today.reuters.com— Drinking tea can reduce the risk of heart disease and stroke but only if milk is not added to the brew, German scientists said on Tuesday.
Jan 9, 2007View in Crawl 4
I think the topic here shouldn't be mixing milk and tea, it should be about how bad milk is for you period. Not to mention all the puss in it. We weren't born from cows, so why do humans drink their milk? Because milk companies make millions off us drinking it.
strong and bitter? something like that. rank and oxidized is more like it. black teas aren't as healthy for you to begin with, nor as smooth, as green teas, oolongs, whites, any of the less, or non, fermented tea types. less fermented teas don't need the milk to be drinkable, skip that crap black stuff.
murkathanJan 10, 2007
I think the topic here shouldn't be mixing milk and tea, it should be about how bad milk is for you period. Not to mention all the puss in it. We weren't born from cows, so why do humans drink their milk? Because milk companies make millions off us drinking it.
lefrenzyJan 10, 2007
Man this sucks, I love drinking tea & milk.
gamechicJan 10, 2007
Milk:calf as Breastmilk:alicam. The non-pasteurized/homogenized kind of course.
statusquorulesJan 10, 2007
earl grey rooibos is my favorite kind of rooibos!
abadinalbanyJan 10, 2007
strong and bitter? something like that. rank and oxidized is more like it. black teas aren't as healthy for you to begin with, nor as smooth, as green teas, oolongs, whites, any of the less, or non, fermented tea types. less fermented teas don't need the milk to be drinkable, skip that crap black stuff.
rowanjlJan 11, 2007
I go through about six liters a week. And I don't drink tea.
jerkface2021Jan 11, 2007
Previous studies have shown milk has no effect on the bioavailability of catechins"CONCLUSION: Catechins from green tea and black tea are rapidly absorbed and milk does not impair the bioavailability of tea catechins."<a class="user" href="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=pubmed&cmd=Retrieve&dopt=AbstractPlus&list_uids=9630386&query_hl=1&itool=pubmed_DocSum">http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?db=pubmed&cmd=Retrieve&dopt=AbstractPlus&list_uids=9630386&query_hl=1&itool=pubmed_DocSum</a>