Weight-Loss Tea Talk

Weight-Loss
Since we're on the topic of milk and tea...

Milk Won't Milk Tea Benefits
Adding Milk Doesn't Diminish Black Tea's Healthy Chemistry

Adding milk to black tea -- as most Britons prefer -- doesn't rob your cup of healthful polyphenols, Scottish researchers find.

Drinking black tea seems to lower a person's risk of heart disease and cancer. Some researchers have suggested that milk may react with the polyphenol compounds in tea, thereby diminishing their healthful effects.

That would be bad news indeed to residents of the British Isles, who prefer a spot of milk with their "cuppa." Can it truly be so? Janet A.M. Kyle and colleagues at the Rowett Research Institute and the University of Aberdeen, Scotland, decided to find out.

Kyle and colleagues asked nine healthy volunteers to drink a beverage on three different occasions. At one visit, they drank 10 ounces of black tea -- the equivalent of two British teacups -- with 3.4 ounces of low-fat milk. On the next visit, they drank the tea with added water. And on the third visit, they didn't drink tea at all, but had just milk and water.

At several time points after drinking their tea (or milk water) the researchers measured the volunteers' blood levels of various compounds from the tea.

They found that tea did indeed significantly increase blood levels of various antioxidant compounds -- and that the addition of milk did not lessen this effect.

Or, as Kyle and colleagues more properly put it, "Our results suggest that the formation of milk protein-polyphenol complexes does not compromise the antioxidant potential of the beverage."

The findings appear in the June 13 issue of the American Chemical Society's Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry

WebMD Health News
 
So... I'll be heading off to school in about 2hrs. I'm going to throw some Mate' Vana together in a travel mug. Why is Florida so hot!? I love my hot tea but wow it's getting harder to drink it during the day lol. I've been making so much more iced tea. That cheap $1 tea I mentioned a while ago is still going strong. It's supposed to be "low quality" but I don't care I really like the stuff.
 
Hate that tea stains your mugs?
Pick a mug made of glass, or stainless steel instead.

Don't like drinking tea out of glass or stainless steel?
Rid your current mugs of stains by cleaning them with baking soda. Or allow them to be submerged in water with 1tbl bleach over night (this is a smellier alternative though) before washing them in the morning.

But I personally think tea mugs are supposed to be stained ^_~ *wink
 
Actually, it's weird. My teacups in Australia stained really quickly. The mugs I've used in the UK have barely stained at all, and I've been using them for going on 20 months. I do try to scrub them, so I think that's it- the only people I've seen with stained mugs are those who do little more than rinse their dishes under hot water. (Could also be that in Australia I used the dishwasher whereas here I wash my dishes by hand)
 
Wow really?
I only know stained mug people. lol
Personally, my mugs are stained around the 3 month period. The stains stay on unless I am really serious about getting absolutely all them off. I use the dishwasher, or hand washing. My mugs are "seasoned" lol ^_^
I think most of mine are ceramic.
 
I wouldn't mind them being seasoned, it just hasn't happened. I'm not sure what mine were made of- my priority when I bought them was "cheap". They were a pound each (and they're actually really nice colours and a nice shape, but... price wins).
 
I drink tea a lot in the winter, but not bad to drink tea in the summer. My drinking tea started when my mom and dad made me and my sister drink ginger tea, we didn't like it at all, but they believed drinking ginger tea would help women when that time of month rolled around, lol. It may help that problem, but my sister and I never knew, because we would give our ginger tea to our little brother who loved drinking ginger tea. :)
 
Green tea contains anti oxidants which is also useful to lose weight...
Thats why most practitioner find it useful to lose weight and stay fit and slim.
 
I drink tea a lot in the winter, but not bad to drink tea in the summer. My drinking tea started when my mom and dad made me and my sister drink ginger tea, we didn't like it at all, but they believed drinking ginger tea would help women when that time of month rolled around, lol. It may help that problem, but my sister and I never knew, because we would give our ginger tea to our little brother who loved drinking ginger tea. :)

lol kids

Welcome to tea talk Anna!
 
Speaking of ginger tea. I made another round of it. This time 1/2 tbs ginger with 1/2 tbs honey. It really helped me relax after school.

I'm going to need to make more since I have two important exams on the very same day coming up...
 
Loose leaf tea is a heck of a lot more expensive in Australia than bags :( Had the tea I used to love in Australia the other day and found it disgusting, although that may be because the water's different compared to where I used to live or what I've become used to in the UK.

But if anyone here is ever in Australia, the tea to try is T2's English Breakfast. It is amazing. (Nerada's lemon and ginger is pretty good too- it's cheap, so it's not fantastic, but it's pretty bloody good for cheap tea)
 
Amy I heard your voice while reading your post just now lol

I think it's because I watched your video on youtube today. Nice and thorough video by the way. ^_~
 
Smooth Sweet Tea

rated * * * * *

Ingredients

1 pinch baking soda
2 cups boiling water
6 tea bags
3/4 cup white sugar
6 cups cool water

Directions

Sprinkle a pinch of baking soda into a 64-ounce, heat-proof, glass pitcher. Pour in boiling water, and add tea bags. Cover, and allow to steep for 15 minutes.
Remove tea bags, and discard; stir in sugar until dissolved. Pour in cool water, then refrigerate until cold.

