Adulterants in Teas
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Adulterants in Teas         


Author: niisonge
Date: Jul 24, 2008 06:27

Lately I've been looking at tea store web sites, and I see all these
weird teas - whites, greens, oolongs, etc - and they've all be
adulterated with bits of dried fruit and flower petals? What's with
that? Are there no more tea purists anymore? What's with all the
flavored teas? Who drinks those? There's nothing like that at all in
China.
11 Comments
Re: Adulterants in Teas         


Author: Warren
Date: Jul 24, 2008 07:47

niisonge wrote:
> Lately I've been looking at tea store web sites, and I see all these
> weird teas - whites, greens, oolongs, etc - and they've all be
> adulterated with bits of dried fruit and flower petals? What's with
> that? Are there no more tea purists anymore? What's with all the
> flavored teas? Who drinks those? There's nothing like that at all in
> China.
>
While I personally don't like flavoured teas, they do certainly seem to
be getting more popular. In fact, growing up, I remember drinking iced
tea as iced tea, now the store shelves are full of "Peach infused
oolong" and all similar items, which I take as something to increase
appeal. Perhaps the "soda-fying" of tea has incited tea sellers to try
the same tactics? Earl Grey is as far as I go into flavoured teas.

While I don't really have a problem with someone who wants to flavour
their tea, it's definitely not for me. It also increases awareness in
the wrong way, IMHO since tea noobs probably think that this is the way
it has always been (though acknowledge certain flavoured teas *have*
been around for a long time). But I think it's here to stay.
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Re: Adulterants in Teas         


Author: Space Cowboy
Date: Jul 24, 2008 08:29

Jasmine, Osmanthus, Lotus, Rose flowers is popular in China. The
biggest abomination Jasmine over YinHao. The tisanes are poplular at
my local tea shoppe. Its been popular in the West ever since Earl
Grey. I occasionally add my own dried fruits and flowers. My
favorite honeysuckle added to white bud tea.

Jim

niisonge wrote:
> Lately I've been looking at tea store web sites, and I see all these
> weird teas - whites, greens, oolongs, etc - and they've all be
> adulterated with bits of dried fruit and flower petals? What's with
> that? Are there no more tea purists anymore? What's with all the
> flavored teas? Who drinks those? There's nothing like that at all in
> China.
no comments
Re: Adulterants in Teas         


Author: Alan
Date: Jul 24, 2008 12:18

On Jul 24, 8:29 am, Space Cowboy ix.netcom.com> wrote:
> I occasionally add my own dried fruits and flowers.  My
> favorite honeysuckle added to white bud tea.

I bought some honeysuckle in a local (Tucson, AZ) international
market, expecting the infusion to taste like a fresh honeysuckle
blossom (or more precisely, the nectar, which I used to taste by
sucking it out of the base of the blossom when I was a child).
Instead, it had a taste that I would describe as "resinous". Is this
your experience with honeysuckle?

Alan
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Re: Adulterants in Teas         


Author: Dave.W.Emery
Date: Jul 24, 2008 23:49

On Jul 24, 7:27 am, niisonge yahoo.com> wrote:
> Lately I've been looking at tea store web sites, and I see all these
> weird teas - whites, greens, oolongs, etc - and they've all be
> adulterated with bits of dried fruit and flower petals? What's with
> that? Are there no more tea purists anymore? What's with all the
> flavored teas? Who drinks those? There's nothing like that at all in
> China.

Presuming you're speaking about the US here, there are plenty of tea
purists to be found, but not enough to be a major demographic.
Instead, tea retailers are attempting to reach the much much larger
group of non-tea-drinkers by appealing to them with sweet and flavored
drinks that have no connection to the bitter, lukewarm brew from a
lipton bag that many americans associate with 'tea'.
no comments
Re: Adulterants in Teas         


Author: niisonge
Date: Jul 25, 2008 01:53

> Presuming you're speaking about the US here, there are plenty of tea
> purists to be found, but not enough to be a major demographic.
> Instead, tea retailers are attempting to reach the much much larger
> group of non-tea-drinkers by appealing to them with sweet and flavored
> drinks that have no connection to the bitter, lukewarm brew from a
> lipton bag that many americans associate with 'tea'.

Well, you can't be all things to all people, and you can't please
everybody. I would tend to stay away from stores that sell all the
flavored teas - and I would never drink any. I don't want them to
possibly taint my other teas. And I would never brew them in my good
tea ware.

In China, if you can believe it, there are plenty of tea stores that
sell only 1 tea! It's not like they got an inventory of 100-200 teas
in stock. There are so many stores like that. I always ask them:
"besides tieguanyin, what other kinds of tea do you have?" They always
reply: "Just tieguanyin."
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Re: Adulterants in Teas         


Author: Space Cowboy
Date: Jul 25, 2008 05:35

There are many varieties of honeysuckle so I assume the nectar is
different. I spent many an hour sucking on honeysuckle in the South.
I got mine at a folk remedy herbalist store. It is young bud with
more suckle than honey ie a slight sweet note with a tinge of
sourness. It looks like bean sprouts when brewed. I eat mine since
they float on the top. I know Asian honeysuckle is popular since they
dont let anything go to waste. Thats about all I know.

Jim
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Re: Adulterants in Teas         


Author: Space Cowboy
Date: Jul 25, 2008 06:55

I think most tisanes arent more than $2/oz. So when I see them added
to tea I dont expect to pay much. This is popular with
Indian,Ceylon,African teas which are decent grades. My local tea
shoppe has a real decent orange blossom oolong which is cheaper than a
comparable oolong. I think in general these teas are better cold than
hot. These days I drink the tisanes by themselves because it is hard
finding a good match with a tea like honeysuckle and white tea. I
think what you find is the herbalist pushing the tea more than the tea
industry pushing the tisane. The local tea shoppe owner is a British
expat and he is partial to his tisanes. He also has something called
Irish cream which is a blend of excellent Ceylon OP and calendula
petals. It has a transcendent taste worth trying. If...
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Re: Adulterants in Teas         


Author: bookburn
Date: Jul 25, 2008 09:28

On Thu, 24 Jul 2008 06:27:18 -0700 (PDT), niisonge
yahoo.com> wrote:
>Lately I've been looking at tea store web sites, and I see all these
>weird teas - whites, greens, oolongs, etc - and they've all be
>adulterated with bits of dried fruit and flower petals? What's with
>that? Are there no more tea purists anymore? What's with all the
>flavored teas? Who drinks those? There's nothing like that at all in
>China.

I like the lemon echinacea tea for colds and flu. Along the line of
additives with health benefits, I would consider adding lemon juice to
tea, but don't have experience doing this. I also have elderberry as
an herbal supplement in the form of capsules that might be opened and
added, but haven't tried this either. Seems possible that some
herbals could be mixed with your teas, experimenting slowly. bookburn
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Re: Adulterants in Teas         


Author: chance
Date: Jul 25, 2008 09:46

"niisonge" yahoo.com> wrote
> Personally, I would look for a tea store that is more committed to
> selling non-flavored teas, and more focused on quality tea leaf. When
> I see flavored teas, I get the impression that they use lower-quality
> leaves, and use the fruit/flowers, etc. to mask and make-up for the
> lower quality tea leaf.

Flavored teas attract people for their exoctiness,
which usually wears off quick enough,
that the people return to normalcy soon enough.
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