How to Brew Green Tea | Eat This Not That

Preparing green tea for weight loss

Green Tea / June 17, 2017

green teaBy Cecelia Smith

But with a gold-standard reputation and laundry list of health benefits, this is one drink that deserves a spot in your pantry and your daily diet. Study after study continues to affirm the elixir’s tea-rrifically healthy reputation, underscoring its ability to reduce your blood sugar, your risk of numerous diseases and your belly fat. In fact, Polish researchers recently discovered green tea’s profound ability to limit the amount of starch absorbed from a meal — making it a potentially powerful treatment for diabetes and obesity.

So if you’re a regular sipper (or ready to become one), you should know how to make the cup that’s going to get you the best nutritional bang for your brew. Here are ten tips to turn your drink into the healthiest cup of green tea on the planet. And lose up 10 10 pounds—fast—on, developed by the bestselling authors of Eat This, Not That!

As is the case with most ingredients, the more processed the tea, the lower its nutrition content. In fact, canned and bottled varieties of green tea are typically little more than sugary water, researchers say. One study that looked at 14 different brands of the bottled stuff found total content of EGCG — the most abundant antioxidant in green tea — to be lower than 3 mg per 100 millimeters in ten of them. In fact, another report published by ConsumerLab.com found one variety, Diet Snapple Green Tea, contained almost no EGCG whatsoever.

Tea purists will turn up their noses at tea bags, but the rule is out as to whether a loose leaf brew is superior from both a health and cost perspective. Green tea brewed from loose tea leaves did, in fact, contain the most antioxidants though cheap-and-cheerful tea bags were almost as potent and much more affordable, a report published by ConsumerLab.com found. And another study found the difference in antioxidant capacity between loose leaf and tea bag preparations to be insignificant. So unless you’re a purist (or having tea with one), we say a teabag is your best brew bet.

Many of green tea’s health accolades can be attributed to catechins — a class of potent antioxidants found in tea leaves. While Chinese green tea that’s dry-heated contains slightly more catechins than steamed Japanese tea, it’s also more likely to be contaminated with lead, researchers say. If you’re not sure where your tea comes from, researchers suggest sticking to tea bags. The lead doesn’t appear to leach out in the brewing process, so you only have to be wary of eating the leaves, which are effectively filtered out when you brew a bag.

Green tea antioxidants like it hot. But not too hot. One study in the Journal of Food Composition and Analysis found optimal brewing conditions for resulting antioxidant content to be 80 degrees Celsius for 3 to 5 minutes. Another study from the International Journal of Food Sciences and Nutrition suggests a brew temp and time of 90 degrees for at least 2 minutes. Compared to cooler infusions (ranging from 20 to 100 degrees), researchers found increasing water temperature could increase the antioxidant potential by as much as 9.5 fold. All things considered, the takeaway tip is this: steep a tea bag for at least two minutes in hot water that’s just shy of boiling.

Those lemon wedges aren’t simply a garnish; they make sure green tea’s catechins can do their job of boosting your total health. Unfortunately, the disease-fighting compounds are relatively unstable in non-acidic environments like the intestines. In fact, less than 20 percent of tea’s catechins remains after digestion, according to researchers. But a recent Purdue University study found a simple solution: a squeeze of vitamin C-rich citrus juice significantly helped recover antioxidant levels. Lemon juice, which maintained an impressive 80 percent of tea's catechins, is your best pick.

Add a drizzle of honey to your morning cuppa if you have a lengthy to-do list. Participants who sipped a caffeinated beverage with sugar—combining caffeine and glucose—showed increased activity in the areas of the brain associated with attention, a study published in the journal Human Psychopharmacology: Clinical and Experimental found.

The morning got away from you, and there’s a half-drunk mug of cold tea on your desk. Resist the urge to dump it for a new bag, and give your tepid tea a zap in the microwave instead. Research has shown that heating a brewed cup of tea in the microwave for one minute can increase its catechin availability by nearly 20 percent.

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Source: www.eatthis.com