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-   -   Hot or Not Any tea drinkers on GFY? (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=1234987)

bns666 12-17-2016 09:43 AM

Any tea drinkers on GFY?
 
To cut down my coffee addiction, I recently started drinking teas.

So far my favorites are various organic Chinese Pu-erhs and Oolongs.

Sometimes I mix lose leaf Oolong or Pu-erh with ginger tea and it tastes great and really boosts metabolism.

Anyone else likes those?

JohnnyNight 12-17-2016 09:50 AM

Yeah... right here

Don't go fancy on the tea though..

Sounds nice...

No coffee for me...

Of course that doesn't stop me from 4-6 diet cokes a day...:pimp

mineistaken 12-17-2016 09:50 AM

I like tea, I prefer simple black tea.

wehateporn 12-17-2016 09:53 AM

Every Brit here will have a tea by their side as they read this, like me

wehateporn 12-17-2016 09:54 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mineistaken (Post 21387283)
I like tea, I prefer simple black tea.

As is no milk or as in not green?

mineistaken 12-17-2016 09:57 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by wehateporn (Post 21387295)
As is no milk or as in not green?

I am not British, so tea and milk sounds the most strange. So no milk, of course.

And what do you mean by "not green" when speaking about black tea? :)

brassmonkey 12-17-2016 10:02 AM

caffeine free?? if not go back to coffee. kind of like giving up drinking and picking up smoking a pack of sigs a day

bns666 12-17-2016 10:02 AM

forgotten to add - no milk and no sugar for me either.

both pu erh and oolong are teas from the same plant as green tea and black tea, difference is in processing.

brassmonkey 12-17-2016 10:16 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bns666 (Post 21387313)
forgotten to add - no milk and no sugar for me either.

both pu erh and oolong are teas from the same plant as green tea and black tea, difference is in processing.

you are full of shit!!! sounds like :1orglaugh:1orglaugh u didn't ditch caffeine!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

2MuchMark 12-17-2016 10:22 AM

Full-on hardcore coffee drinker here, even at night, but lately I've been trying to drink more tea, especially green tea.

celandina 12-17-2016 10:33 AM

The only one for me daily after dinner Yorkshire Gold... My wife whiff of milk, for me a bit of dark rum and some lemon...:thumbsup

brassmonkey 12-17-2016 10:45 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by ********** (Post 21387364)
Full-on hardcore coffee drinker here, even at night, but lately I've been trying to drink more tea, especially green tea.

i got 6 bags of black tea from a company have you tried that? it' vanilla black tea

Bladewire 12-17-2016 10:46 AM


I'm a chai guy with a diffuser, frother, the works. The three chai's I keep in stock are chakra chai coconut, Raja chai rooibos & Maya chai macaroon. I have a Starbucks quad Venti white chocolate mocha every morning and tea in the afternoon :thumbsup

TheDynasty 12-17-2016 10:46 AM

Me and the wife drink green tea every morning

bns666 12-17-2016 11:17 AM

also real organic japanese matcha is nice too :thumbsup

mineistaken 12-17-2016 11:22 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bladewire (Post 21387412)

I'm a chai guy with a diffuser, frother, the works. The three chai's I keep in stock are chakra chai coconut, Raja chai rooibos & Maya chai macaroon. I have a Starbucks quad Venti white chocolate mocha every morning and tea in the afternoon :thumbsup

chai = tea. Why do you use word chai instead of tea?

Bladewire 12-17-2016 11:48 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mineistaken (Post 21387505)
chai = tea. Why do you use word chai instead of tea?

In the West chai refers specifically to spiced Indian-style tea - that is, tea with traditional Indian spices and milk. This is also referred to as Masala Chai, which is more popular in India than coffee.

There are many different spice mixes of chai and the ones I listed are my favorite and imported from Africa. I get them on Amazon now.


bns666 12-17-2016 12:03 PM

yes, chai are indian variations mostly

mineistaken 12-17-2016 12:27 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bns666 (Post 21387565)
yes, chai are indian variations mostly

My point was that it was just a marketing stunt, which is completely misleading and false as tea = chai 100% (just different language words).

bns666 12-17-2016 12:37 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mineistaken (Post 21387592)
My point was that it was just a marketing stunt, which is completely misleading and false as tea = chai 100% (just different language words).

hm not quite marketing stunt, indian chai means blend of tea and spices, while cha in chinese means dried and processed leaves of camelia sinensis plant. however around the world word chai is commonly used for both.

woj 12-17-2016 12:38 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mineistaken (Post 21387592)
My point was that it was just a marketing stunt, which is completely misleading and false as tea = chai 100% (just different language words).

