Sweet Tea

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Total Reviews: 33

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  • on April 08, 2013

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    Perfect recipe! I have a lot of tea bags left so I weighed 1oz of them (4 regular bags, and I cut the simple syrup recipe to 1cup water and 2/3cup sugar (I didn't want to store extra because it only takes 2 minutes to make, then added it all to the tea. Perfect! Just enough sweetmake without being overly so. Thank you!
    Update-- I just realised I had initially intended on making the simple syrup with 2/3 water and 1cup sugar. I'm glad I mixed them up though. It was perfect the way I fixed it.

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  • on July 13, 2012

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    I love sweet tea and was delighted to find this recipe! I especially like making enough simple syrup for several batches, portioning it, and freezing it. It is then a snap to whip up additional batches of sweet tea during the work week. I add lemons & limes and mint from the garden into the syrup and it makes a fabulous tea!

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  • on December 09, 2009

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    I love this tea. It's just what I needed. I was a little confused as to how much syrup to use, but one can only guess.... it's like sweeting your coffee: EVERYONE'S DIFFERENT! Thanks, Alton! You are a genius!

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  • on September 03, 2008

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    The recipe seemed simple, but it was unclear with regards to how much syrup to add. Like the Yankee I am, I added the whole batch of simple syrup and then had to spit out my first sip! Whoa, too sweet. If I didn't have to dilute my tea with 2 other batches, this recipe would have earned 5 stars.

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  • on August 09, 2008

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    This is some mighty fine sweet tea... I read all the reviews with all these people asking what was Alton thinking with all the simple syrup going in the tea... if you can READ, he tells you to use the syrup to sweeten the tea as DESIRED, not dump it all in. Anyways... READ directions and don't use all the syrup...

    Enjoy... I did.

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  • on July 30, 2008

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    The simple syrup is really quite good.

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  • on July 19, 2008

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    A good, solid recipe for making ice tea. Instead of using a quart of room-temp water, I weigh 2 pounds of water and ice (which comes out to a quart so it cools down faster.

    @"Way too sweet": You should think before dumping 5 CUPS OF SUGAR into 2 quarts of tea. What were you thinking!!! The 5c. sugar/3c. water is a formula for a large batch of simple syrup, some of which you will use to sweeten the tea. Add as much sugar as you like, but for heaven's sake, don't add all of it!

    @"WHAT???": Too many ingredients? What are you smoking? The ingredients are water, tea, and sugar. Add lemon and mint if you like. What's complicated about that? Your recipe is just as complicated. The fact that you use tea bags shows you're not the tea expert you think you are. Orange Pekoe or better grade loose tea leaves is far superior to the fannings and dust put into tea bags. Just boil water, add tea leaves, remove tea leaves, add cool water/ice and sugar. How hard is that? In fact it's the SAME METHOD as yours except this one uses loose leaves and sugar syrup. You could add the sugar straight to the hot tea (like your recipe with the same exact result, but the syrup allows guests to sweeten their own tea to taste. We like to keep lots of sugar syrup on hand, it allows us to sweeten all sorts of cold drinks (tea, coffee, mixed drinks, etc. and the syrup will dissolve into the drink (unlike sugar.

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  • on April 09, 2008

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    why on earth does it take so many ingredients to make a pitcher of tea?
    I live in Georgia, and have lived all over the south for my entire life. NEVER EVER in my life have I seen someone put so much mess in their tea. It's ridiculous.

    Take 2 family sized tea bags.
    Place them in small sauce pan.
    add about 3 cups of water.
    Bring to simmer then turn it off.
    Add 1 to 2 cups of sugar, depending on taste.
    Pour into serving pitcher over ice.
    Add water to fill the pitcher.
    Add more ice and stir.

    Then pour it into your cup and drink.

    SIMPLE. No fuss, no muss.

    Alton...darlin', I think you just went a little too crazy on this one. I normally love your recipes...but I'm just not sure what to think at this point.

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  • on March 03, 2008

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    This is just like the Sweet Tea that my Grandmother used to make all of my life. She was from Kentucky and Iced Tea was a staple of the dinner table year around.

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  • on August 28, 2007

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    This recipe says it makes about 8 to 10 servings and has 5 cups of sugar. That would be like drinking syrup. I have lived in the south for over ten years and I love the sweet tea! But this recipe was way out of proportion. I was so embarrassed when my southern friends tried my tea and almost gagged by the syruppy texture. I had to make 3 1/2 more gallons of unsweetened tea so this could taste right. Big Disaster. I would recommend using just 1 cup of the simple syrup per gallon. You can always add but not take away.

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