tea

Tea is an aromatic beverage prepared by pouring hot or boiling water over cured or fresh leaves of Camellia sinensis, an evergreen shrub native to China and East Asia. After water, it is the most widely consumed drink in the world. There are many different types of tea; some, like Chinese greens and Darjeeling, have a cooling, slightly bitter, and astringent flavour, while others have vastly different profiles that include sweet, nutty, floral, or grassy notes. Tea has a stimulating effect in humans primarily due to its caffeine content.The tea plant originated in the region encompassing today's Southwest China, Tibet, north Myanmar and Northeast India, where it was used as a medicinal drink by various ethnic groups. An early credible record of tea drinking dates to the 3rd century AD, in a medical text written by Hua Tuo. It was popularised as a recreational drink during the Chinese Tang dynasty, and tea drinking spread to other East Asian countries. Portuguese priests and merchants introduced it to Europe during the 16th century. During the 17th century, drinking tea became fashionable among the English, who started to plant tea on a large scale in India.
The term herbal tea refers to drinks not made from Camellia sinensis: infusions of fruit, leaves, or other plant parts, such as steeps of rosehip, chamomile, or rooibos. These may be called tisanes or herbal infusions to prevent confusion with "tea" made from the tea plant.

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  1. BarSer

    My tea collection of items for pleasant tea drinking.

    I want to share with you my collection for pleasant tea drinking. I started collecting more than six months ago. All glass items are perfectly combined, although they were bought in different places. I use it in the sauna and not only.
  2. LadyBelle

    Recipe Honeysuckle Iced Tea

    30g honeysuckle petals 500g water Bring the water to the boil. Add the honeysuckle petals and leave to steep in the boiled water for 2/3 hours. Transfer to a covered container and leave in the fridge overnight. Strain through a muslin cloth into a serving jug, serve over ice. Lilac tea can...
  3. TastyReuben

    Your Tea Habits

    So...what's everyone's tea habits here? Do you drink it regularly? Do you like it hot, iced, full of sugar and/milk? Green tea? Herbal? Flavored teas? A lot, a little? Chai, anyone? Loose leaf? Bagged? Make your own bags from loose leaf? Do you enjoy the ritual of making a "proper...
  4. J

    Need a certain tea infuser i can't seem to find

    I recently heard that tea bags are made from plastic and that they release plastic into the tea which is obviously not a good thing. I decided i want to find a way around that and a stainless steel infuser seems the likely choice. I make a gallon of tea for iced tea at a time so i need one that...
  5. SatNavSaysStraightOn

    Is your cup of tea killing you?

    This makes for an interesting, if alarming, read. Plastic tea bags are releasing billions of microplastics into your tea - Geographical Magazine And ties in with this article (New evidence points to microplastics’ toxic impact on the human body - Geographical Magazine), also regarding...
  6. C

    Recipe Citrus Herbal Tea Rub

    This might be old news to some of you, but I have never heard of using tea in a rub. The recipe says "does wonders for lighter protein like chicken and fish. Slow-cooking in liquid allows the tea to "steep", which brings out its subtle flavor". Sounds intriguing to me. Citrus Herbal Tea Rub...
  7. murphyscreek

    Recipe & Video Tea Eggs / Marble Eggs

    Ingredients 10 hard boiled eggs (cooked for 10 minutes then cooled in cold water) 2 black leaf or strong tea bags 1 cinnamon stick 2 star anise 1/2 tsp szechuan peppercorns 3 thin slices ginger (peel and all) 3 dried red chillies 1 bay leaf 1/2 tbsp sugar 2 tbsp dark soy sauce 1/2 cup Chinese...
  8. Morning Glory

    Recipe Saffron and Marmalade Tea Bread

    There is a traditional Cornish tea bread made with saffron and dried fruit and I was reading that bakers used to make it with whole threads of saffron rather than crushed, pounded saffron. This was to show customers that the saffron was real and not a fake substitute. Saffron and orange work...
  9. Cherry Kirschenbaum

    Flora tea

    My partner and I went to a coffee festival some time ago and the big surprise at it was this beautiful, natural tea. It's a little ball that you drop at the bottom of the glass and, when you pour hot water over it, it blooms like a flower. It tastes refreshing (there's a few different flavours)...
  10. M

    Bubble Milk Tea

    Which one do you like? Bubble milk tea or Brown sugar bubble milk tea?
  11. Herbie

    Topsy turvy tea

    The amazing burger cake by @medtran49 reminded me of when a friend wanted to make an afternoon tea where everything looked sweet but were actually savoury and asked for recommendations. I came up with: Scones, jam and cream = Cheese scones, cream cheese and chilli jam cheesecake = savoury...
  12. MrsDangermouse

    BBC - Back In Time For Tea

    Did anyone else watch this? For anyone who hasn't heard of it - its a programme combining food and social history where a family live and eat as people did throughout the 20thC. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Back_in_Time_for... I really enjoyed the previous series of Back In Time For Dinner...
  13. Duck59

    Recipe Mint tea

    I put this forward as the simplest recipe ever to 'grace' the recipe challenge. 1. Acquire some fresh mint. 2. Snip it up (scissors will do) and put it into a teapot. 3. Add boiling water and leave for about four minutes (depends on how strong you like it). 4. Pour into cup(s) via a strainer or...
  14. Elawin

    Recipe Saffron Tea

    Ingredients (per cup): 250 ml freshly drawn or filtered water 2 cardamom pods, cracked 1 tsp soft light brown sugar 1 cm cinnamon stick 5 strands saffron 1 green tea bag A few flaked almonds to serve Extra sugar, if required, to taste Method: 1. Put the water, cardamoms, sugar, cinnamon and...
  15. sidevalve

    Odd question about tea

    Been thinking about the various drinks that call themselves 'tea'. 'Tea' is not a process or a way of cooking it is a drink made from the tea plant just as coffee is a drink made from coffee beans. So why do we seem to call any drink involving hot water 'tea' ? If I ordered a van from a dealer...
  16. SatNavSaysStraightOn

    $27,000 for a pair of perfect melons?

    Would you pay $27,240 for a pair of perfect melons? You're thinking of the wrong melons there folks! :whistling: Or perhaps US$1 million for 1kg of tea? More at http://a.msn.com/06/en-au/BBBfHqu?ocid=se
  17. M

    The scents of a tea shop

    It's been awhile since I've posted. Still in the midst of writing (what I hope will be) a novel and I am at a point where my main character enters a tea shop, one that sells bulk loose teas and where you can I also buy a cup of your favorite hot or iced teas (I live in the South, the story...
  18. SatNavSaysStraightOn

    Fresh tea

    Has anyone ever had tea made from fresh, not dried tea leaves? Over here in Australia I have come across a brand of fresh tea called Prana Chai. It comes in 2 varieties, one sweetened with agave and the other with honey (masala blend). It's rather nice. The Australian site is this one...
  19. winterybella

    Recipe Indian Ginger Cardamom Chai

    So after my Ginger beer idea was taken by a certain @classic33, I thought I'd still share some liquid and thought of a simple Ginger Tea which I am always happy to sip on. Since I am not that great at putting together my own recipes, I decided to do a search and stumbled on Ginger Tea with a...
  20. aquaticneko

    Recipe Tumeric Tea

    Tumeric is something that I have always had in the mix of local curry powder I can buy around my area. However, it has always been foreign to me. I didn't even know what it LOOKED like until very recently when I saw it at my local asian supermarket. Now that I have learnt how good it is for you...
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