ideal sweetener – also have never heard of a stove EYE!!! That’s a new one on me! Is that a regional usage? We have always called it simply a “burner”. We put things on the burner and we take things off the burner. I grew up in Arkansas and lived in Oklahoma most of my adult life. What does everyone else call it?
I couldn’t drink sweet tea OR coffee till Iwas 16 –was told it would stunt my growth–BLESS THEIR HEARTS & THEY REST IN PEACE–if they only knew how big that I ‘ve got in 68 years , MAYBE , they would have gave it to me in my baby bottle instead of milk ..
LOVE MY SWEET TEA WITH A TWIST OF LEMON OR ORANGE , SUMMER & WINTER , well, all year long &&& all day today !!!,
JUST A GOOD OLE” SOUTH CAROLINA GIRL !!!
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I made this yesterday for my hubby – I used 2 family sized tea bags and a scant 1 C sugar, as my hubby has the sweet tooth of a 5 year old 🙂 He said it was the best he’d ever had!! Thanks so much!!
OMG Christy!
i never tried to make real iced tea before and last week i used your cookbook to do this. sooooo good. my husband teased me when i said i never knew how to make it from real tea bags before! growing up in Buffalo, with a mom who didn’t like kitchen messes, its no surprise!
i had some raspberry herbal tea in the house for some reason, and i made some using this method – my girls loved it! i couldn’t make it fast enough.
thanks for all that you do!
I am so glad it was such a hit!!!
In the summer I add a 1/4 capful of mint extract to my pitcher of sweet tea.
It is so refreshing.
Growing up in Arkansas, I never realized there was anything else other than sweet tea lol.