Oversteeping: Difference between revisions
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'''Oversteeping''' is the act of steeping tea for far longer than you usually would, with the express purpose of imbuing it with sterility that is then conferred upon the drinker. | '''Oversteeping''' is the act of steeping tea for far longer than you usually would, with the express purpose of imbuing it with sterility that is then conferred upon the drinker. | ||
How long tea must be oversteeped to be considered ‘ready’ is highly dependent on the type of tea, but usually, the time is somewhere between 3 and 30 days. There are, however, exceptions to this. For instance, the artificial [[Orkney Earl Black]] tea of [[Nuck Chorris|Nuck]]’s creation is exceptionally prone to oversteeping | How long tea must be oversteeped to be considered ‘ready’ is highly dependent on the type of tea, but usually, the time is somewhere between 3 and 30 days. There are, however, exceptions to this. For instance, the artificial [[Orkney Earl Black]] tea of [[Nuck Chorris|Nuck]]’s creation is exceptionally prone to oversteeping. | ||
== Over-oversteeping == | == Over-oversteeping == | ||
Latest revision as of 16:05, 7 February 2026
Oversteeping is the act of steeping tea for far longer than you usually would, with the express purpose of imbuing it with sterility that is then conferred upon the drinker.
How long tea must be oversteeped to be considered ‘ready’ is highly dependent on the type of tea, but usually, the time is somewhere between 3 and 30 days. There are, however, exceptions to this. For instance, the artificial Orkney Earl Black tea of Nuck’s creation is exceptionally prone to oversteeping.
Over-oversteeping
Oversteeping tea for too long can increase the sterility contained in the tea even more, but it also causes the sterility to start ‘leaking’ out of the tea, thus reducing the amount of sterility absorbed by the drinker compared to properly oversteeped tea. Why this happens is ill-understood, though Nuck tends to speak of it as a matter of fact.
That said, it is actually possible to oversteep tea for longer than normal while still achieving favourable results, but the procedure is rather involved and more ritualistic and traditional than practical in nature—even properly over-oversteeped tea cannot compare in quality to regular, oversteeped Orkney tea.