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Books
20,000 Secrets of Tea: The Most Effective Ways to Benefit from Nature's Healing Herbs
20,000 Secrets of Tea: The Most Effective Ways to Benefit from Nature's Healing Herbs
by Victoria Zak
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The Tea Enthusiast's Handbook: A Guide to the World's Best Teas
The Tea Enthusiast's Handbook: A Guide to the World's Best Teas
by Mary Lou Heiss Robert J. Heiss
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The Book of Tea
The Book of Tea
by Kakuzo Okakura
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The Ancient Art of Tea: Wisdom From the Ancient Chinese Tea Masters
The Ancient Art of Tea: Wisdom From the Ancient Chinese Tea Masters
by Warren Peltier
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365 Things Every Tea Lover Should Know
365 Things Every Tea Lover Should Know
by Harvest House Publishers
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Bubble Tea: A Fun And Flavorful Tea Variation

Tired of the latest fad coffees? Something new is hitting tea houses and coffeeshops across the country. Its bubble tea. This bizarre drink also goes by the names boba, pearl tea, milk tea, or bubble drink. Its part drink, part dessert snack, and all fun!

  

Most recently it has become very popular in the late 1990s, although it originated over 10 years ago. It is a mixture of ice or hot tea, cream and flavorings. The original version of the tea was black tea, tapioca balls, milk and honey. Although there have been numerous variations on the original. Most generally, there is less sugar used than carbonated beverages or soft drinks.

The tea was then modified with fruit versions such as peach or plum. Today you can find tea shops similar to coffee bars and juice bars. Other flavors used are raspberry, mocha, coconut, cinnamon and other flavors. These flavorings are added as syrups, powder or the actual pulp of the fruit. The mixture is then shaken similar to a milk shake. Any tea shaken is considered bubble tea because bubbles form after the shaking process.

The tapioca pearls are made from the cassava plant. The balls are boiled and cooled. Once cooled, they are coated with honey or sugar. The consistency of these little gems is somewhere between jello and gum. They are approximately the size of a marble.

Another variation of the beverage is to use flavored jellies instead of tapioca balls. Popular flavored jellies used are coconut or cognac jelly.

The first bubble tea shop originated in Taiwan in the 1980s and has since grown. It has grown in popularity in the United States, in areas where there is a large amount of Asians. There are franchises in the United States, called Quickly and Lollipop that are growing in popularity. Other restaurants in California are Fantasia and Sweetheart Caf.

This beverage can be made at home with ice tea mix, sugar, mint leaves and milk. The pearls can be bought in Asian grocery stores or on the internet. An unopened bag of pearls can last up to six months. You can add a variety of flavors depending on your taste. Some people prefer a fruity version without any milk products. If you enjoy being creative in the kitchen, you can make pearl tea at home, but its not easy. The starchy tapioca pearls can be hard to work with. If you boil them too long, they dissolve. Not long enough, and they are hard in the middle.


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Tea Orange Pekoe Headlines

Where there's tea, there's hope - GQ.com


Where there's tea, there's hope
GQ.com
Tea is a pause, where coffee is a jolt. (You don't get coffee cosies.) I like nothing better than a warmed pot, a good leaf tea (my favourites are the East India Company's orange pekoe and proper, neroli-scented Earl Grey) and an English bone-china cup ...

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Buoyancy continues at Coonoor tea auction - Hindu Business Line


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Buoyancy continues at Coonoor tea auction
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Buoyancy continued at Sale No: 2 of Coonoor Tea Trade Association auctions with about 87 per cent of the five-week high offer of 14.90 lakh kg being sold with prices rising Rs 2 a kg over the inaugural sale of 2012. “Our Broken Orange Pekoe Small, ...

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Find (All Categories): - Washington Post


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By Becky Krystal | The Washington Post Partake of this civilized tradition with variations that range from orange pekoe to green to oolong. By Alex Baldinger We get it -- DC isn't New York City, and as anyone that espouses that bit of taxicab wisdom ...

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Labelling local teas - Daily Star Online


Labelling local teas
Daily Star Online
The local tea labels do not carry the technical grading of the tea. The use of adjectives does not carry any technical information. The Indian tea labels print flowery orange pekoe (FOP); Orange Pekoe (OP), or Broken Orange Pekoe (BOP).

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Coonoor tea sale gets a good start for 2012 - Hindu Business Line


Hindu Business Line

Coonoor tea sale gets a good start for 2012
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“Our Broken Orange Pekoe, auctioned by Global Tea Brokers, topped not only the leaf market but the CTC auction as a whole when Tulsi Trading bought it for Rs 155 a kg,” Mr Prashant Menon, Managing Partner, Homedale Tea Factory, told Business Line.

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