This post assumes you are as obsessed about tea as I am. If you are not, you have my permission to just wonder, “What’s up with this guy?” :D

I find it handy to have a list of the teas that I’ve tried and my detailed thoughts on them, as I can’t remember everything since I’ve tried so many teas at this point. Keeping a list has helped me avoid re-sampling the same tea accidentally and to learn what styles and regions of tea I enjoy.

I use airtable.com (shown in the screenshot). I started out using Google Sheets, but I was feeling limited. I wanted to dynamically sort, filter, and search my spreadsheet - as if it were a UI form. I also wanted to add tags to describe my teas, again for quick filtering and such. airtable.com seems to be everything I need.

  • @[email protected]
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    21 year ago

    I used to log every tea I drank in Steepster. Haven’t done that in quite a while though, and I never had a spreadsheet

    • @[email protected]OP
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      11 year ago

      I’ve ended up on steepster a few times, looking for reviews of teas by others. I suppose that’s something lacking from my method - sharing my review with others.

      Do you recommend using steepster? I don’t imagine it will replace my complex spreadsheet, but I suppose I could copy my review to steepster.

  • @violoncellemuse
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    21 year ago

    I really like MyTeaPal. Very flexible, robust and a really nice UI. Lets me keep track of all my teas with as much detail as I like, such as vendor, origin, elevation, cultivar, harvest year and season, caffeine, steeping instructions, and then there’s a website link if I ordered it online so I can look back at it, but I usually put all the details about the tea in the “details” section. I also copy the website image of the tea from the website so it looks really nice when looking at all of my teas.

    And then it lets you track teaware as well much to the same level of detail (type, vendor, origin, material, volume, etc).

    The beauty of setting all this up is when it comes time to log a brewing session. You select your tea and teaware, enter in the amount of tea leaves, the water type (filtered, distilled, spring, etc), and if you are rinsing the leaves before brewing. Then you get to log every infusion if you do multiple re-steepings. You can log the water temperature, the infusion time, and then a few notes about this particular infusion. It includes a timer with automatic additional time between infusions (+30 sec for example). Then you also get to add flavor profile tags (fruity, floral, earthy, etc) for the whole brew session. Perhaps this time because you lowered the temperature of the water, you’re getting hints of honey that you didn’t taste last time. Or this year’s harvest seems to have more notes of citrus than last year’s.

    Then when you look back at your tea, you can see a list of all the brewing sessions you’ve had and read your infusion notes so you could try to recreate that or try something new to improve upon. You also get to see an aggregate of all the flavor profiles you have entered across all your brewing sessions, so if you’re browsing and in the mood for something “woody”, you can see which teas you’ve had before where you could taste that characteristic.

    You can also have it automatically decrement the quantity of tea leaves you have when you brew, if you give it an accurate number to start with, and also fairly accurate with the amount you used for each brewing session. Then you can see which teas you have are running low and need to order more!

    There is also a community aspect to it, which is cool for those who are in to that. My username is the same if you really want to look me up. :-P

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      Oh wow! I really like the look of this! My only worry would be, how reliable the service is and whether I could download my data if it came down to it. I’ll look into this some more to ease my worry. Thank you for the recommendation!

  • @[email protected]
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    11 year ago

    Excel, with worksheets for: 1. purchase log with tasting/brew notes 2. Current tea inventory 3. Current cake inventory I actually wrote my own .Net app, but never use it, because it takes more effort to keep evolving it than just using Excel, but it basically opened each line from the Excel sheet and showed all the information in a more organized view with pictures which was really cool, but I make notes most days so Excel is just easier given the volume of data.