Print This Article Post Comment Add To Favorites Email to Friends Ezine Ready

Tea: What Is Jasmine Tea?

By: Marcus Stout Home | Food-and-Drink


One of the tea blends you simply cannot miss is Jasmine tea. If you've never tried it, you're missing a real treat. Much of the world has already discovered the fragrance and flavor of Jasmine tea. In fact, it is the most popular Chinese flavored tea.

What makes jasmine tea so special is its special blend of high quality loose tea leaves with jasmine petals. The jasmine petals impart a delicate yet very aromatic fragrance to the tea. The jasmine petals also impart a slightly sweet flavor to the tea.

Jasmine has been produced in China for at least 700 years. The original production of jasmine tea included plucking the jasmine blossoms just as they are beginning to bloom and adding them to the tea leaves at night to ensure the best infusion of the aroma and fragrance. In most cases, the tea was scented twice using two different sets of jasmine blossoms to ensure that the tea is properly infused.

Jasmine tea is most often made using green tea. Jasmine green tea is one of the healthiest teas you can drink. Green tea has been shown to have more health benefits than black tea because of the way that it's processed. Green tea does not go through a fermentation process. The fermentation process that happens to black tea converts the natural anti-oxidants to other compounds. So, while black tea is a healthy beverage, it is not as healthy as green tea, whose anti-oxidants are left in their natural state.

Anti-oxidants are important to protecting our health. Anti-oxidants help to neutralize free radicals. Free radicals are oxygen containing molecules that are created as a by product of converting the food we eat into energy. Left unchecked, these free radicals damage our cells and DNA, leading to aging and disease.

A diet rich in anti-oxidants keeps these free radicals under control. And, green tea is one of the best sources of anti-oxidants around. Including green tea in your diet along with other plant based products like fruits and vegetables can help protect your health.

In recent years, a lot of research has shown some very specific and interesting things about drinking green tea. We've learned that green tea has the power to prevent many types of cancer, including breast cancer, colon cancer and lung cancer. In addition, long term green tea drinkers tend to have a lower body weight and are more successful at losing weight.

Green tea can also help prevent heart disease by helping lower cholesterol and preventing blood clots, which are the leading cause of heart attacks and strokes. In addition, green tea may be helpful at regulating insulin naturally.

So, if you like the idea of adding green tea to your diet, then jasmine green tea may be a great way to enjoy a wonderful fragrance and flavor and protect your health at the same time.

If, however, you're not a green tea drinker, you can find jasmine tea in other forms. Oolong jasmine tea is also a very popular blend. Oolong teas are also processed a bit differently than black teas. Oolong teas are semi-fermented, meaning that they are fermented, but for a shorter period of time than black teas. To produce a good oolong tea, fermentation must be stopped when the leaves are 30% red and 70% green.

It is the ability to stop the fermentation at precisely the right time that gives oolong teas their distinct flavor. Most oolong teas are also dried using charcoal, giving it another distinct dimension. Oolong jasmine tea has the typically smooth and fruity taste usually found in oolong teas combined with the fragrant sweetness of jasmine.

Jasmine tea can be made from white tea, too. In fact, today, white jasmine tea is becoming quite popular. Sweet and light white tea combined with the subtle scent of jasmine makes for a very delicate and refreshing beverage. It's one of the mildest jasmine teas you'll find. And, drinking white jasmine tea will provide all the health benefits of drinking green jasmine tea.


Finally, there are also a few black jasmine teas. Because black tea has a bolder flavor, you'll find black jasmine teas to have a more subtle jasmine flavor, as the jasmine scent and taste does not stand out as much when combined with black tea as it does when combined with lighter green and oolong teas.

As you can see, jasmine is a favorite for blending with tea, making jasmine tea one of the easiest tea blends to find. Because jasmine tea is so common, however, it's important to ensure that you're choosing only the best quality tea when you purchase your jasmine tea.

The best jasmine tea is made using real jasmine petals combined with the highest quality loose leaf teas. In jasmine green tea, you'll often find that some of the best and most flavorful jasmine teas use tightly rolled green tea pearls mixed with jasmine petals.

In addition to teas mixed only with jasmine, you'll also find jasmine teas mixed with other flavors as well. Because jasmine imparts mostly fragrance and only a subtle flavor to the tea, it mixes easily with other flavors, as well.

