My question is, since I am making one amount of tea go a very long way, due
to the time it has to brew, am I getting less of the healthful ingredients,
and instead just getting color and flavor? Put another way, since I am not
using one teabag per cup, am I greatly diluting the healthful properties of
the tea, and getting less antioxidants, etc, than if I were using one bag
per cup?
Thanks in advance,
Peter
Vancouver
> My question is, since I am making one amount of tea go a very long way, due
> to the time it has to brew, am I getting less of the healthful ingredients,
> and instead just getting color and flavor? Put another way, since I am not
> using one teabag per cup, am I greatly diluting the healthful properties of
> the tea, and getting less antioxidants, etc, than if I were using one bag
> per cup?
You'll only be getting the amount of the `healthy' chemicals as are in
the tea leaves, of course. More tea leaves, more of the chemicals.
Nevertheless, concentration doesn't matter that much. Dilute drinks
taken over the course of the day should be fine, up to a point. In
fact, it's almost certainly better than drinking 20 cups (or however
many you average) with new tea leaves each time. That would probably
be far too much caffeine.
You should figure out how many fresh cups a day suit you, and then
refresh the leaves appropriately during the day.
Cheers,
- Joel
Peter
"Joel Reicher" <jo...@panacea.null.org> wrote in message
news:rnptbr5...@cindy.panacea.null.org...
> I see what you're saying, but what I really want to know is, if the tea is
> rich and full, can I assume that there are plenty of catechins, phenols,
> etc? Or, do those properties weaken and become dilute at a different rate
> than the taste and color of the rest of the tea?
You can't make that assumption. Each chemical becomes dilute at a
different rate. I don't fully understand all the details, but I think
it comes down to how quickly a chemical leeches from the leaves during
infusion. If it leeches quickly, it will be present only in the first
few cups and then the concentration will drop off sharply. Other
chemicals may leech slower and maintain a more steady level from cup
to cup. All this *might* come down to water solubility, but I expect
it's more complex.
Caffeine is the typical example of a chemical that drops off in
concentration very quickly. That's why discarding an initial quick
infusion works as an ad hoc decaffeination. I'm sorry, but I don't
know how the other chemicals behave.
Cheers,
- Joel
Thanks very much. That definitely sheds some light on the subject.
Jim
"Peter" <p...@coolwarm.com> wrote in message news:<104ftbl...@corp.supernews.com>...
thanks for the info.
Peter
"Space Cowboy" <nets...@ix.netcom.com> wrote in message
news:24a3776d.0403...@posting.google.com...
> Largely if not mostly what determines the taste and color of tea are
> the various antioxident polyphenols such as catechins, flavonoids,
> tannins, theanine, vitamins, minerals, etc (I don't play a chemist on
Are you sure? You can tell superficially that many of the chemicals in
teas don't have a colour from the fact that green and white teas do
not infuse much colour into the water. Caffeine is tasteless,
odourless and colourless. Only some polyphenols, not even all of the
flavonoids, have a colour. Similarly with taste. Despite the name,
some flavonoids are tasteless.
> TV.) These constituents are released on a bell curve and if I were
> guessing a 10 minute infusions of white tea buds would release 90% of
> the healthfull benefits. Obviously tea volume is no more than
While you're right about the bell curve as far as I know, wouldn't the
standard deviation of the curve vary from compound to compound?
That's what I meant by differint `rates' in my other post. I don't
know the details, but the solubility of these compounds will be
affected by other compounds, by the pH of the water, etc. A
rudimentary web search turns up at least one flavonoid that is
hydrophobic.
It would be nice if all these compounds behaved roughly the same way,
but I really don't think it happens, and I wouldn't trust taste and
colour.
Cheers,
- Joel
Jim
Joel Reicher <jo...@panacea.null.org> wrote in message news:<rnllmel...@cindy.panacea.null.org>...