显示标签为“black tea”的博文。显示所有博文
显示标签为“black tea”的博文。显示所有博文

2011年3月21日星期一

New website is now running!!!!!

Well it took a lot of hard work and a decent amount of time but we finally got our new website up and running.

www.chinesetea-shop.com

As a re-launch/ spring sale we offer the following amazing deals:


Spend $50 or more to receive 25 grams of Lapsang Souchong free! To celebrate the arrival of our new 2011 spring green teas we are having a 1 month only incredibly deal. It is very simple and doesn’t cost you an extra cent!

Simply place an order with us, totaling $50 between March 22nd and April 22nd and you will receive, in addition to your purchased products, 25 grams (.88 oz) of Lapsang Souchong. For example, buy 100 grams of Li Shan Oolong tea totaling $82.49 and in your package will be an extra 25 grams of Lapsang Souchong.

We want to make the arrival of our 2011 spring teas as memorable as possible. Try some of our beautiful Peaceful Monkey Leader or Lao Shan Green tea, some of the freshest tea available anywhere.

In addition to this amazing offer you will still receive a small token of Chinese culture and of course, free shipping on all orders over $100.

We are here to help you have an absolutely wonderful spring season this year, don’t miss opportunity as it only comes around once a year! Just to recap you will receive:

  • A free gift of 25 grams of Lapsang Souchong with any purchase of 50 dollars or more
  • Free shipping on all orders over $100
  • A small token of Chinese culture, regardless of purchased amount.
  • Free samples of tea with every purchase




2010年12月22日星期三

How To Buy The Perfect Tea!



White, Green, Oolong and Black tea all are produced from the "Camellia sinensis" plant. "Camellia sinensis" is native to China and Asia and grown in many tropical regions throughout the world today. WikiPedia states, "It is an evergreen shrub or small tree that is usually trimmed to below two meters (six feet) when cultivated for its leaves. It has a strong taproot. The flowers are yellow-white, 2.5–4 cm in diameter, with 7 to 8 petals." The main difference in each one of these teas is when and how they are processed. "Processed" means picked, fermented (or oxidized), dried, etc. etc. Optimal time to pick the tea leaves is April-May with some variations expected. It can take several years for these plants to produce a plentiful harvest. Green and White tea is considered the least processed with the most antioxidants and the least amounts of caffeine. Green tea will have a pleasant grassy taste while White tea will boast a more floral flavor. White tea is actually produced using the plant's flower buds. The buds are picked before they bloom and then baked or steamed to halt any oxidation process. This preserves the high anti-oxidant properties of the tea. Green tea is made in a similar fashion but with the leaves of the plant. The highest quality green tea will contain only leaves while some lesser quality varieties will be leaves and twigs combined. Next in line is oolong tea. Oolong teas are said to be the hardest of the four to create. Oolong tea is somewhere in between green and black tea. This is because they are only partially fermented "oxidized" during the processing cycle. Oolong tea has less antioxidants than green and white tea but more than black tea. Caffeine levels are in the middle. Finally the most processed of the teas are black tea. Black tea leaves are picked the same way green and oolong tea leaves are picked but these leaves are fermented "oxidized" the longest. The term oxidized refers to how long the leaves are exposed to a set air temperature and humidity. You can compare this to an oak tree leaf falling on the ground and beginning to turn brown. The longer the tea leaf is oxidized the more it is considered "processed". The tea leaves that are most processed have a unique taste that is loved by many but lack the high levels of antioxidants that the green and white teas contain. Black tea contains the highest levels of caffeine also and have a full bodied taste.

Basically there are 3 main things to consider when choosing your tea. You have flavor, nutritional benefits, and price.

White tea has a light, delicate, flavor with a touch of sweetness. Green tea can have a range of flavors depending on many factors but most all will have a fresh green grassy taste. You will either love or hate green tea but it is a must try. Oolong tea will produce a woody, earthy taste with slight flowery taste and last of all black tea can be compared to your morning cup of coffee. It gives a bold, deep, earthy flavor. The nutritional benefits of tea are vast and deep. Several studies have revealed the anti-cancer properties of antioxidant poly-phenols found in tea. From cancer fighting properties to health skin support it has been proven that 2-6 cups of tea per day is healthy addition to any diet. Some teas have higher antioxidant levels than others. To reap the amazing anti-oxidant properties choose either white or green tea. These are the least processed and have the highest levels of poly phenols (antioxidants) per ounce as well as the lowest levels of caffeine.

