Sip Sustainably! 🌱 Elevate your tea game effortlessly.
T-Sac Tea Filter Bags are disposable, single-use infusers designed for steeping high-quality loose leaf tea. With a 1-cup capacity, these eco-friendly bags are made in Germany from natural, chlorine-free paper fibers, ensuring no flavor taint. Ideal for various tea types and spices, they offer a convenient, mess-free brewing experience while being fully compostable.
A**R
Work awesomely for mugs and small pots alike!
Taking the "getting the little bits of leaves out of the infuser" problem and literally throwing it away, these are excellent. These are great at letting you make your tea as weak or as strong as you want - there's plenty of room in these bags for a far stronger cup of tea than most any single-mug could handle! Also, if your bulk leaves contain a dusting of powdered tea, these don't let that gunk up the bottom of your hard-to-scrub pot or mug!
A**S
A must have for all loose tea drinkers
Pros:-The best loose tea bags-Great value-High durability-Consistent designCons:-Clunky-No self sealingThese are the go to tea bags that every loose tea drinkers needs to have in their arsenal. I personally have been using the t-sac bags for over 20 years and they have always done me right. Simply add your tea, put into hot water (or pour over the bag), steep, then remove done! These bags make loose tea insanely easy to prepare with one notable exception - they don't seal.Now, there is one possible explanation why these bags don't seal and it most likely has to deal with preventing glue from ending up in your tea. I have found that rolling the top closed will keep most of the tea in place but I always get some leaves in the brew. Also, I would highly recommend using a wide mouth funnel for inserting tea as the bags are very 'Clunky' and awkward to fill by hand.Otherwise these bags have remained identical to when I first started using them, I am not even sure the packaging has changed (talk about consistency). You should buy with confidence as this brand of tea bag does its job and does it well every time.
R**A
Great tea bags
I use these to pre make my herbal infusion. I use a hair straightener to seal the bags. Easy to do and use.
M**N
best tea bags available at this time
For the price and quality, after much research, these seem to be the best available for what's out there.
B**R
Good product, good price
Shipping was fast,I have used this product for years.I often by powered or loose herbs etc.but I don't want to be drinking them in my teaso I can put them in these tea bags.The price for one box did go up and I was not happy,However, the price for buying two boxes was cheaper ( per box), than I paid the last time for one box.So that was great!
P**O
File Under: Favorite Old Reliables
I've used, literally, about a thousand of these t-sacs (that's how they've branded the product--all lower case) over the past five years or so, in two different sizes--individual and pot. I've never had a problem with this product nor any experience with complaints that have turned up in amazon.com reviews: no funky smell, no fragility and breakage, nothing that compromises what I perceive to be a tasteless, odorless wonderfully permeable filter that lets the quality of the tea, or lack thereof, shine through. And when done brewing, toss the swollen bag into the compost heap. No need to deal with those clumsy metal strainers,T-Balls, imaginative infusers, etc. that have to be rinsed and washed and picked clean and, well, dealt with. I like just tossing the t-sac. The Zero-Defect, No Tea Dust, t-sac.And those of you who have a hard time wrangling the t-sac into compliance: hang on to the little flap-end until the cup is full, then just fold a moistened flap over to close the opening. Voila! Drape it on the lip of the cup and let it steep, and if it slides down into the deep, fish it out with a spoon. Genius, huh? (There's a little illustrated guide on the side of the no. 1 box, for people who can read 3-pt type.) I can count the number of times I've had a totally sunken bag on two hands, and maybe 2 or 3 times with the escape of leaf, normally at the hands of someone who doesn't quite know the drill. So, not quite Zero, but way out past Six Sigma.But wait! The box that contains my precious T-Sacs is...is...imperfectly perforated! And, although the packaging has changed over time, the perforation issue remains unsolved. I like the package concept: a cute little box that opens like a book. (It used to open from the top. Like a book is better.) Unlike my trusty Cut-Rite Wax Paper, which I seem to have been using all my 70 years, with its thick cardboard box and well-perforated tabs (a lot of people don't bother with these, but punching them out really makes the box a lot more functional), T-Sac boxes are so fragile, and so frequently arrive with corners bumped or crushed, and the perforation is so imperfect that I nearly destroy the box trying to get it open "like a book," so the t-sacs dispense as they should, peeling them out one at a time (although very frequently two come out stuck together). More than once, I've taped corners or flaps, simply to store the sacs the right way.That's a small beef and doesn't detract from the functioning of the T-Sac itself.BUT: what I only recently--like, 10 minutes ago--noticed on that fallible box is that the t-sacs are made from "natural and synthetic materials." t-sac's advertising copy, however, says, "Made in Germany from natural, chlorine-free, paper fibers." That's "natural" as in "all natural." For a long time, the ad copy said only that it was hemp from the Philippines.I went to the website, and this was how t-sac explained its materials and their wonders: "Tea filter paper is made of wood cellulose and cellulose from Manila fibre. For only the finest fibre is selected from the Philippines and Equador (sic) to ensure an extremely high strength of paper: and yet one square meter of this thin, fine-porous filter paper only weighs approximately 16g/m²..."Well. That's light. (And, remember, strong.) But is the synthetic material must be a wash or something? If you read your notices, herr or frau t-sac, tell your admirers about everything that's in these wonderful patented t-sacs. At this point, I don't care, for reasons I address above.So, a net four-star bravo (that would go to five if we could clarify the constituent materials). I'm still an extremely happy customer.
J**N
T-Sac Tea Filter Bags, Disposable Tea Infuser, Number 1-Size, 1-Cup Capacity, Set of 200
I bought these to use with loose tea. They work well and are easy to fill. When through there is nothing to wash...just toss. I have bought these twice.
G**L
Very useful for loose tea.
I have T-sacs in two sizes; one for individual cups (good for full-size mugs, too!), and the other for when I'm making a larger pot of tea. They're easy to use, and I have clips that hold the bags closed while in use. I compost the bags and tea when my brew is done!
G**S
Five Stars
ok
Trustpilot
5 days ago
2 months ago