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Sunday, March 28, 2010

Tea Tasting For Health - A Fresh Perspective on How to Taste Tea

Tea tasting is often viewed as a specialized art. People pay steeply for tea tasting workshops. Large tea companies such as Lipton employ professional tea tasters in order to maintain the consistency of their blends, which combine different teas whose characteristics vary seasonally. Connoisseurs of rare and specialty teas may taste dozens of teas in one day. Michael Harney of Harney and Sons boasts tasting an average of 80 teas a day.

But there is also a different way to approach tea tasting--one that is accessible to anyone, requires no training, and has health benefits that are often missed by other approaches to tea tasting. To understand this approach we must understand the purpose of our senses of taste and smell.

Humans have a sense of taste and smell to ensure that we eat foods that are healthy and avoid substances that are poisonous or harmful to our health. On a basic level, things that are edible and nutritious taste good and things that are toxic or harmful taste bad. However, anyone living in our modern society knows that there is more to taste than this oversimplification. Some foods initially taste good but are not good for us, and on the other hand, a great deal of healthful foods and drinks, including many teas, are described as having an acquired taste. Something with an acquired taste often tastes unappealing when you first try it, but begins to taste better over time as you consume more of it.

The phenomenon of acquired tastes serves to reduce the risk of poisoning by ensuring that when we encounter something unfamiliar, we only try it in small quantities. The human body and mind employ complex feedback mechanisms linking our digestive tract and other biological systems to our memories of taste and smell. If something gives us a feeling of well-being and nourishment after eating or drinking it, we gradually become more comfortable with its flavor and aroma and develop a liking for it. If it makes us sick or unwell, we become averse to its flavor and aroma.

These issues are relevant to tea tasting both because many teas have an acquired taste, and also because tea has both positive and negative health effects. Tea, especially green tea, is often touted for its health benefits, including antioxidant activity, cancer prevention, stress reduction, antimicrobial activity, and promotion of a healthy immune system and healthy intestinal flora, among a myriad of other benefits. But these benefits vary greatly from one variety of tea to the next, and tea can also have negative effects on health.

Darker teas contain tannins, which can interfere with the absorption of iron and other nutrients. Tea contains caffeine, which in excess can cause or contribute to sleep disruption, addiction, anxiety, and other negative effects. Some teas are acidic, which can be rough on the stomach, especially for those suffering from acid reflux. Flavored and herbal teas are even more diverse in terms of both their positive and negative health impacts. Furthermore, different people vary widely in their susceptibility to these health effects.

Tea tasting, and in particular, developing acquired tastes for teas over time, gives us a tool to solve this problem. By tasting teas over time, we allow our taste to adapt based on how the tea makes us feel. Teas that make us feel balanced and healthy will come to taste better to us, and we will come to dislike (and thus avoid) those that make us feel unwell.

Here are some recommendations on how to taste teas so as to develop your tastes to reflect the health effects of the tea:

* Taste only one tea at a time and leave some time between the tasting of different teas.
* Focus on how you feel after drinking the tea.
* Taste each new tea several times, and on several different days.
* Pay attention to how your impression of the tea changes over time.
* Reflect on the time of day at which you enjoy the tea most, and what foods or moods the tea complements.
* Experiment with brewing the tea in different ways, varying the temperature of the water, quantity of leaf used, and steeping time, to find which way of brewing leads to the most enjoyable cup.

The recommendation to taste only one tea at a time runs contrary to most approaches to tea tasting, which emphasize comparing many teas at once. Yet this approach is critical if you are to allow your taste to adapt to reflect the health effects of each tea. If you drink two cups of tea at once, and one makes you feel unwell some time later, your mind and body will not be able to determine which one was the culprit, and you may come away with an aversion to a healthful tea.

Tasting each tea several times is crucial if you are to allow yourself to develop an acquired taste for new teas, especially those with unfamiliar aromas. Many of my favorite teas are ones that I did not love upon the first sip but only came to appreciate over time. If you buy samples of loose teas, make sure to order enough to make several cups. If you reject every tea that you dislike upon the first sip, you may cut yourself off from some of the teas that you would most appreciate in the long-run.

If you follow these recommendations, you may never become a connoisseur of tea, and indeed, your approach may be frowned upon by some "experts". But you will find your taste develops in such a way that it helps guide you towards teas that enhance your well-being and overall health. Since each person has a unique diet, lifestyle, and genetic makeup, we all have different needs that cannot be summed up in broad generalizations about one type of tea being universally healthier than another. While science can guide us to understand which teas are healthy for most people, only taste can guide each person to understand which teas are best for them. Tea tasting can thus be an integral part of promoting good health through the drinking of teas that are best suited for you an an individual. Enjoy!

Alex Zorach has an M.A. in statistics from Yale University, and is an avid tea drinker and the creator of http://RateTea.net/, a website for rating and reviewing teas and learning about tea. Rate and review tea.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Alex_Zorach

Friday, January 22, 2010

Superior Green Tea EGCG Health Benefit in Heart Disease Prevention

As our community is becoming richer, people are more health conscious today. In term of beverage, green tea is considered as the healthiest drink as it is not only has the rehydrate function, but it is also flavonoid rich that able to defend our body from cardiovascular disease.

Research on tea drinkers show that they are significantly less vulnerable to a lot of disease, from virus infection to chronic degenerative condition like stroke, cancer, heart disease and osteoporosis.

Research shows that green tea has substantially high level of flavonoids (antioxidant) which consist of catechins and their derivatives. Antioxidant is the biological event that prevents the oxidation which will yield highly reactive free radicals. Flavonoids substance comprises of larger than 30% of the tea dry weight. Epigallocatechin-3-gallate (EGCG) is the largest prolific catechin in all tea. It has the greatest antioxidant activity of all tea's catechins and therefore is thought to play the most important role in the tea's anticancer and antioxidant effect. Green tea EGCG is so abundant that a cup of tea might have 20-35mg of it.

In our arteries, there is a one cell thick lining that acts as the interface between the bloodstream and the wall of the artery where blood plaques could form, this is known as arterial endothelium. When heart disease happens, a type of enzyme will speed up the production of free radicals in the artery endothelium, thus increases the level of free radicals in arteries quickly. Green tea EGCG will inhibit the enzymes needed in the production of the free radicals and thus shields the endothelium from damaged by free radical. Therefore green tea is playing a vital role in preventing cardiovascular disease.

EGCG also acts in curbing the death of heart muscle cells following ischemia/reperfusion injury, by preventing the stimulation of inflammation compounds (STAT-1) that will cause oxidative injury which kills heart cell in reperfusion injury.

Beside that, cancer cells require enzyme dihydrofolate reductase (DHFR) to fabricate DNA and grow. EGCG will inhibit the DHFR and is effectively obstructing the spread of cancer cells.

Furthermore, EGCG can also facilitate the recovery of injured heart cells, and as a result allowing fast recovery of tissues and alleviating organs damage.

In conclusion, green tea EGCG has excellent benefit in helping heart disease prevention as well as in heart disease damage recovery. So for those who are suffering from heart disease and those who are health sensitive, tea is the best choice of beverage for them. Having few cups of tea, specifically decaf green tea a day rather than decaffeinated coffee will definitely ensure our long term health.

Visit e-HealthCare Center for more reading on Decaf Green Tea And Heart Disease and other health information.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Wong_Jun_Xiang