As far as cost goes, well we would have to give white tea the highest prices. A high quality Darjeeling White Tea can cost upwards of $150/lb.! Green and black tea have the most appealing prices as these are the teas which are produced the most. Supply and demand tend to dictate the cost of tea just as with anything else. Oolong teas are second in price after white tea. So in conclusion the cost from high to low is white, oolong, green, and black tea. Sampling different teas is not only fun and relaxing but healthy for you too! May the tea be with you always!


From allvoices.com by floridaherb


        Buy black tea, green tea and oolong tea  in Chinese tea shop                    

2010年12月21日星期二

Keemun Black Tea (High Grade)


Keemun Black Tea (High Grade)




Black Tea by Foruntay Tea (ChineseTea-Shop.com)

Black Tea- Keemun Black Tea

Other Name: Qimen Black Tea, 祁门红茶

Origin: keemun Black Tea is a famous black tea variety, produced in the areas of QiMen County, southwest of AnHui Province.

Description: The branch of the Yellow Mountain runs though the county, and the fertile red soil and mild climate with adequate rainfall and moderate sunshine make the tea trees very good quality. The shape of the Keemun Black Tea is tight and neat, and the needles are beautiful with a shinning black color (commonly known as “Glory” ). It has a mellow flavor. Keemun Black Tea is one of the Top 10 Famous Chinese Tea.

Taste: It tastes fresh and mellow with the flavor of honey fragrance, and the best-quality one even carries the everlasting orchid fragrance (commonly known as “QiMen fragrance” ). The liquor is bright red and the residue is also red. Drinking the tea alone is the best way to taste its fragrance, while adding some milk will still keep.

How to brew:
1. Containers selected: usually white porcelain tea set.
2. Tea and water consumption: 3-5g for a commonly-used cup, ie, the tea covers the bottom of the tea cup; for serving 3 or 4 people, 10-15g tea leaves are appropriate amount.
3. Water temperature and brewing time: best brewing for 3-5 minutes with hot water of about 90-100 ℃. In order to maintain the original flavor of tea, we suggest you’ d better draw the tea 7-8 times at most.

Harvest Period: Spring, 2010


Thomas Smith
89

Wow, another good Keemun!
I’m really happy to have stumbled upon this company – both the teas I bought from them really exceeded my expectations.

Really pretty leaves with a preponderance of golden buds. I’d have trouble telling this apart from Silk Road’s Golden Monkey by just looking at it, but the leaves are a bit smaller here.
I’m on my second preparation of this today. First time ’round I used 4g per 125ml with steep times-temps: 1.5min-95C, 3min-90C, 4min-85C, 5min-85C, 5min-100C. Second round I used 2g per 125ml and drank from continuous infusions using 95C water and finishing at around 27 minutes first brew and 15 minutes second brew.

Dry fragrance is a bit like hay in a barn… a clean barn, but still – straw and hardwood. Wet aroma pops up with some tart apple smell and more resinous redwood. Liquor carries an apple and pear cider aroma mixed with toasted sesame seeds, flax seed, and whole wheat pasta. Tacky smelling and sort of carries a smell that reminds me of a cork board.

Flavor is a tad earthy and ever so slightly bitter, like a potato or pear carries bitterness. Balances nicely with the refreshing crisp qualities it has. Toasty, and certainly “Keemun-like” but it’s a mellow one. Soothing yet with a touch of spice. Cassia, nutmeg, and allspice. Aftertaste like the taste the air takes on around dry sand or river rocks – slight dusty tasting mineral quality I feel as a bit “spicier” than more clay- or gravel-like mineral tastes. Very pleasant, and adding dimension to this approachable tea. Aftertaste brings a bit of that flaxseed back from the front and ends on a brown rice note. A bit of dried fig/prune comes through at the end of a very long infusion. Flavor has a slow recession, but the aftertaste doesn’t linger very long at all. I usually prefer a very long lasting aftertaste and aroma, but this is the second red tea I’ve enjoyed greatly today that fades quickly.

Maybe not as complex as the Xian Zhen from TeaSpring, but every bit as enjoyable. Smoother, and with a little bit more body, though the flavor progression is a soothing flow in, then out with little trace. A huge plus for me is this is slightly less consistent between brews, developing from crisp and floral (orchid and honey notes mentioned in company description come through easily at first), to fruited and ripe, to toasty and salivating tannin, then richer wood before receding to bamboo, pecan and slight caramel accents in later infusions.

