Your Cup, Your Way: Loose Leaf, Teabags, and Sachets

Your Cup, Your Way: Loose Leaf, Teabags, and Sachets

The way you steep tea can affect everything from its flavors to its aroma. Our latest blog compares the benefits of loose leaf tea, teabags, and sachets…and helps you learn which method is right for you. 

Hot Takes on (Mostly) Hot Teas Reading Your Cup, Your Way: Loose Leaf, Teabags, and Sachets 7 minutes

One of tea’s delights is the many options it presents to its drinkers. As well as multiple styles and a seemingly endless variety of flavors, tea offers a choice of preparation methods: loose leaf, teabags, or sachets. In this blog, we’ll discuss each of those three methods, their different advantages…and how they can affect the taste of your tea.

Loose Leaf: A Little More Work for a Lot More Flavor
Loose leaf teas, made from tea leaves and herbals, can be brewed using a strainer, infuser, or teapot. The many advantages of this brewing method begin with the leaves themselves.

Loose leaf teas preserve more of the tea’s natural flavor and aromas. When steeped, they unfurl slowly, releasing their aromas and flavors more evenly and completely to create a more complex, and elegant taste.

Loose leaf tea leaves also have more room to expand as they steep, since there is no material surrounding them. This fuller expansion enables a more effective infusion, which produces a richer flavor and a more nuanced, expressive aroma.

As you’d expect, loose leaf is the method that most tea devotees prefer. Case in point: my parents, Mike and Brigitte Harney…who wouldn’t think of starting their mornings without a cup of loose leaf tea.

For beginners, there may be a bit of a learning curve to the brewing process, as you’re figuring out the proper tea-to-water ratio, and how to tailor proportions to your individual taste. You’ll also want to get a few accessories (such as the aforementioned strainer, infuser, or teapot).

However, once you’re comfortable with the process, you’ll start to appreciate the ability to customize your experience…as well as the comforting ritual that’s part and parcel of loose leaf brewing.

There’s one more advantage to loose leaf brewing. Because the method has no packaging, it also has no microplastics. Microplastics can be a concern when using teabags and sachets produced by some other companies. Here at Harney & Sons, however, we’ve taken steps to eliminate microplastic concerns in those brewing methods as well. And since teabags have entered the chat…

Teabags: Brewed for the Busy 
Teabags are small, flat, porous pouches made of paper designed to produce a single serving of tea. Teabags’ convenience, affordability, availability, and consistency of taste have made them the United States’ most popular brewing format, and they’re often your best choice when brewing conditions are less than ideal (say, when you’re in a rush or your water’s not quite hot enough). 

Teabags generally brew faster and produce a stronger infusion than loose leaf tea or sachets. That’s because the tea inside them is broken into smaller particles, which allow color and flavor to release more quickly…even at lower water temperatures.

Most supermarket teabags are made with inexpensive teas…what our founder, John Harney, called “dust.” But with our family’s deep expertise sourcing outstanding loose leaf teas, we’re able to take a different approach to our teabags, sourcing great-tasting teas that deliver mouth-filling body and fuller flavors.

One more consideration: the paper used in some teabags can negatively affect the brewed tea’s taste. Typically, that’s because the paper in the bag is bleached with chlorine.

At Harney, we use oxygen to bleach our teabags’ paper, to make sure its taste isn’t affected…and we make sure of that, by actually tasting the teabag paper as part of our quality checks (the tea business isn’t always nonstop glamor, readers).

One more advantage of our teabag paper: it’s compostable (and thus, more environmentally friendly).

Sachets: Balancing Taste and Convenience
If you want the more nuanced flavor of loose tea but enjoy the convenience of teabags, our sachets offer the perfect balance.

Tea sachets are permeable, usually pyramid-shaped pouches that generally contain whole leaves and offer multiple benefits for their users.

Foremost among those benefits is convenience. Brewing tea with a sachet doesn’t require you to own any extra accoutrements (besides a cup), and the portions have already been measured out. All you have to do is add water of the appropriate temperature and then wait the recommended number of minutes while your tea steeps.

With few exceptions, we use the same blends in our sachets as we do in our loose tea. That makes for a taste that’s extremely similar (though not precisely the same, due to the tea in sachets being constrained by packaging).

Speaking of packaging, we’ve again taken steps to make ours more environmentally friendly. The vast majority of our sachets (the sole exception being Hot Cinnamon) are made with an industrially compostable material derived from sugarcane.

How Will Your Tea’s Brewing Method Affect Its Taste?  
To demonstrate the answer to this question, we’re going to use one of our most popular black teas: Paris.

In loose leaf form, Paris is offered in quantities from a one-pound bag down to a four-ounce tin. Teabags are available in boxes of 20 or 50, and sachets range from a bag of 50 to a tin of 20. (For that matter, Paris even comes in iced tea pouches…but that’s a blog for another day.)

Brewing a perfect cup of Paris requires water heated precisely to 212°F and a steeping time of 4 to 5 minutes. However, the format you choose makes a difference to the end result.

Loose leaf brewing with an infuser or teapot gives the tea leaves room to unfurl and release their flavors, letting Paris become all that it can be. Rich and nuanced, the blend layers bold black tea with notes of vanilla, caramel, and bergamot, allowing a gentle fruitiness to shine through.

Teabags are designed for ease and speed, making it simple to enjoy a great cup in moments. While the smaller leaf size and compact brewing space can gently soften some aromatic nuances, Paris remains rich and enjoyable, with its finer notes blending into a fuller black tea foundation.

Brewing Paris in a tea sachet offers a middle ground between flavor and convenience. Even though the leaves have less room to expand, the intended balance of sweet and floral notes still comes through…plus you gain the time-saving convenience of not needing extra tools, such as a strainer or infuser.

Which Method is Best?
Honestly, there’s no right answer to that question. It all comes down to whether you prefer maximum flavor, maximum convenience, or maximum compromise.

Loose leaf teas require more effort but deliver the fullest flavor. Teabags offer greater convenience, but often at the expense of nuance. For many drinkers, sachets provide a just-right balance that combines ease with a fresher, more complex tea.

Ultimately, all three methods are simply different paths to the same destination: a warm, soothing cup that invites comfort, clarity, and a moment of calm. However you brew, we hope you’ll enjoy the journey.

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