tea health
All posts tagged "tea health"
Categories: Health benefits of tea
Tags: Oolong tea, tea health, weight loss tea, wu yi
Post date: February 26, 2009
Comments: 8 comments
Try searching for “green tea” on Google. Seriously. Do it.
Check out the right side of the page, where those sponsored links are. What’s being advertised? Tea, right? But chances are that the people selling the tea are trying to tell you that drinking tea – sorry, drinking their tea – will make you lose weight.
Take it with a grain of salt.
Categories: White tea
Tags: Bai Hao Yin Zhen, Bai Mudan, Beginner's Guide to Tea, caffeine content of tea, camellia sinensis, chinese teas, Fujian Province, silver needle, tea health, white peony
Post date: January 19, 2009
Comments: 1 comment
White tea is one of the most rare teas around, produced with unopened budsets or the first leaves of the tea plant. Traditionally, it also only comes from one specific region in China. Learn all about this highly prized tea.
Categories: Oolong tea
Tags: Beginner's Guide to Tea, caffeine content of tea, camellia sinensis, chinese teas, formosa fancy silvertips, formosan teas, Oolong tea, tea health, ti kuan yin, tung ting jade oolong, wild-grown tieguanyin, wu yi
Post date: January 7, 2009
Comments: 4 comments
Can’t pick an oolong from a green tea? This quick introduction to oolong tea (also known as wulong tea) explains what it is, where it’s grown, what its health benefits are, and much more.
Categories: Green tea
Tags: Beginner's Guide to Tea, camellia sinensis, chinese teas, dragon well, gen mai cha, Green tea, gunpowder green, Gyokuro, Japanese teas, jasmine tea, longjing, matcha, Sencha, tea health
Post date: January 1, 2009
Comments: 2 comments
Ever wondered where green tea is grown? What its health benefits are? Where you can buy it online? In this article, I answer seven questions people commonly have about green tea.
Categories: Green tea
Tags: caffeine content of tea, Green tea, tea health
Post date: December 22, 2008
Comments: 9 comments
Does green tea contain caffeine? In short, yes. But the important question is: How much? That’s a much harder question, because different studies have found that the caffeine content of any given cup of green tea varies.