Getting the perfect cup of tea starts with using the right amount of loose-leaf tea. Here's how much you should measure out ...
People are being encouraged to 'rethink' their drinking habits, especially if they enjoy a cup of tea and use tea bags. The ...
A health expert has shared a warning to tea drinkers after a study found the average human brain contains about seven grams ...
Dr. Dravid and his team tested how different types of tea — black, white, oolong, green, rooibos, herbal, loose leaf and plain old Lipton — behaved in water with varying amounts of lead.
That comforting hot cup of tea—or refreshing glass of iced tea on a hot summer day—could help reduce the amount of toxic metals in drinking water, according to a new paper published in the journal ACS ...
In the study, researchers examined the differences in loose-leaf and bagged teas. They found cotton and nylon bags only adsorbed trivial amounts of the contaminants. The cellulose (or paper ...
With the news of tea’s ability to absorb heavy metals like lead in water, it’s worth grabbing a tea infuser to promote as ...
A new study found that tea leaves naturally absorb heavy metals, filtering dangerous contaminants from drinking water.
In the new study, researchers experimented with a variety of teas, brewing methods and steeping times, and they examined the difference between loose-leaf and bagged tea. The recipe for the purest ...