Tea is Good for You


Hardly a week goes by without news of yet another research study confirming the health benefits of tea. Here's a summary of

the recent findings.

AGING
Drinking tea leads to fewer signs of aging.

ALLERGIES
Tea: allergy fighter!

ALZHEIMER'S DISEASE
Improve the memory and help prevent the disease.

Chemical in Green Tea May Fight Alzheimer's

ARTHRITIS
Tea may help reduce inflammation and help arthritis.

Tea benefits the arthritis patient!

BONE STRENGTH
Tea may be a bone builder!

BREATH
Halitosis Alert!

Bad breath be gone!

Tea: Liquid confidence

Read this before you date!

CANCER
Tea is one of the single best cancer fighters you can put in your body

Killing cancer cells through cups

Lower risk of breast cancer

Fighting against emerging cancer cells

Green tea fights bladder cancer

Learn how green tea fights cancer

Green tea extract 'is cancer aid'

Green Tea Catechins and Cancer Therapy NEW!

Effects of various tea components on neoplastic cell transformation and carcinogenesis NEW!

CHOLESTEROL
Cholesterol-Fighter found

Tea lowers cholesterol level

"Good" cholesterols are unaffected

A profound inhibitory effect



DERMATOLOGY
A safe and beneficial treatment for rosacea

DIABETES
Oolong helps combat type 2 diabetes

GENERAL HEALTH
Tea "healthier" drink than water NEW!

Can you drink too much tea? NEW!

Black Tea Remedy for Food Poisoning NEW!

HEART DISEASE
Drinking black tea may help blood pressure

Three cups for the heart

Surviving through tea

"Better to be deprived of food for three days than tea for one"

Lowering the risk of heart attack

People who drank tea regularly had lower blood pressure than those who did not

Study says Green tea cuts risk of stroke NEW!

IMMUNE STRENGTH
Stave off a Cold

More Good News

EGCG, a powerful antioxidant

Sharpen the body's disease defenses

Drink a cup of tea - or four

Matcha, matcha-man!!

Finally! Ice tea's praise!

China's Fountain of Youth

Skin safety

Green tea could fight autoimmune disorders

LIVER
Tea protects transplanted livers

WEIGHT LOSS
Trying to lose weight? Another benefit of green tea!!

Burning off those Munchkins

Accelerate calorie burning



LOOSE vs BAGS
More antioxidants with loose tea

DECAF TEA
Retain 90% of its cancer-fighting properties with decaf

Cut your caffeine intake!

Rooibos: caffeine free and healthy

  WHITE TEA
An even more potent anti-cancer quality

White tea helps fight viruses and bacteria

White Tea has Anti-viral benefits NEW!

BLACK vs GREEN
Black is just as healthful as Green

Green and black tea fight diabetes

 

Gourmet vs. Supermarket Tea


Remember when your choice of coffee ranged from Folgers to Sanka? And then Starbucks came along to show how much better it can be. The same is true of tea. The varieties on offer in your supermarket are the bottom of the barrel: low-quality bags containing tea dust - the tiny leaf particles that break off when tea leaves are processed. They'll add color to your cup, but not much flavor. A far cry from the abundance of flavor and intoxicating aroma found in a cup of full-leaf gourmet tea. Chances are, you are no longer drinking Sanka. Once you try our teas, you will not wish to drink anything sold in the supermarket either.

All teas come from the same plant. The differences stem from how they are processed.


How the leaves are processed will determine their final classification as black, green, and oolong teas. The main difference between the many tea varieties is how much oxygen the leaves are allowed to absorb during processing. Much oxygen produces dark-colored black teas. Little oxygen results in green tea. Unprocessed leaves are called white tea.
black tea
undergoes a full fermentation process composed of four basic steps - withering, rolling, fermenting, and firing (or drying). First, the plucked leaves are spread out to wither. The withered leaves are then rolled, in order to release the chemicals within the leaf that are essential to its final color and flavor. The rolled leaves are spread out once more to absorb oxygen (oxidize), causing the leaves to turn from green to coppery red. Finally, the oxidized leaves are fired in order to arrest fermentation, turning the leaf black and giving it the recognizable tea scent. We invite you to view photos and descriptions of individual black teas.
green tea
is often referred to as "unfermented" tea. The freshly picked leaves are allowed to dry, then are heat-treated to stop any fermentation (also referred to as oxidation). In China, traditional hand-making methods are still employed in many places, particularly in the manufacture of the finest green teas you'll find offered here. We invite you to view photos and descriptions of individual green teas.
oolong tea
is generally referred to as "semi-fermented" tea and is principally manufactured in China and Taiwan (often called Formosa, its old Dutch name). For the manufacture of oolongs, the leaves are wilted in direct sunlight, then shaken in bamboo baskets to lightly bruise the edges. Next, the leaves are spread out to dry until the surface of the leaf turns slightly yellow. Oolongs are always whole leaf teas, never broken by rolling. The least fermented of oolong teas, almost green in appearance, is called Pouchong. We invite you to view photos and descriptions of individual oolong teas.
white tea
is produced on a very limited scale in China and India. It is the least processed of its many varieties. The new tea buds are plucked before they open and simply allowed to dry. The curled-up buds have a silvery appearance and produce a pale and very delicate cup of tea. We invite you to view photos and descriptions of individualwhite teas.

scented tea
is created when the additional flavorings are mixed with the leaf as a final stage before the tea is packed. For Jasmine tea, whole jasmine blossoms are added to green or oolong tea. Fruit-flavored teas are generally made by combining a fruit's essential oils with black tea from China or Sri Lanka. We invite you to view photos and descriptions of individual flavored teas.

Introducing our custom blends of gourmet looseleaf teas !

 

                                "Flower Works II Tea Company"

 

                                                    Green Blend               Black Blend               Red Blend               WhiteBlend

                                                 Anji             Earl Grey        Rooibos          Peach

 

                          Mandarin      Pomegranite     Rasberry        Tropic

 

                            Citron            Tropics         Song Yang       Peony

 

                           Apricot            Peach       Cinnamin/Apple   Pear

 

                           Jasmine        Chocolate                            Blueberry

 

                          Cocomint

 

                          4oz $9.00        4oz $7.00         4oz $9.00      4oz $13.00

                          2oz $5.00        2oz $4.00         2oz $5.00      2oz $7.00

     Sold in 4oz cartons, 2oz Tins, 2oz Gourmet Bags, 2oz Cartons

call 609-654-8888

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