From steepster.com by Thomas Smith

Lapsang SouChong (Special Grade)


Lapsang SouChong (Special Grade)




Black Tea by Foruntay Tea (ChineseTea-Shop.com)

Black Tea- Lapsang SouChong

Other Name: ZhengShanXiaoZhong, 正山小种

Origin: WuYi, FuJian Province

Description: Lapsang souchong is a black tea originally from the WuYi region of the Chinese province of FuJian. It is sometimes referred to as smoked tea. Lapsang souchongs is distinct from all other types of tea because lapsang souchong leaves are traditionally smoke-dried over pinewood fires, taking on a distinctive smoky flavour. The name in Fukienese means “smoky sub-variety.” Lapsang souchong is a member of the WuYi Bohea family of teas. The story goes that the tea was created during the Qing era when the passage of armies delayed the annual drying of the tea leaves in the WuYi hills. Eager to satisfy demand, the tea producers sped up the drying process by having their workers dry the tea leaves over fires made from local pines. Lapsang souchong from the original source is increasingly expensive, as WuYi is a small area and there is increasing interest in this variety of tea.

Taste: High quality of lapsang souchong possesses a taste of dried Longan for the first few brews. Its’ flavour is strong and smoky, similar to the smell of a campfire or of Latakia pipe tobacco.

How to brew: When drunk by itself, black tea is prepared by first cleaning the tea ware, then putting a certain amount of tea leaves into a teapot with a teaspoon, and finally pouring in boiling water at about 90 degrees celsius from a kettle lifted high above the teapot at a proportion of 50 to 60 ml of water to one gram of dried leaves. In order to maintain the original flavor of tea, we suggest you’ d better draw the tea 7-8 times at most.

Harvest Period: Spring, 2010


Thomas Smith
90
Never thought I’d be wishing I bought a larger quantity of Lapsang. This is utterly incomparable to any tea bearing the same name that I have ever seen, tasted, or even heard of.

First, and foremost – it is not smoky. There are light whiffs of toasted marshmallows, wheat bread just finishing cooking in an oven, or a very hot smokeless oak fire oven/grill, but really it is more about the light “smokiness” of tobacco leaves and milled grains. Pay little heed to the company description of “strong and smoky”!

While this is not a pure bud tea (two leaf and a bud intact sets are common throughout) it is entirely covered in light golden hair. Leaf length and color is very similar to a pure bud Yunnan red. Measuring the 4g I used for my gaiwan resulted in a volume around 1.5-2 tablespoons. Used 125ml with steep times-temps: 1.5min-95C, 2.5min-95C, 4min-90C, 5min-85C, 5min-100C, 9.5min-85C.

Dry fragrance is similar to the Golden Monkey reds I’ve been going through a lot lately – dried apricot and nectarine – but when tossed into the prewarmed gaiwan, the fragrance was straight up natural cocoa powder. Wet leaves like doused, burned hardwood – not smoky, but toasty with a refreshing light char note oddly reminiscent of grilled Tilapia (not fishy, mind you) and indiscernible fruit “ripeness”. The lid from the gaiwan, however combined a touch of the former cocoa with piles of ripe fruit aromas. Kumquat above the rest, but also white peach, uncut nectarine, longan, intact raspberries, black figs, apricot kiwi, and just a hint of avocado and coconut. These carry through in the liquor aroma but longan takes the stage.
Liquor is bright red-orange and very clear.

Flavor takes the fruit notes and blends them nicely with roasted nuts – almonds and macadamias primarily, but chestnut, cashew, brazil nut, pecan, and peanut also play a small part. The taste is a base of woody characteristics – brown rice, sesame seed, dried grasses, barley, oak, sunflower seeds and palms. Aftertaste brings in a mineral quality of adobe clay or mud bricks and a bit of gravel in the afteraroma. Not heavy on the minerals, but it certainly draws up similarities to other WuYi Shan teas. Nice heavier-medium body is much thicker than most Lapsangs, on par with heavier Keemuns. Smoooooooth. Mouthfeel again makes me think of clay in a sort of slip-slurry. There’s a very slight astringency just up against the uvula… Don’t think I’ve had a tea that hits that part of the mouth and nowhere else. Fleeting crispness and faint herbaceous acidity leaves a mouthwatering effect, but not a ton. Really clean – - aftertaste diminishes really quickly and afteraroma is short. impression of the tactile elements lingers for a while, though.

Man, this is yummy. Definitely getting more the next chance I can make the excuse. Expensive, but oh so worth it. I brewed this up with the intent of something to kick me awake, but it wound up being comforting and satisfying, making me want to curl up and take a nap. I finished long before the tea did and this would be a great candidate to drink straight from the gaiwan with. Again, you can not compare this to other Lapsangs – this is much more akin to specialty Taiwanese Reds.


From steepster.com by Thomas Smith

2010年12月13日星期一

Black Tea Soothes Away Stress

Daily cups of tea can help you recover more quickly from the stresses of everyday life, according to a new study by UCL (University College London) researchers. New scientific evidence shows that black tea has an effect on stress hormone levels in the body.

