
and the url for the company and tea http://theteaspot.com/snowflakes-loose- ... ?catid=257
I have always been a little confused about the "low (or high) in caffeine" claims. For what I've learned about tea I can't see how white or green tea should be lower in caffeine than f.e. red tea.The Tea Spot wrote:a fragrant and sweet cup that is low in caffeine.
So, you are saying this is a black tea? Not white tea? Not really understanding what you are saying.legend wrote:It is a Sheng cha 生茶 in the Black tea category 黑茶类 but it is commoly marketed as white tea.
Chip wrote:So, you are saying this is a black tea? Not white tea? Not really understanding what you are saying.legend wrote:It is a Sheng cha 生茶 in the Black tea category 黑茶类 but it is commoly marketed as white tea.
Perhaps I am not understanding your meaning, but these do not appear to be fully oxidized leaves ... regardless of origin, etc. I just do not understand your black tea category reference at all.
It is my understanding that Yunnan produces white tea in addition to the "whites" used for pu-erh.
White tea refers to how it is manufactured, not so much leaf form ...
Chip wrote:However going back to the OP and his reference link for the tea in question ... is there something to draw a conclusion that this is NOT white tea? (albeit the site's photo and the OP's are quite different!)
... which is basically what I said about the site in the FP.alan logan wrote:Chip wrote:However going back to the OP and his reference link for the tea in question ... is there something to draw a conclusion that this is NOT white tea? (albeit the site's photo and the OP's are quite different!)
no certain way (because light and image quality may always bring surprises).
In fact I would conclude something else : site is full of ignorances.