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masala_chai

"Masala chai (/tʃɑːɪ/; Hindi: मसाला चाय, literally "mixed-spice tea"; Urdu: مصالحہ چائے‎) is a flavoured tea beverage made by brewing black tea with a mixture of aromatic Indian spices and herbs.

Alternative names: Chai, Spiced tea"

Eliza Miller 12-17-2016 12:54 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bns666 (Post 21387313)
forgotten to add - no milk and no sugar for me either.

both pu erh and oolong are teas from the same plant as green tea and black tea, difference is in processing.

Are you sure you don't want any milk? :1orglaugh

http://i.giphy.com/11yGItQ5ZvzDNe.gif

bns666 12-17-2016 12:56 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Eliza Miller (Post 21387649)
Are you sure you don't want any milk? :1orglaugh

http://i.giphy.com/11yGItQ5ZvzDNe.gif

milk is ok, but not necessary in tea ;)

Evil Chris 12-17-2016 01:59 PM

I've tried several of the David's Tea blends. Some are good, while others are terrible.

mineistaken 12-17-2016 02:30 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by bns666 (Post 21387613)
hm not quite marketing stunt, indian chai means blend of tea and spices, while cha in chinese means dried and processed leaves of camelia sinensis plant. however around the world word chai is commonly used for both.

Indian chai = Indian tea.
Tea = chai
Tea is English word (also te and many similars in differenty languages) for it.
Chai is Indian word (also many similars in many other languages) for it.

Trying to imply that they are different would be like taking any English word for X, translating it into Indian and then claiming that that Indian word means "special X" or "indian X"...



Quote:

Originally Posted by woj (Post 21387625)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Masala_chai

"Masala chai (/tʃɑːɪ/; Hindi: मसाला चाय, literally "mixed-spice tea"; Urdu: مصالحہ چائے‎) is a flavoured tea beverage made by brewing black tea with a mixture of aromatic Indian spices and herbs.

Alternative names: Chai, Spiced tea"

Again. Masala chai = masala tea because tea = chai. These are the same word in different languages, nothing more than that.

Bladewire 12-17-2016 02:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mineistaken (Post 21387730)
Indian chai = Indian tea.
Tea = chai
Tea is English word (also te and many similars in differenty languages)
Chai is Indian word (also many similars in many other languages).





Again. Masala chai = masala tea because tea = chai. These are the same word in different languages, nothing more than that.

Chai: noun. 1. a drink of tea made with cardamom and various other spices, milk, and a sweetener. Origin of chai2 Expand. Turkish

NatalieK 12-17-2016 03:45 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by wehateporn (Post 21387289)
Every Brit here will have a tea by their side as they read this, like me

:1orglaugh we do like our Tea.

Yes, Tea's lovely, although now we live in Spain we drink more coffee now :thumbsup

mineistaken 12-17-2016 03:47 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bladewire (Post 21387736)
Chai: noun. 1. a drink of tea made with cardamom and various other spices, milk, and a sweetener. Origin of chai2 Expand. Turkish

So now Turkish as well? And how do Turkish and Indians call reglar tea? Lets say simple black lipton? Also chai! Because in 100% of cases chai = tea.

Misinformed/ignorant/etc and marketing people introduced the idea of a different meaning and it spread. But it is 100% wrong, chai = tea. Period.

Here it is:

Dutch and Portuguese started importing tea from China.
There are different languages there.

Portuguese imported it from Canton, where they called THE SAME THING cha.
Dutch imported it from Fujian, where they called THE SAME THING te.

These 20 Fascinating Etymology Maps Show The Origin Of Words In Various Languages | NekoPlaza

So in those countries where Dutch exported, THE SAME THING was called variations of te.
In those countries where Portuguese exported, THE SAME THING was called variations of chai.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etymology_of_tea

It is 100% THE SAME THING.

Different languages (origins Cantonese - cha and Amoy - te).

The fact that somebody took popular tea style/recipe from India nor where ever and decided to call it chai in English language and it spread, does not make it true.
Same sense would be to call Russian, Slovakian, Turkish, Bulgarian, etc style tea chai in English, just because in their language it is called chai...