The study, published in the journal Psychopharmacology, found that people who drank tea were able to de-stress more quickly than those who drank a fake tea substitute. Furthermore, the study participants – who drank a black tea concoction four times a day for six weeks – were found to have lower levels of the stress hormone cortisol in their blood after a stressful event, compared with a control group who drank the fake or placebo tea for the same period of time.

In the study, 75 young male regular tea drinkers were split into two groups and monitored for six weeks. They all gave up their normal tea, coffee and caffeinated beverages, then one group was given a fruit-flavoured caffeinated tea mixture made up of the constituents of an average cup of black tea. The other group – the control group – was given a caffeinated placebo identical in taste, but devoid of the active tea ingredients. All drinks were tea-coloured, but were designed to mask some of the normal sensory cues associated with tea drinking (such as smell, taste and familiarity of the brew), to eliminate confounding factors such as the ‘comforting’ effect of drinking a cup of tea.

Both groups were subjected to challenging tasks, while their cortisol, blood pressure, blood platelet and self-rated levels of stress were measured. In one task, volunteers were exposed to one of three stressful situations (threat of unemployment, a shop lifting accusation or an incident in a nursing home), where they had to prepare a verbal response and argue their case in front of a camera.

The tasks triggered substantial increases in blood pressure, heart rate and subjective stress ratings in both of the groups. In other words, similar stress levels were induced in both groups. However, 50 minutes after the task, cortisol levels had dropped by an average of 47 per cent in the tea drinking group compared with 27 per cent in the fake tea group.

UCL researchers also found that blood platelet activation – linked to blood clotting and the risk of heart attacks – was lower in the tea drinkers, and that this group reported a greater degree of relaxation in the recovery period after the task.

Professor Andrew Steptoe, UCL Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, says: “Drinking tea has traditionally been associated with stress relief, and many people believe that drinking tea helps them relax after facing the stresses of everyday life. However, scientific evidence for the relaxing properties of tea is quite limited. This is one of the first studies to assess tea in a double-blind placebo controlled design – that is, neither we nor the participants knew whether they were drinking real or fake tea. This means that any differences were due to the biological ingredients of tea, and not to the relaxing situations in which people might drink tea, whether they were familiar with the taste and liked it, and so on.

“We do not know what ingredients of tea were responsible for these effects on stress recovery and relaxation. Tea is chemically very complex, with many different ingredients. Ingredients such as catechins, polyphenols, flavonoids and amino acids have been found to have effects on neurotransmitters in the brain, but we cannot tell from this research which ones produced the differences.

“Nevertheless, our study suggests that drinking black tea may speed up our recovery from the daily stresses in life. Although it does not appear to reduce the actual levels of stress we experience, tea does seem to have a greater effect in bringing stress hormone levels back to normal. This has important health implications, because slow recovery following acute stress has been associated with a greater risk of chronic illnesses such as coronary heart disease.”


From NaturalNews.com by citizen journalist

                                                        Fineset black tea in Chinese tea shop

2010年12月12日星期日

Study Finds that Adding Milk Reduces Healthy Benefits of Black Tea

Previous studies have suggested that black tea's antioxidative, anti-inflammatory and vasodilating effects can help protect against cardiovascular diseases, but researchers from the Charité-Universitätsmediz in Berlin report that adding milk -- even skimmed milk -- may diminish those effects.

The study looked at 16 healthy postmenopausal women with an average age of 59. Each participant's flow-mediated vasodilation from baseline in the forearm brachial artery was measured before and two hours after they were given roughly two cups of freshly brewed black tea without milk, freshly brewed black tea with 10 percent milk, and boiled water as a control.

While drinking the black tea without milk, the subjects' flow-mediated dilation increased more than 400 percent, said lead researcher Veran Stangl and colleagues in the online issue of European Heart Journal. Women who drank 90 percent black tea and 10 percent skimmed milk had the same insignificant vasodilation increase they would get from drinking two cups of hot water.

"The most striking finding of our study is that addition of milk to black tea completely prevents the biological activity of tea in terms of improvement of endothelial function," said the authors.

The next step in the study was to see which milk compounds could be inhibiting the tea's vasodilatory properties. The researchers took six major single milk proteins and conducted a series of cell culture experiments with them on isolated rat aortic rings and endothelial cell cultures. To determine flow-mediated dilation, the researchers measured the amount of nitric oxide produced when the cell cultures were stimulated with each milk protein and black tea, just black tea, and black tea with skim milk.

