yes it can
As medicine for cough and cold in early China
nope
they drank tea as medicine before exporting to europe
Native Americans used pumpkins in several different ways: when they cleaned the seeds out they used them for medicine .They will boil them and make them kind of a tea that they drank for different sicknesses .
hebal tea
yes. Until the nineteenth century, solid blocks of tea were used as money in Siberia!Tea bricks were in fact the preferred form of currency over metallic coins for the nomads. The tea could not only be used as money and eaten as food in times of hunger but also prepared as supposedly beneficial medicine for treating coughs and colds.
"The Chinese have consumed tea for thousands of years. People of the Han Dynasty used tea as medicine (though the first use of tea as a stimulant is unknown). China is considered to have the earliest records of tea consumption, with records dating back to the 10th century BC." (taken from the following wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tea#Origin_and_history)
* To sweeten beverages, such as tea or coffee * To sweeten cereal * For baking and cooking * To make the medicine go down
Green tea.
It's a small red fruit that's used in Chinese and Korean traditional medicine, where it's believed to alleviate stress. It's used as a tea in Japan.
2 popular herbal medicines are green tea and yellow tea.
St. John's Wort tea is significant in herbal medicine practices due to its potential benefits for mental health, such as reducing symptoms of depression and anxiety. It is believed to have mood-boosting properties and is commonly used as a natural remedy for these conditions.