According to Wikipedia, yes.
No, tea is considered tea. Juice is considered juice. Tea is made from the leaves of certain plants, and juice is usually made from some kind of fruit or vegetables such as apple, orange, or grape.
Tea leaves (Camelia Sinensis).
"Real" tea made from tea leaves as opposed to herbal tea.
Tea is the name of the drink made from the leaves of the tea plant (a type of camellia evergreen).
no how can that be possible
it depends what type of tea..... white tea is made from tea leaves
Tea is made from the Camellia sinensis plant.Different types of tea are made from different parts of the tea plant. Most teas (including those graded as orange pekoe) are made from the top two leaves and the leaf bud from the tea plant. Souchongs (such as Lapsang souchong) and Congou teas are made from larger, more mature leaves. "Tippy" teas are made with more leaf buds, such as the top one leaf and a bud, and some teas (like Silver Needle white tea) are made exclusively from buds.A few teas are made from other parts of the plant. Kukicha is a Japanese green tea made from twigs and stems of the tea plant. Bancha, a Japanese tea, and some Chinese oolongs can also contain some stem even if they consist mostly of leaves. Matcha, a Japanese powdered green tea, is made by grinding up different parts of the tea plant, including leaves and stems.
Blueberry tea Blueberry Tea
A nice cup of tea.
It's called Earl Grey. It can be easily be made at home with green tea leaves. just a few drops of Bergamot oil needs to be sprinkled and mixed to make Earl Grey Tea
Tea is made with "Tea" leaves (the leaves of the plant called Camellia sinensis). You can not make "Tea" out of garlic - an infusion on Garlic would be a type of Garlic soup.
Oolong tea is made from the leaves of the tea plant like other teas. Most teas are made from the first two leaves at the tip of a branch, and some teas are made from the buds of tip leaves. Oolong tea is distinct from others because of its distinct oxidation process. Oxidation is the process that turns green tea into black tea. Oolong is partially oxidized and is considered somewhere in the middle of green and black tea.