73 kCal

comments:

~Well, I can see where all the 5 star ratings come from! This stuff really is good, so good you could bottle it and sell it! I'm the unsweetened iced tea drinker in the house so that's saying something. I'm going to try the baking soda trick with the unsweetened iced tea as well. My husband loves this iced tea - Thanks for the recipe we'll put it to a lot of use over the summer months!

~The baking soda is the key ingredient in this recipe to make a smooth tea. It helps to cut the bitter taste that you can get from tea. It's really refreshing and for me it has the right amount of sweetness. Thx.

~As if this recipe needed ANOTHER 5 star rating, but I couldn't help myself. I agree with another reviewer that the baking soda DOES take the bitterness out of the recipe. I had stopped making iced tea for that very reason, and then I found this recipe. It's absolutely delicious. For those of you who see the baking soda in this recipe and frown in curiosity, turn that frown upside down. The baking soda makes it delicious (and is necessary in my opinion)!

~A lovely recipe. I used 1 cup of sugar (If you've ever had the "Tradewinds" brand of iced tea, then you'll know what I mean when I say I prefer "super sweet" to simply "sweet". The baking soda worked its magic even better than I thought it would.

~Some of my family members are not sweet tea drinkers, they prefer their iced tea unsweetened so I tried the pinch of baking soda in unsweetened tea and it seemed to be just as effective at smoothing the bitterness and preventing it from getting cloudy. Thanks for the tip!

~I love this recipe! My man is from Ga and misses his sweet tea. This did the trick and thinks it is the BEST tea he has had. I double the recipe using 4 family sized tea bags and only add 10 cups of water after the 1 1/2 cups of sugar dissolves. He says its the BEST sweet tea ever.


AllRecipes
 
Popping my head back in to say Hi and thanks to the tea-talkers. :) My apologies in advance if this is rambly, but I'm going to try to post before the WLF logs me out. This means no editing and no backspace key.

emerald, thanks for the hint about putting baking soda in ice tea! I'm so trying this tomorrow! I love iced tea, but every time I've tried to make it, it's :ack2:

Hi Amy - Except for plants that grow locally or are cheap, I'm all about the tea bags. The most luck I've had (cheap-o, tasty, good variety) is with a brand called 3 Crown. Maybe you can find it where you are, too? Thanks for the rec about 2T!

Hi AnnaGail, I liked your story about your sis and little brother. I hated all tea when I was young, just on principle (sp?).

But I do love drinking spicy tea in the summer (and eating spicy food, for that matter). The warmer my body is, the cooler a hot day feels, if that makes any sense. :/ Without an air conditioner in this heat (wicked, evil heat) it's jalapenos, pepper sauces, pickled red peppers, onions, garlic and ginger in my food, and hot-spicy tea all day long. Maybe it sounds weird, but it helps me.

And I do notice that after a few days on a spicy diet, my desire for heaps of floury-carbs decreases, but that needs a bit more science-ing, I think.

More on ginger teas: find Korean red dates (called jujubes) and toss a dozen in a pot. Add a handful of diced ginger, boil for about 1/2 an hour or less. If you like it sweeter, you can add honey or sugar. In Korean this is called Dae-cho Sang-kang-cha (apologies, just sounding it out here) - Date and Ginger Tea. I usually use dried black dates and no honey or sugar - just because I always have them for baking and I think they're much, much sweeter - but if you do this use fewer dates. Plenty of expert recipes on this with exact amounts if you search-engine it.
 
Geekynoob it's really great to hear from you again!
Thanks I completely forgot about this. I was watching a video of Daecho Sangkangcha/DaeChu SaengGangCha (I just so happen to be learning Korean ^_~*winx) a few months ago on youtube. Aeri made it. Date and Ginger tea. That sounds so good. This is really bad but... I've never had a date before *gasp* LOL. I want to make this so it will be fitting for my first date (no pun intended) to be in the form of tea. It also reminds me of a korean beverage that requires two cloves. So I'll make two batches. One with cloves and one without. Can't wait!

 
emerald, that sounds so tasty! Makes sense, too - a spice cake in a mug... num... I have to follow your lead and experiment with these. :)

I've just recently become a fan of Aeri's. Love those little date flowers she made! And thank you, btw -- I know there are rules about referring experts or linking without being asked, but wasn't sure what the parameters of that were, so thanks for the (albeit probably unintentional) advice.

I just so happen to be learning Korean ^_~*winx

Cool! I'm a terrible languages student, but search engines are my friend, so Gun Bae! :cheers2:
 
I made regular tea with cloves over the weekend and liked it. I'm getting dates thursday so I'll make the official one then ^_^
 
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