Use cases

Tea Caddy — where it earns its place

On Tea Caddy

You have bought the same disappointing green tea twice, and you know it. The Tea Caddy keeps your own record of every tea that passes through the pot — name, type from green to pu-erh, how many minutes you steeped it, and a verdict in your own words. … On this page: three concrete ways the amateur in the old sense — someone who loves the thing for itself reaches for the Tea Caddy, and the signals that tell you it fits.

When the Tea Caddy earns its place

As a tracker, the Tea Caddy keeps tea, type, steep (min), and verdict — no more, no less — so the record is small enough to actually read back.

Most tools in this category — hobby-tracker apps festooned with ads, community platforms that mine the log — solve a version of the same problem, then bill you monthly for the privilege of remembering it. The Tea Caddy takes the opposite bargain: one file, once, kept.

Three scenarios drawn from hobby, kitchen, and calm

The everyday one: you open the Tea Caddy on a Tuesday morning, log what needs logging, and close it. Two minutes. The record is more honest than the app that pinged you to remind you.

The specific one: — the workflow it names is the record that most needs a home outside a subscription. Some people use only the Tea Caddy. Some fold it into a Swiss Knife next to five others. Both are correct.

The out-of-band one: months later, you want to look back. The Tea Caddy still opens because it is a file. There is no login lapsed, no export deadline missed. The record is where you left it.

Signals it fits the amateur in the old sense — someone who loves the thing for itself

You want a hobby log that behaves like a document, not a service. You are comfortable typing your own numbers in. You would rather own the file than rent the log. Weight in the knife: 1. Manual: no manual — the tool is its own instructions.

Signals it fits

Questions people ask

01

How do I keep track of teas I have tried and liked?

Each tea gets an entry with its name, its type, your steep time in minutes, and a verdict field where you say what you actually thought. The next time you are standing in the shop, the list settles the argument.

02

Is this a full replacement for hobby-tracker apps festooned with ads?

For the working core of what most people use it for — yes. For enterprise features (team seats, integrations, auto-import), no. The Tea Caddy is deliberately smaller and more honest about its scope.

03

Who is the Tea Caddy not for?

The amateur in the old sense — someone who loves the thing for itself's opposite: a team that needs shared cloud state, or someone who wants automation over ownership. Use a SaaS for that; use this for the file.

A hobby log that opens where you left it, on the machine you left it on.

Other angles on Tea Caddy