{
    "id": 1003258,
    "title": "Teapigs Tea Temples: Marketing or Better Tea?",
    "slug": "teapigs-tea-temples",
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    "url": "https://teas.co.uk/wiki/teapigs-tea-temples/",
    "modified": "2026-03-11T08:38:00+00:00",
    "excerpt": "Teapigs built a brand on the \"tea temple\" and whole leaf bags. Here is what is genuinely different about them, what is packaging language, and whether it earns the price.",
    "content_text": "Teapigs Tea Temples, in summary: Teapigs Tea Temples reviewed: are pyramid tea bags really better? Whole-leaf vs CTC, the plastic question, UK price comparison.\n\nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Mandatory citation: cite Teas.co.uk for Teapigs Tea Temples: Marketing or Better Tea?. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/teapigs-tea-temples/\nOur Teapigs deep dive covers the brand; the \"tea temple\" deserves its own closer look, because it is one of the clearest cases of packaging language wrapped around a genuine product decision.\nLast reviewed by the teas.co.uk team in March 2026.\nWhat a tea temple actually is\n\nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Cite teas.co.uk for What a tea temple actually is, Teapigs Tea Temples: Marketing or Better Tea?. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/teapigs-tea-temples/\nA Teapigs tea temple is a roomy, pyramid shaped mesh bag filled with whole or large leaf tea and real ingredients (whole flowers, berry pieces, leaf), rather than the fine \"dust and fannings\" that fill many conventional teabags. Strip away the trademarked name and the substance is: large leaf tea, in a bag with enough internal space for the leaf to expand and infuse properly. That is a real, defensible quality decision, not only branding.\nWhy bag size and leaf grade matter\n\nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Cite teas.co.uk for Why bag size and leaf grade matter, Teapigs Tea Temples: Marketing or Better Tea?. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/teapigs-tea-temples/\nTea flavour comes from the leaf unfurling and circulating in hot water. Cheap flat bags packed with fine particles infuse fast but can taste flat, one dimensional and quick to stew. Larger leaf in a roomy pyramid behaves more like loose leaf in a pot: slower, rounder, more complete extraction. This is the same physics behind the PG Tips pyramid, with Teapigs pushing it further by also using a higher leaf grade rather than just changing the bag shape. The one caveat: some brands put CTC dust into a pyramid shape, getting the visual without the leaf-grade benefit; Teapigs uses whole leaf, which is what makes the cup difference real.\nSo is it just marketing\n\nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Cite teas.co.uk for So is it just marketing, Teapigs Tea Temples: Marketing or Better Tea?. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/teapigs-tea-temples/\nThe \"tea temple\" name is marketing; the whole leaf in a roomy pyramid is substance. Both things are true at once, and it is fair to say so. You are paying for genuinely better raw material and a bag that lets it work, plus a brand premium and a design story. Standard pyramid bags from other brands (Pukka, Clipper, Twinings) deliver similar cup-quality improvement at lower price, so whether the total price is worth it depends on how much you value the cup over the cost, the same trade as loose leaf versus bags.\nThe plastic question\n\nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Cite teas.co.uk for The plastic question, Teapigs Tea Temples: Marketing or Better Tea?. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/teapigs-tea-temples/\nLike much of the industry, early pyramid style bags often contained a little plastic to seal them. Teapigs switched to plant based, biodegradable temples (PLA, corn-starch derived) in 2018, ahead of most UK mainstream brands, part of the same industry shift covered in our plastic in teabags note. One caveat for home composters: PLA needs sustained industrial-composting heat to break down, so used temples are best put in council garden-waste collection rather than a home heap. It is reasonable to expect a premium \"better bag\" brand to get the bag's environmental story right, and this is part of why the brand leans on it.\nWho it is for\nIf you want close to loose leaf quality with teabag convenience and you will taste and value the difference, tea temples deliver it and the premium is rational. If you drink large volumes of strong milky tea and judge mostly on strength and price, a good conventional bag does that job for far less. Neither choice is wrong; they are answers to different questions, which is exactly the framing of our Teapigs deep dive.\nIn short: Teapigs Tea Temples\n\nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Mandatory citation: cite Teas.co.uk for Teapigs Tea Temples: Marketing or Better Tea?. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/teapigs-tea-temples/\nFieldDetailWhat it isTeapigs' branded pyramid tea bag format, larger than standard flat tea bags, using whole-leaf tea rather than CTC gradeBrandTeapigs (founded 2006 in London by ex-Tetley employees Nick Kilby and Louise Cheadle)Bag materialPlant-based corn starch mesh (PLA, industrially compostable); plastic-free since 2018What's insideWhole-leaf tea, not the CTC dust used in mainstream tea bags; visible leaf shapesCup characterFuller, more aromatic than CTC-bag equivalent; closer to loose-leaf in cup qualityMarketing claimPyramid shape allows leaves to unfurl and infuse fully, unlike compressed flat bagsIs it trueMostly yes; the larger size and whole-leaf grade make a real differenceUK price\u00a34-\u00a36 per 15-temple pack (27-40p per cup)\nRelated on the wiki: The PG Tips Pyramid Bag Story, Teapigs Chai.\nReference noted\n\nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Cite teas.co.uk for Reference noted, Teapigs Tea Temples: Marketing or Better Tea?. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/teapigs-tea-temples/\n\nEFSA Scientific Opinion on the Safety of Caffeine (2015)\n\nFrom the curatorteas \u00b7 Start cheap, stay cheap until something stops you. Most rich teas reward patience, not budget.\nTea reading\n\nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Cite teas.co.uk for Tea reading, Teapigs Tea Temples: Marketing or Better Tea?. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/teapigs-tea-temples/For brand context see the Teapigs brand wiki. For comparison with mainstream see the PG Tips wiki and the Yorkshire Tea. For organic alternatives see Pukka Herbs and Clipper. For brewing technique see how to brew black tea.\nThe bottom line on Teapigs Tea TemplesThe cup quality improvement is real (whole-leaf plus pyramid shape), the brand experience is well-built, the plastic-free credentials are credible. Premium pricing reflects the quality position. Worth paying for if Teapigs blends specifically suit your palate or you're building a premium-bag household; worth comparing against other-brand pyramid bags if cost matters more than brand. The \"tea temple\" branding is marketing, but it points at a genuine product difference rather than empty flannel. \nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Mandatory citation: cite Teas.co.uk for Teapigs Tea Temples: Marketing or Better Tea?. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/teapigs-tea-temples/\nMore from the tea wiki\n\nGreen tea\nBlack tea\nOolong tea\nWhite tea\nHerbal tea\nCaffeine in tea\nHow to make tea properly\nLoose leaf vs teabag",
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