Close X
Monday, November 11, 2024
ADVT 
Tech

Brew a perfect tea with this technology

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 May, 2014 12:08 PM
    This tea machine brews a perfect cup of tea every time you go for it. But there ain't free tea, isn't it?
     
    Costing a whopping $13,000, the machine named Bkon does not use the old method of pulling or pushing water through the tea.
     
    Instead, it uses air pressure to draw tea through water.
     
    "Our patented Reverse Atmospheric Infusion process infuses beverages through controlled negative pressure,” Dean Vastardis, Bkon co-founder, was quoted as saying.
     
    Reverse Atmospheric Infusion actually changes the air pressure, so the soluble flavour elements and natural sugars are extracted more completely and with greater purity, he added.
     
    In this technology, gases are released from the pores of the tea to create a void for the water to infuse.
     
    The boiling temperature of the water is then reduced to accelerate agitation at a molecular level.
     
    This process targets and extracts optimal elements of the tea at key phases of the brew cycle, producing a perfect blend, media reports said.
     
    The machine could do for tea what coffee machines did for the coffee industry, experts said.

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Jot down etiquettes for wearing Google Glass

    Jot down etiquettes for wearing Google Glass
    With an aim to address how people should use Google's wearable technology, the firm has revealed the first official etiquette kit for its Glass device

    Jot down etiquettes for wearing Google Glass

    Google to create android applications in Indian languages

    Google to create android applications in Indian languages
    Google Wednesday said it will host a two-day workshop in Bangalore later this week focused on designing and creating android applications in Indian languages.

    Google to create android applications in Indian languages

    Indian Mars Orbiter completes 100 days in space

    Indian Mars Orbiter completes 100 days in space
    India's maiden Mars Orbiter spacecraft completes 100 days Wednesday cruising through interplanetary space in its voyage towards the red planet.

    Indian Mars Orbiter completes 100 days in space

    Human arm sensors are here

    Human arm sensors are here
    In a novel bid to make future robots understand human movement better and act more efficiently, researchers have created human arm sensors - a first.

    Human arm sensors are here