"Mormon Tea" is a plant, also called Ephedra, Mahuang, or Joint-Fir. It's made by planting a seed in the ground and supplying it with soil, sunlight, and water.The Ephedra plant is used in medicines and herbal remedies. Some like to boil the dried branches or leaves as a tea.
Mormon Tea isn't really a tea per-say. It's more like a shrub that grows in the desert. Mormon Pioneers brewed it into a tea, hence the name Mormon Tea. It basically has the same chemical properties as sudafed so it's really good for clearing up allergies.
Mormon Tea or Brigham Tea is a type of ephedra herbal remedy and is usually only available commercially in a pill form. If you want to get the leaves to make an actual tea, you'll probably have to pick them yourself. The "Related Links" below have some links to places where you can buy Mormon Tea.
Hey! I am a Mormon. We do not drink many kinds of tea and no coffee. Good suggestions are juice, pop, water, lemonade, hot chocolate.
tea was made by the russians when they came here
Jasmine tea is a famous tea made with Chinese tea leaves that are scented with jasmine flowers. Jasmine tea is commonly made with green tea. You can find them in supermarkets and specialty tea shops as well.
"Real" tea made from tea leaves as opposed to herbal tea.
No. Tea (the beverage) is made from the Camellia sinensisplant. Tea tree oil is made from a completely unrelated plant, Melaleuca alternifolia.There is an oil made from the tea plant, but it is made from the seeds of the plant, not the leaf. This oil is called "tea oil" and is not the same as tea tree oil.
No, fennel does not have caffeine in it, therefore the tea made from it has none. If however, fennel is added to black tea, then the black tea will add caffeine to the tea made from it.
camomile tea is an herbal tea made from the camomile plant.
Korean green tea is made of the camellia sinenis plant however they have tea made from berries, herbs, roots and even pine needles
Devout Mormons do not drink tea -- beverages made from the tea plant Camellia sinensis. Some Mormons drink no hot beverages; some drink non-caffeinated hot beverages such as cocoa, Postum, or plant influsions (sometimes called herbal "tea"). Mormons also do not drink coffee or alcohol. The Word of Wisdom upon which these prohibitions are based counsels caution in taking any harmful substance into the body.
Tea is found all over the world.