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	<title>The Loose Change &#187; Green Tea</title>
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		<title>Green Tea Time</title>
		<link>http://www.theloosechange.com/green-tea-time/</link>
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		<pubDate>Sat, 24 May 2008 15:52:18 +0000</pubDate>
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				<category><![CDATA[Green Tea]]></category>
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		<description><![CDATA[Recently I was at a friends home and they are usually up to something interesting and unusal.  This time they had &#8220;the best green tea in China&#8221;, according to another friend who brought it back straight from China.  Curious, and being a green tea drinker, I wanted to try the tea.  They debated a while, as [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Recently I was at a friends home and they are usually up to something interesting and unusal.  This time they had &#8220;the best green tea in China&#8221;, according to another friend who brought it back straight from China.  Curious, and being a green tea drinker, I wanted to try the tea.  They debated a while, as they did not have much left, but after careful consideration, allowed me to drink a cup or three.</p>
<p>Bottom line, it was truly amazing.  It was incredibly full bodied and very sweet.  It was easily the best tea I had ever had. And it didn&#8217;t have any added sugar or anything, it was just loose leaf pure green tea.  One small problem, they didn&#8217;t know the name of the tea and neither did their friend who brought it back from China.  So they gave me a box of &#8220;Gunpowder Tea&#8221;, and sent me on my way.  Of course, the taste of that gunpowder tea was no where in comparison to the &#8220;best tea in China&#8221;.</p>
<p>So that lead me on a quest searching for the &#8220;best tea in China&#8221;.  I have since purchased a lot green tea, loose leaf form.  The stuff in bags are not the highest of quality and usually what&#8217;s leftover from the loose leaf, so I stopped drinking bagged tea.  I now only drink loose leaf tea (the kind that you spoon out into a strainer and steep for anywhere from 1 &#8211; 3 minutes and generally not available in supermarkets) and I have drank a lot of it.  I have tried about 20 different types of green tea and NONE of them came even close to the tea I had at my friends house.  Many of them are quite good and have sublte depths of various flavors, but that one tea was still the sweetest tea I have ever tasted.  But I have no idea what the name of it is.</p>
<p>So for now the quest continues, I buy tea from incredibleteas.com, dragonherbs.com, and <a href="http://www.silkroadteas.com/servlet/StoreFront" target="_blank">Silk Road Teas</a>.  I even have and grow my own little green tea bush in my backyard (which fortunately has taken hold and is starting to grow like crazy) and in a couple years, might be able to a cup or two from it.  As I understand it, the best tea comes from 500 year old bushes.  Just my luck.</p>
<p>In case you didn&#8217;t know ALL tea comes from the same plant &#8211; Camellia Sinensis.  It doesn&#8217;t matter if it&#8217;s black, green or oolong tea.  They are all the same leaves from that particular Camellia plant.  It&#8217;s ultimately a matter of how oxidized the leaves are allowed to get after picking that determines whether it&#8217;s green, black, white or oolong.</p>
<p>If I ever discover the &#8220;best tea in China&#8221; then I will blog about it, I suspect, or I might just keep it a secret and let people venture down their own path of consuming copious amounts of the green stuff.  I hear it even has health benefits&#8230;</p>
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