Same thing would be call Spanish or Mexican beer cerveza (in English language) just because beer = cerveza in their languages.
Or Indians in hindu should call lipton tea - te or something, but they do not. They call it chai, because chai and tea are merely translations of each other.
Or Cantonese should call tea from Fujian te and Fujian people should call tea from Canton cha, buit they do not, because they are merely different language translations from each other.

rogueteens 12-17-2016 04:28 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by wehateporn (Post 21387289)
Every Brit here will have a tea by their side as they read this, like me

Oh, yes. Builders strength.

rogueteens 12-17-2016 04:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bladewire (Post 21387553)
In the West chai refers specifically to spiced Indian-style tea - that is, tea with traditional Indian spices and milk. This is also referred to as Masala Chai, which is more popular in India than coffee.

There are many different spice mixes of chai and the ones I listed are my favorite and imported from Africa. I get them on Amazon now.


In the UK, cha is slang for an ordinary cup of tea. as in "Fancy a cha"?

Just thought I'd put that out there :)

Sid70 12-17-2016 04:49 PM

http://ic.pics.livejournal.com/oktan...9_original.jpg

Bladewire 12-17-2016 04:59 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by mineistaken (Post 21387835)
So now Turkish as well? And how do Turkish and Indians call reglar tea? Lets say simple black lipton? Also chai! Because in 100% of cases chai = tea.

Misinformed/ignorant/etc and marketing people introduced the idea of a different meaning and it spread. But it is 100% wrong, chai = tea. Period.

Here it is:

Dutch and Portuguese started importing tea from China.
There are different languages there.

Portuguese imported it from Canton, where they called THE SAME THING cha.
Dutch imported it from Fujian, where they called THE SAME THING te.

These 20 Fascinating Etymology Maps Show The Origin Of Words In Various Languages | NekoPlaza

So in those countries where Dutch exported, THE SAME THING was called variations of te.
In those countries where Portuguese exported, THE SAME THING was called variations of chai.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Etymology_of_tea

It is 100% THE SAME THING.

Different languages (origins Cantonese - cha and Amoy - te).

The fact that somebody took popular tea style/recipe from India nor where ever and decided to call it chai in English language and it spread, does not make it true.
Same sense would be to call Russian, Slovakian, Turkish, Bulgarian, etc style tea chai in English, just because in their language it is called chai...

Same thing would be call Spanish or Mexican beer cerveza (in English language) just because beer = cerveza in their languages.
Or Indians in hindu should call lipton tea - te or something, but they do not. They call it chai, because chai and tea are merely translations of each other.
Or Cantonese should call tea from Fujian te and Fujian people should call tea from Canton cha, buit they do not, because they are merely different language translations from each other.



Chai on left / tea on right

http://mediaresources.idiva.com/medi...asala_chai.jpg

Completely different, end of story.

I win.

Unzip your pants and whip it out Russian :love2suck

bns666 12-17-2016 08:29 PM

tea, cha, chai, whatever, why bother so much over a simple thing like that?

drink it or not? like it or not? which one do you prefer?

discuss that :thumbsup

Lewis11 12-17-2016 10:26 PM

I like tea, but my go to has to be English Breakfast tea.

Paul Markham 12-18-2016 01:25 AM

I drink tea and coffee.

Bladewire 12-18-2016 01:27 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Lewis11 (Post 21388378)
I like tea, but my go to has to be English Breakfast tea.

Is there a difference between English breakfast tea and British breakfast tea?

lovebitch 12-18-2016 04:10 AM

so many teas ? wtf, coffee is much better.

rogueteens 12-18-2016 04:21 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Bladewire (Post 21388489)
Is there a difference between English breakfast tea and British breakfast tea?

No, when Brits talk about tea, they mean this - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tea_in_the_United_Kingdom
any other sort of tea is explicitly referred to.

Also check this out - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TV_pickup :1orglaugh

Bladewire 12-18-2016 05:03 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by rogueteens (Post 21388600)
No, when Brits talk about tea, they mean this - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tea_in_the_United_Kingdom
any other sort of tea is explicitly referred to.

Also check this out - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/TV_pickup :1orglaugh

Learn something new ever day ha!

Thanks for the links the second one was a great read :thumbsup

LetterTwenty7 12-18-2016 05:33 AM

coffee 2:1 tea in my case. i like it all :D


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