Chinese Tea Info
May 8, 2010 by Ginseng Reviews and Tips
Filed under Chinese Herbs
Tea is the second most consumed beverage behind water. There must be something special about this brewed beverage. If we are to discuss tea and the different types of teas, we must first cover what it actually is. What is Tea? Chinese Tea is basically the dried and processed leaves of only one species of plant called camellia sinensis. Interestingly enough, herbal teas or herbal infusions are not really teas, but simply dried flowers and/or herbs.
Even though all teas come from only one species, there are three major varietals:
The China – Small leaves and generally thrives at higher altitudes.
The India (or Assam) – Larger leaves and generally thrives at lower altitudes.
The Hybrid – Kind of in-between the Chinese and Indian.
Earlier, I talked about the processing of the camellia’s leaves. There are four main methods of processing and each produces a different type of Chinese tea. These four main types are:
* White Tea
* Green Tea
* Black Tea
* Oolong Tea
A Tea for Everyone:
Some teas are flavored with oils or scented with flower petals during the processing stage. Some teas are blends of the four main types listed above. One of my favorites is chai tea which is black tea brewed with various spices. Finally, let’s not forget refreshing iced tea!
What is Oolong Tea?
Oolong tea is nothing more than the leaves of the camellia sinensis that have been processed a certain way. It is one of the four types of teas (white, green, oolong, and black).
Oolong teas are the most difficult of the four types of teas to process. The best way to describe oolong tea is that they are somewhere in between green and black tea. This is because they are only partially oxidized during the processing.
What is Tea Processing?
Processing tea is generally considered the art of tea. It is where many of the subtleties in taste, body, and overall character are created.
In its most basic form, it is taking the raw green leaves and deciding whether or not, and how much oxidation (or fermentation) should take place before drying them out.
Tea leaves have enzymes in their veins. When the leaf is broken, bruised, or crushed, the enzymes are exposed to oxygen resulting in oxidation. The amount of oxidation depends upon how much of the enzymes are exposed and for how long.
The Processing of Oolong Tea:
The processing of oolong tea requires only a partial oxidation of the leaves. After the leaves are plucked, they are laid out to wither for about 8 to 24 hours. This lets most of the water evaporate.
Then the leaves are tossed in baskets in order to bruise the edges of the leaves. This bruising only causes the leaves to partially oxidize because only a portion of the enzymes are exposed to air.
Next, the leaves steamed in order to neutralize the enzymes and stop any oxidation. Oolong tea can have varying degrees of oxidation. Some are closer to black teas, and some are closer to green.
After that, a final drying takes place. From there, it goes off to be sorted, graded, and packaged.
Thanks to chinese tea for contributing this article to our Ginseng blog:
Chinese tea – Drink Oolong tea for a healthy life!
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Would this be considered bad for you?
December 12, 2009 by Ginseng Reviews and Tips
Filed under More Ginseng Answers
I just started drinking Arizona’s Green Tea with Ginseng. It is sugar free. There’s no fructose of any sort in it.
Would it be beneficial to my health?
Or would it be bad for my health?
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I am addicted to Arizona’s Green Tea, I know I *can* have it, but could it inhibit let down?
May 30, 2009 by Ginseng Reviews and Tips
Filed under More Ginseng Answers
I am breastfeeding, and wouldn’t worry about this if I just nursed, but I also pump, and I am wondering if it could affect how much milk I can pump.
Anyone know??
I know there’s ‘panax ginseng’ in it, but is there enough in the tea to have an effect on me??
How many milligrams of ginseng does it take to be considered Ginseng Overuse?
May 29, 2009 by Ginseng Reviews and Tips
Filed under More Ginseng Answers
i wanna get extremely high off of ginseng how many milligrams of ginseng will it take? is drinking 200 milligrams of it in a cup of crystal light green tea enough?? i wanna be drunk and have extreme euphoria. i don’t have alcohol and i’m underage. i wanna be high legally. what do i do?!?! don’t tell me i’m too young just tell me
Panax Ginseng Extract
does slim green tea with ginseng really work? what are some side effects?
May 28, 2009 by Ginseng Reviews and Tips
Filed under More Ginseng Answers
i was shopping and saw a box of slim green tea. it doesn’t have any information on the box just what it does and doesn’t contain such as no sugar,artfical colors,flavors and no preservatives. The key ingred. are ginseng root, crataegi fructus, ailsmatis Rz, sennae folium many more and green tea as well. it is also 100% natural.
Growing Wild Ginseng








