Call it a tea mug, tea-traveler, tea infuser or whatever you want. Ours is the best! It doesn’t leak and you can re-infuse your tea later in the day.
Our Tea Traveler Rocks!
MARTEANI Time
6 ounces of your favorite black iced tea
4 ounces of unsweet pomegranate juice
4 ounces of Absolute Wild Tea Vodka
Combine ingredients in a ice filled shaker and shake it till it’s too cold to hold.
This recipe makes 2 seven ounce drinks so invite a friend or pour yourself a double!
Enjoy, Jim Dixon www.Celebriteas.com
Health Benefits of Tea
What We Do.
At Celebriteas.com we pride ourselves in providing our customers with the finest Super Grade loose leaf tea made. Our tea only comes from Fair Trade, Organic certified plantations. We only import small batches of Super Grade tea leaves which are then handcrafted into our famous blends. This attention to quality, guarantees our customers the freshest and highest quality award winning tea. Our goal at Celebriteas.com is to educate people about tea and the tea culture sweeping the US. Tea is the 2nd most popular drink in the world because of its health benefits and taste.
Please feel free to browse our site and email us with any questions. You will also notice we only carry about 27 different tea flavors, not 127 like the B-grade tea peddlers in the mall. We only carry the best of the best. If you are unhappy with your purchase for any reason just call or email us and we will make it right.
Thank you for your loyalty.
Tea, The Healthy Option
Long stressful days at work, lack of exercise, too much convenience food that is high in fat and sugar but low in fiber, can all take its toll. A well-earned tea break is often the way to catch your breath and help maintain heart health.
Studies from around the world are finding ingredients in tea may help towards maintaining a healthy heart. A national study of 1,764 women in Saudi Arabia showed that tea drinkers were 19% less likely to suffer from cardiovascular disease than non-tea drinkers. In Holland, 806 men who consumed the greatest amount of catechins (a type of flavonoid) were 51% less likely to die of heart disease during the 10-year study period.
Further studies are looking into how tea could help your heart. The results from trials so far show that flavonoids prevent the oxidation of the so-called bad cholesterol in the blood that leads to the buildup of plaque in artery walls, as well as helping to maintain a healthy cardiovascular system.
Nutrition & Health Compounds Found in Tea
Try Cold Brewing!
Here’s how:
• Clean a jar or pitcher.
• Put some tea in it (about 1.5 times the amount you’d normally use).
• Add cold water and a lid.
• Let it sit in the fridge for four to ten hours, depending on the type (less time for white teas, green teas and wiry/flat oolongs, more for rolled oolongs and the most for pu-erhs, herbal infusions and black teas).
• Strain. Sip. Simple.
How Tea is Made
How Tea is Made
Picking. Sorting. Steaming. Firing. Twisting. Oxidizing.
All of these techniques and more are used to produce the best tasting tea. Learn more about how the perfect leaf becomes the perfect sip.
All tea is made from the same plant.
Yes, you read right, all tea, whether it’s black, oolong, green, white, or pu-erh, comes from the Camellia sinensis plant in the same way that all wine comes from the grape, albeit different varietals.
Like wine, different tea leaf varietals have developed in different geographic locations. Each tea varietal’s unique characteristics are the result of the human selection, soil composition, and local weather patterns.
Processing makes all the difference.
Processing the tea in different ways creates different kinds of teas. (Just for the record, we need to differentiate between tea and herbal infusions. The former is what we’re describing here, the latter is a beverage made from herbs and plants such as lavender, chamomile, rooibos, lemongrass, and osmanthus.)
In general, the more oxidized the tea is, the darker the infusion will be.
White tea and Green tea are the least oxidized and the color of these teas is little changed from the buds and leaves on the bush.
Black tea undergoes a complex and lengthy processing, which involves full oxidation of the leaves.
The amount of oxidation a tealeaf is allowed to undergo before this oxidation is stopped, determines what kind of tea you will get. More oxidation produces dark-colored Black and Pu-erh teas. Less oxygen results in Green and White teas.
Most kinds of tea go through a process of plucking, withering, rolling, oxidation and drying or firing. Here’s what each of these terms means:
Plucking
Before tea can be processed, it must, of course, be picked. Only the bud and two small leaves are plucked from the best tea plants to ensure the best tasting tea.
Withering and Steaming
Withering is particularly important for white, oolong, black and pu-erh teas.
After picking, the leaves are laid out to dry on bamboo trays or in large in-door areas where heated air is forced over them if the climate is too cool to heat the leaves naturally. This process reduces water content and makes the leaves pliable enough to move to the next step in the process, rolling.
In the case of green teas, leaves are often steamed, baked, or pan-fired instead of, or immediately after, being withered briefly. Steaming, pan firing, or baking arrests oxidation of the leaves so that they remain green.
Rolling
The next step in tea production is rolling.
Have you ever wondered how oolongs, some greens, and black tea leaves get scrunched up?
Traditionally, this was done by hand. This hand rolling is still used to make extremely rare high-end teas, but today, machines are often used to roll and shape the leaves. This process helps break down the leaf cell structure, which releases the juices and oils from the leaves, encourages a more uniform oxidation, and gives each tea its distinctive flavor.
Oxidation
Oxidation is the chemical process that is easiest to observe by looking at a dried tealeaf’s color. The greener the leaf, the less oxidized it is. Like a cut banana turning brown, the tea leaf turns brown as it oxidizes.
Japanese steamed teas, senchas, are the least oxidized (as apparent in the vibrant green color of the leaf and infusion). Black teas are the most oxidized (as you can see in the dark color of the leaf and deep crimson-brown of the infusion.
Drying or Firing
Tea is finally dried evenly, without burning the leaves, in large ovens or drying machines to complete halt oxidation and lock in the final flavor.






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