You'll find jasmine tea flavored also with vanilla, rose and orange. All of these have the delicate aroma and sweet flavor of jasmine, but include a second, complementary flavor to add dimension to the taste of the tea.

Whatever form of jasmine tea you choose, you're sure to love it. Jasmine tea, whether in green, oolong or black form is one of the most traditional of all Chinese teas and certainly one of the most fragrant and enjoyable.



Article Source: http://www.eArticlesOnline.com

About the Author:
Marcus Stout is President of the Golden Moon Tea Company. For more information about tea, wholesale tea and black tea go to http://www.goldenmoontea.

Tags: , , , , ,

Please Rate this Article

 

Not yet Rated

Click the XML Icon Above to Receive Food-and-Drink Articles Via RSS!

Recent Related Articles From Food-and-Drink

  • Jasmine Green Tea †Fragrant, Sweet And So Relaxing
    By: Vikram kuamr | Dec 6th 2010
    Sometimes, a cup of tea can seem to melt away the stresses of the day. When you combine the heavenly scent of jasmine with a high quality green tea, you will certainly feel more relaxed. Read

  • An Intoxicating Evening With Night Blooming Jasmine
    By: Steven charlie Habib | Dec 18th 2008
    The night blooming jasmine opens its flowers and spreads its fragrance in the evening and overnight. Read

  • Types Of Tea
    By: cdmohatta | Oct 4th 2007
    The are five major categories of tea. White, green, Oolong-style (brown), and black teas come from the tea plant, Camellia Sinensis. Herbal teas are made from herbs, spices, fruits, flowers, and bark, and contain no tea leaves. Similar to wine varieties, sometimes the name of a tea indicates the region in which it is grown, ... Read

  • Tea: Grading Jasmine Tea
    By: Marcus Stout | Jun 6th 2007
    Jasmine tea is the most popular flavored tea in the world. The first jasmine tea was produced in China and made from green tea. Today, however, jasmine flowers are used to scent teas from all over the world, in black, white, green and oolong varieties.

    What makes jasmine tea so wonderful is its special blend ...
    Read

  • Health Benefits Of Jasmine Tea
    By: dmytro fedosev | Nov 4th 2010
    Can drinking the aromatic jasmine tea lead to health benefits?
    Jasmine tea is more than just another beverage or thirst quencher. This natural tea includes a considerable number of health benefits
    Read

  • Health Benefits Of Jasmine Teas. Tealux
    By: dmytro fedosev | Oct 21st 2010
    Jasmine tea is more than just another beverage or thirst quencher. This natural tea includes a considerable number of health benefits. Jasmine leaves are known to have medical properties that range from bringing down raised cholesterol levels to cancer prevention Read

  • Can Drinking Tea Make You Live Longer?
    By: Marcus Stout | Feb 21st 2007
    Tea is the second most popular beverage in the world, after water. Asian cultures drink gallons of green, oolong and other teas, and the Brits consume large quantities of black tea. In fact, everywhere in the world, tea is a regular part of life. In many cases, we drink tea because we like it, but as it turns out, it may be ... Read

  • Some Beneficial Properties Of Green Tea
    By: Gregg Hall | Feb 18th 2006
    Asian cultures have used green tea for medicinal purpose throughout the course of time. Recent scientific studies, though, have shown many different benefits associated with green tea. Green tea is rich in powerful antioxidants. While green, oolong, and black tea all come from the same plant, the Camellia green tea is proce ... Read

  • Discover The Ten Secret Beneficial Properties Of Green Tea
    By: James Calvin | Dec 2nd 2006
    Asian cultures have used green tea for medicinal purpose throughout the course of time. Recent scientific studies, though, have shown many different benefits associated with green tea. Green tea is rich in powerful antioxidants. While green, oolong, and black tea all come from the same plant, the Camellia green tea is proce ... Read

  • Tea, High Tea And Afternoon Tea What's The Difference?
    By: Marcus Stout | Mar 9th 2007
    Tea the Drink

    There are two forms of tea that often cause confusion in the tea world: tea the drink and tea the meal. Tea the drink is made from the Camellia Sinensis plant and from the processing of the plant white, green, oolong, and black teas are produced. The basic teas are also often blended with other ...
    Read


Copyright © 2005-2011 eArticlesOnline, LLC - All Rights Reserved
Terms of Service | Privacy Policy