The milk proteins alpha-casein, beta casein and kappa-casein all stunted the production of nitric oxide to the same degree as skim milk. The alpha-lactalbumin, beta-lactoglobulin and serum albumin did not seem to have an effect on nitric oxide production. The researchers theorized that the three proteins that slowed nitric oxide production might have formed complexes with catechins -- flavonoids in the tea -- and blocked the vasodilatory effects.

"Our results thus provide a possible explanation for the lack of beneficial effects of tea on the risk of heart disease in the United Kingdom, where milk is usually added to tea," the authors noted. "The finding that the tea-induced improvement of vascular function in humans is completely attenuated after addition of milk may have broad implications on the mode of tea preparation and consumption."

From naturalnews.com by Ben Kage, citizen journalist


                                                                 Buy black tea in Chinese tea shop

2010年12月9日星期四

Black Tea Polyphenols May Reduce Cancer Risk



Polyphenol-B from black tea could reduce the risk of cancer by inhibiting several causing mechanisms, according to new research.

The study, published in Food and Chemical Toxicology, suggests the polyphenols in black tea influences several cancer controlling proteins, and may block a crucial signaling pathway in cancer formation.

“The results of the present study demonstrate that Polyphenon-B inhibits tumour cell growth both in vitro and in vivo,” wrote the researchers, led by Dr. S. Nagini, at Annamalai University in India.

Tea polyphenols

Uncontrolled cell growth and survival play a “critical role” in the development of cancers, stated the authors.

Hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) is the fifth most common cancer worldwide, accounting for 662,000 deaths per year, according to the World Health Organization (WHO).

The activation of the nuclear factor kappa B (NF-kB) signaling pathway in cancer cells is known to aid cell survival by blocking natural cell death mechanisms. Inhibiting the activation of NF-kB is considered to a strong potential target for cancer reduction.

Since several studies have suggested evidence for the protective effect of tea polyphenols on cancer risk, the Indian researchers sought to test the potential anti-cancer activity of compounds from black tea – polyphenol-B – in HCC cancer cells and in rats with HCC cells

Previous studies have report the potential anti-cancer effects of tea are linked to the polyphenol content of the tea. Green tea contains between 30 and 40 percent of polyphenols, while black tea contains between 3 and 10 percent.


A study last year linked green tea to a 22 percent reduction in the risk of breast cancer, however the same study found no such protective for black tea.

Cancer inhibition

The researchers found a dose-dependent relationship between polyphenon-B and cancer development in cancer induced cells, and also witnessed reduced tumor incidence in rats.

Polyphenon-B was observed to up-regulate the expression of cell death inducing proteins and down regulate expression of the anti cell death proteins.

The black tea polyphenol also stopped certain cellular processes associated with cancer, noted the researchers.

The authors stated their results provide evidence that polyphenon-B effectively inhibits uncontrolled cell growth associated with cancer, and induces cell death mechanisms by inhibiting NF-kB signaling.

They added that by influencing the expression of a network of molecules that control cell death mechanisms, the effects of polyphenon-B can eventually result in cancer reduction.

“These studies underscore the potential anti-cancer properties of black tea polyphenols,” wrote the researchers.


From nutraingredients-usa.com


                                                                           Buy black tea in Chinese tea shop

2010年11月9日星期二

Black Tea

Black tea is originated from Xishuangbanna, YunNan Province of Guizhou, southwest China. Black tea is called "Red tea" in China. The tea's name is influenced by Chinese culture and describes the colour of the liquid. Black tea can retain a long time even in several months. For this reason, it has long been an article of trade and compressed bricks of black tea.

Black tea is very popular in western countries and over ninety percent of all tea sold in the West. Most westerners like to black tea because it has a lot of benefits. Black tea is a variety of tea that is more oxidized than the oolong, green, and white varieties. Black tea is generally stronger in flavor and contains more caffeine than the less oxidized teas. Black tea have many health benefits such as anti-inflammatory, detoxification (absorb heavy metals and alkaloid), raise a stomach, resisting oxidation, tumor and radiation. Black tea is also known as "Congou" in the international tea trade business. The name Congou is actually taken from the Chinese term GongFu or Kung-Fu.

Today, black tea is planted a lot and mainly distributed in AnHui, YunNan, GuangZhou, SiChuan province. The name of QiMen and DianHong are very famous in China and overseas.

There are some methods to identify the black tea. High quality of tea's leaves look tight, slim, flat handsome and its color looks glossy black and golden yellow point bud. Black tea's liquid smells sweet aroma and looks charming red color, golden color on the bowl edge. It tastes a strong flavor, fresh and sweet. The spent of tea leaves look bright red and evenly.chinesetea-shop