🍵 Steep Tea
Like a Pro
Oliver
Oliver
Published 28 May 2026

How to Steep Tea Like an Expert (Temperature & Timing Guide)

Most people make tea with boiling water and a generic steep time, then wonder why it tastes bitter. The temperature and timing matter more than the tea itself for most varieties. Get these right and even a £3 supermarket tea tastes excellent.

The Temperature & Time Cheat Sheet

Tea Type Temp (°C) Time
White 75-80°C 2-3 min
Green 75-80°C 2-3 min
Oolong (light) 85°C 3 min
Oolong (dark) 90°C 4 min
Black 95-100°C 3-5 min
Pu-erh 95°C 3-5 min
Herbal (most) 100°C 5-10 min
Rooibos 100°C 5-7 min

The Boiling Water Mistake

Putting boiling water on green or white tea is the most common mistake. It releases tannins (the bitter compounds) and destroys delicate aromatic oils. The result: bitter, flat tea you blame on the brand.

Fix: let boiled water sit for 60 seconds before pouring (drops temp to ~85°C). For greens, wait 90 seconds (drops to ~80°C). A kitchen thermometer is the most useful £5 tea accessory you can buy.

Small Details That Make Big Differences

  • Water quality matters. Filter your water if it's hard. Limescale ruins delicate teas.
  • Warm the pot/cup first. Cold ceramic drops your water temperature 10°C+ instantly.
  • Use enough tea. 1 teaspoon (2-3g) per 250ml is the baseline for most teas.
  • Don't squeeze tea bags. You release bitter tannins.
  • Cover during steep. Stops aromatics from escaping.
  • Loose leaf > bags for serious tea drinkers. More room for leaves to unfurl.

Pairing CBD with Tea

CBD oil and hot tea is a popular pairing but tricky — CBD is fat-soluble and won't fully dissolve in water. Options:

  • Add a splash of milk (any fat source) before adding CBD drops
  • Use water-soluble CBD for clean integration
  • Let tea cool slightly before adding CBD — heat above 80°C can degrade cannabinoids
Oliver

Oliver's bottom line
CBD Freedom founder

Tea is one of the simplest rituals — but the small details transform it. Right temperature, right time, warm cup, decent water. Get those four right and any tea tastes better. The £5 thermometer is the single best investment you'll make in your tea life. Precision pays.