10 JUL 2026 - Back up to full speed! Let's be honest: for the last few months, TorrentFunk was painfully slow. Pages crawled, searches dragged, and just loading the site tested everyone's patience. We hunted the problem down to our network and rebuilt it from the ground up — smarter caching, a much bigger and faster connection, and a lot of fine-tuning under the hood. The difference is night and day: the site now loads in a fraction of a second. No more waiting around. Thanks for sticking with us through the slow spell. Now go discover your funk!
TORRENT DETAILS
Inside The Factory S03e01 Tea Bags EN SUB MPEG4 X264 WEBRIP [MPup]
TV Release: 2015-05-05 Torrent Release: 12-08-2017 by user
TV Show Genre
Documentary
Awards
N/A
Infohash
165f69ecac80de42e45f1cfc01b88de6be7909e4
Parental Rating
N/A
Vote:No votes yet.
Episode: Tea Bags (3x1)
Episode Plot:
Gregg Wallace receives a load of tea leaves from Kenya and follows their journey through the factory. Cherry discovers the secrets of the tea leaf and Ruth investigates the history of 19th century tea selling trickery.
How our favorite foods and products are made? Cherry Healey and Gregg Wallace go into the factories to figure out, while Ruth Goodman tell us about the historical development of the manufacturing process of these products.
Synopsis by IMDb
TV : Documentary : HD : English
Inside.The.Factory.s03e01.Tea.Bags.EN.SUB.MPEG4.x264.WEBRIP.[MPup]
Gregg Wallace receives a load of tea leaves from Kenya and follows their journey through the factory that produces one quarter of all the tea we drink in Britain. Gregg turns his 20-tonne batch into 6.9 million bags. Along the way, he discovers that there can be up to 20 different teas in your bag and that the recipe for the blend is altered every day, measured against a standard created in 1978.
Meanwhile, Cherry Healey discovers the secrets of the tea leaf in an African tea processing plant. She learns that 40% of each leaf is made up of chemicals called polyphenols. She is surprised to find that white, green and black tea are all made from the same leaves. She also discovers that the bag surrounding your tea is not ordinary paper, but a highly engineered fabric made up of hemp, wood and polypropylene. She watches as a 60 kilometre-long roll is produced. And she gets some scientific tips on making the best possible cup of tea with a tea bag.
Historian Ruth Goodman investigates tea adulteration. In the 19th century, there were eight separate factories in London which existed solely to dry and recolour used tea leaves. She discovers that it was 'honest' John Hornim who put that right and ensured we could trust our tea. She also finds that in the military during the Second World War, armoured divisions had to leave the safety of their tanks to brew up - a habit that resulted in many casualties. She climbs on board a modern-day tank to make a cup of tea with a Boiling Vessel, the innovation that solved this problem.