Tea Documentary - The Bitter Sweet Truth About Tea Drinks - National TV
Tea Documentary - The Bitter Sweet Truth About Tea Drinks - National TV Tea is an aromatic beverage typically prepared by putting very hot or boiling water over healed fallen leaves of the Camellia sinensis, an evergreen hedge belonging to Asia. After water, it is the most commonly consumed drink in the globe. Some teas, like Darjeeling as well as Chinese eco-friendlies, have a cooling, a little bitter, and astringent flavour, while others have greatly different profiles that consist of wonderful, nutty, flower, or grassy notes. Tea come from China, potentially as a medicinal drink. It involved the West through Portuguese priests and also merchants, which introduced it during the 16th century. Drinking tea came to be fashionable amongst Britons during the 17th century, which began large scale manufacturing and commercialization of the plant in India to bypass a Chinese syndicate at that time. The expression natural tea usually refers to mixtures of fruit or herbs made without the tea plant, such as steeps of rosehip, chamomile, or rooibos. These are also called tisanes or herbal mixtures to identify them from "tea" as it is commonly construed. Tea plants are native to East Asia, and probably originated around the meeting points of the lands of north Burma and southwest China. Statistical cluster analysis, chromosome number, easy hybridization, and various types of intermediate hybrids and spontaneous polyploids indicate that likely a single place of origin alreadies existing for Camellia sinensis, an area consisting of Assam province of India, northern part of Burma, and Yunnan and Sichuan provinces of China. Tea drinking likely began during the Shang Dynasty in China, when it was used for medical objectives. It is believed that, soon after, "for the very first time, people started to steam tea leaves for consumption into a concentrated liquid without the addition of other leaves or herbs, thereby using tea as a bitter yet stimulating drink, as opposed to as a medicinal combination.". More Documentary Films: http://thetrendstoday.com Be The First To Watch Our Newly Uploaded Films Just By Subscribing To Our Channel http://www.youtube.com/channel/UChMjlytMi_zXY-RFlUzfBZQ?sub_confirmation=1
Comments
-
I like how they conveniently left out the fact that the founder of Celestial Seasonings was a creepy ass cultist.
-
I love my tea extra bitter. Tastes so good with fresh tropical fruits.
-
You can't make tea with teabags. CTC Tea is awful by design even if you use high quality leaf as base (which simply isn't done, because the people producing it wouldn't sell it as CTC if it were)
-
Mr. T: "I pity the fool, sucka!!!!" 😂
-
I'm American and have anxiety and so I've started drinking chamomile tea which I know doesn't really contain tea leaves but it has helped sooooo much and I love the taste. I've always HATED coffee. I think I belong in Britain hahahah.
-
10:00 typical fucken american. either drunk, high, or both. sad, bankrupt country they got there.
-
Love those old Tetley adverts.
-
I clicked to leave this video at 41:26 and ended up hearing "Dr. T's most prized tea however is this one. It's poo."
-
Boring don't watch
-
Anyone care to hazard a guess what tea they are drinking at 30:29 where its just in the bottom of the cup? I'd like to try that :)
-
Lipton is famous among tea experts as the worst tasting tea..I would drink dog piss before Lipton
-
Teabags = Mc Donalds. Loose leaf, hand picked, handmade, organic = 3 Michelin Star restaurant.
-
tea bags= quantity not quality
-
Very informative!
-
you can't use the words "quality" and "tea bags" in the same sentence
44m 17sLenght
217Rating