The creator of the tea bag!

Question: Do you know who invented the Tea Bag?

Answer: Thomas Sullivan and an accidental American invention!

Needless to say, it was in America, with its love of labour-saving devices, that tea bags were first developed. In around 1908, Thomas Sullivan, a New York tea merchant, started to send samples of tea to his customers in small silken bags. Some assumed that these were supposed to be used in the same way as the metal infusers, by putting the entire bag into the pot, rather than emptying out the contents. It was thus by accident that the tea bag was born!

Responding to the comments from his customers that the mesh on the silk was too fine, Sullivan developed sachets made of gauze - the first purpose-made tea bags. During the 1920s these were developed for commercial production, and the bags grew in popularity in the USA. Made first of all from gauze and later from paper, they came in two sizes, a larger bag for the pot, a smaller one for the cup. The features that we still recognize today were already in place - a string that hung over the side so the bag could be removed easily, with a decorated tag on the end.


P.S. When we released our most recent cookbook Tales of a Tea Leaf - One of our longtime Cook'n readers, Wayne Osborne, emailed me and said: “My father's cousin developed the Tea Bag. He was a chemist and held over 20 patents with Dexter Paper Company in Windsor Locks, Connecticut when he retired.”

We thought that was pretty cool! Tea anyone?

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