• Skip to main content
  • Skip to site footer
Umami Days: Journal

Umami Days: Journal

Food stories from all over

  • Recipes
  • Cooking tips
  • Newsletter
  • Recipes
  • Cooking tips
  • Newsletter
Pouring tea into cut

How to use a teapot (with or with no strainer insert)

September 8, 2023

It has to do with how you make your tea. If you use loose tea leaves, get one with a strainer. If you prefer tea bags, a teapot without a strainer is all you need.

Whether you’re making a drink with real tea leaves or dried flowers and herbs, you need a vessel in which to brew your drink. A teapot is traditional.

How to use a teapot with strainer

Teapot with glass strainer

In Asia where loose tea leaves are preferred, a teapot that comes with a strainer insert is ideal for making the drink. The strainer can be glass, ceramic or wire mesh.

Pouring hot water over tea leaves in glass teapot

Put the strainer in the pot, drop your tea into the strainer and pour in hot water. Not boiling water but hot water. If you boiled water for tea, allow it to cool for about 40 seconds before using.

If you want to be really traditional, steep for two minutes, pour out the water then pour in hot water again. This process is supposed to take away much of the bitterness of the tea. Steep again and pour.

Dropping teabag into teapot without a strainer

The pot can be refilled with water three to four times. After that, you will need to throw out the now-flavorless tea leaves, drop in a new batch and repeat the process.

When making a herbal brew (tisane) with dried flowers, leaves, barks or fruit peel, a teapot with a strainer is also ideal.

How to use a teapot with no strainer

Ceramic teapot with no strainer

Teapots without a strainer are common in Western Europe. Not because they don’t mind eating tea leaves that fall into the cup but because loose tea leaves are less commonly consumed.

Dropping teabag into teapot without a strainer

Some people do prefer tea in bags, and a strainer in the teapot is unnecessary. Just drop a teabag into the pot, leave to steep and pour into cups.

A tea bag in a teapot? Shouldn’t the tea bag go directly into the teacup? No. Oh, no. Although I have to admit that it has become such common practice.

The truth is, steeping a tea bag with very little water (such as the amount of water in a single teacup) will yield an extremely strong drink. I know a lot of people who leave the tea bag in their cup for a short time only then refrigerate the tea bag to make another cup or two the next day. Some say it works, I find that tea made by reusing a tea bag tastes awful.

Pouring tea, adding sugar and milk

With a few exceptions, we add neither sugar nor milk into our hot tea. But if you do, I suggest that you make a strong brew. Adding sugar or milk, or both, to a weak brew will drown out the flavor of tea.

About Connie Veneracion

Home cook and writer by passion, photographer by necessity, and good food, coffee and wine lover forever. I create, test and publish recipes for family meals, and write cooking tips and food stories. More about me and my umami blogs.

Spaghetti with gourmet tuyo

He who works with his hands…

Boiled beef short ribs, bok choy and purple sweet potato soup

Nilaga essentials

Eggs en cocotte

An egg yolk or two is good for you

Halloween matcha cookies

Shortbread butter cookies

Previous Post:Tea and cake at Salon de The Alcyon, Osaka 2019English-style tea in Osaka
Next Post:The gravy boat is not an American inventionNoritake gravy boat with saucer
  • Author
  • Privacy
  • Copyright
  • No AI
  • Contact

Created by a human for humans · Copyright © 2026 Connie Veneracion · All Rights Reserved