Tea (rec.drink.tea) Discussion relating to tea, the world's second most consumed beverage (after water), made by infusing or boiling the leaves of the tea plant (C. sinensis or close relatives) in water.

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Sandstone
 
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Default Top Antioxidant Teas

Spotted the following in a USA Today article

Susanne M. Henning UCLA researcher and colleagues tested 20 tea brands
and found antioxidant variations were great. The top 10 of these teas
were

1. Celestial Seasonings Authentic Green Tea
2. Bigelow Green Tea
3. Uncle Lee's Green Tea
4. Lipton Black Tea
5. Salada Earl Green Tea
6. Lipton Green Tea
7. Wissotzky Earl Grey
8. Bigelow English Teatime
9. Bigelow Darjeeling Blend
10. Swee-Touch-Nee Black Tea

Most likely, these are just popular tea bag brands. Too bad white tea
wasn't included in the study.

Tried to locate this report on the web but only came up with the
following study

http://www.healthnews.ws/index.aspx?id=2085

which is mostly of interest to guys.

Anybody have a credible anti-oxidant ranking for loose teas?

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Sandstone wrote:
> Spotted the following in a USA Today article
>
> Susanne M. Henning UCLA researcher and colleagues tested 20 tea

brands
> and found antioxidant variations were great. The top 10 of these teas
> were <snip>



When the box says "green tea", what kind of green tea is it? I've
always wondered about that. I've tried plenty of ready-made green tea
in a can or bottle and they differ in taste.

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Livio Zanini
 
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"Lewis Perin" > ha scritto nel messaggio
news
> writes:
>
> > Sandstone wrote:
> > > Spotted the following in a USA Today article
> > >
> > > Susanne M. Henning UCLA researcher and colleagues tested 20 tea

> > brands
> > > and found antioxidant variations were great. The top 10 of these teas
> > > were <snip>

> >
> >
> > When the box says "green tea", what kind of green tea is it?

>
> There's no way to know, but you can assume the packer got it fairly
> cheaply.
>
> > I've always wondered about that. I've tried plenty of ready-made
> > green tea in a can or bottle and they differ in taste.

>
> If you want a predictable taste, you need to know what kind of tea it
> is, and honestly, that only *reduces* the variation.
>
> /Lew
> ---
> Lew Perin /

>
http://www.panix.com/~perin/babelcarp.html


IMHO, when you have people drinking green tea just (or mainly) because it
contains antioxidants, let them drink whatever the green tea they want.
I once wan invited to serve some tea in a "new-age" school for shiatsu,
reiki, taijiquan, etc. I served a two years stale, low quality Longjing and
a wonderfull Anxi Tieguanyin. After tasting them people were all impresed by
the taste of TGY, but as soon as they were told that LJ is a green tea and
TGY is a light-oxised oolong, the all turned to say that the LJ was better
and asked me where they could buy that tea. What's the point in discussing
the quality of tea with these people?




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Bluesea
 
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LOL!

--
~~Bluesea~~
Spam is great in musubi but not in email.
Please take out the trash before sending a direct reply.

"Livio Zanini" > wrote in message
news
>
> IMHO, when you have people drinking green tea just (or mainly) because it
> contains antioxidants, let them drink whatever the green tea they want.
> I once wan invited to serve some tea in a "new-age" school for shiatsu,
> reiki, taijiquan, etc. I served a two years stale, low quality Longjing

and
> a wonderfull Anxi Tieguanyin. After tasting them people were all impresed

by
> the taste of TGY, but as soon as they were told that LJ is a green tea and
> TGY is a light-oxised oolong, the all turned to say that the LJ was better
> and asked me where they could buy that tea. What's the point in discussing
> the quality of tea with these people?



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