Loose Leaf  Tea

Wulong

Rooibos Red Tea

 

 

 

 

White Tea

Oolong

China Green Tea

Tea Laden

Ceylon Teas

Japanese Tea

Earl Grey

 

 

 

 

 

Yerba Mate

Organic Teas

Black Tea

 

Featured Product

Mandarin Tea for One

Pretty orange flowers decorate this tea for one.

  

April Special

Swiss Gold Tea Ball

 Top of the line tea ball. Fine gold mesh. Ideal for brewing 2-4 cups of tea.

Click for a special price!

  

Featured Tea

Milk Oolong

A very special Oolong Tea! These leaves have an aroma of creamy sweet milk.

   

Tea Laden is now an authorized dealer of Royal Patrician China

Royal Patrician has more than 20 patterns of bone china tea sets. Purchase one piece or a complete set. The prices on Tea Laden web site have been discounted to give you the best possible value.

For the month of April, receive an additional 10% off your order of Royal Patrician china simply by entering the code royal at check out.

Please note that your cart total will not reflect the discount, however your card will be charged the discounted amount.

New at Tea Laden

Tea Articles

Oolong Teas of China and Taiwan

 

Royal Patrician China

There is a great deal of poetry and fine sentiment in a chest of tea. 

~Ralph Waldo Emerson, Letters and Social Aims

 

Black Tea Soothes Away Stress

Source: American Society for Microbiology
May 24, 2001

Science Daily Drinking tea may help fight cavities. A group of researchers from the University of Illinois College of Dentistry believe that black tea and its components benefit oral healh by interfering with the harmful plaque bacteria in the mouth that cause gum disease and cavities. They report their results at the 101st General Meeting of the American Society for Microbiology in Orlando, Florida.

"In recent years, many symposia and publications have focused on the health effects of green teas. Earlier studies by Japanese scientists have suggested that consumption of green tea lead to reduction of dental cavities in humans," says Dr. Christina Wu, the principle investigator of the study. "However less attention has been focused on black tea, the more popular drink in the Western countries, and worldwide 80 percent of the tea consumed is black tea."

Dr. Wu and her colleagues found that compounds in black tea were capable of killing or suppressing growth and acid production of cavity-causing bacteria in dental plaque. Black tea also affects the bacterial enzyme glucosyltranferase which is responsible for converting sugars into the sticky matrix material that plaque uses to adhere to teeth. In addition, certain plaque bacteria, upon exposure to black tea, lost their ability to form the clumpy aggregates with other bacteria in plaque, thereby reducing the total mass of the dental plaque.

One study conducted in Dr. Wu's lab found that when volunteers rinsed with black tea for 30 seconds five times at 3-minute intervals plaque bacteria stopped growing and producing acid, which breaks down the teeth and causes cavities. This research supports an earlier Swedish study that found rinsing the mouth with black tea significantly reduced plaque build-up.

"It is our belief of these researchers that the intake of black tea can be signficant to imporove oral health of the general public," says Wu. "If sequenced properly between meals and normal oral hygiene, a reduction in dental caries may be possible. Drinking tea may have added oral health benefits by controlling through 'prevention' the most prevalent diseases of mankind, mainly caries and periodontal disease."

Note: This story has been adapted from a news release issued by American Society For Microbiology.