STeaP: The Tea Vodcast

Felicitea’s CTC Contest

Summer, custom tea blender of Felicitea (friend: Felicitea), is currently looking for tea-drinking contestants for Phase One of her Coffee to Tea Convert Contest. All you have to do is create a video about why you drink tea instead of coffee, and then add the video to the Felicitea’s CTC Contest group. Phase Two of the contest will involve converting a lucky coffee drinker with lots of tea-related prizes!

The winner with the best tea video will have their video used to promote tea drinking for Phase Two of the contest, they will get free tea, and they will also get a special piece of free personalized teaware, so hop over to the group and submit your video. Tea is always a good reason to make a video!


STeaP Tea Giveaways

TEA GIVEAWAY THREAD - STeaP TV

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Check out the community thread linked in the image above to see what viewers (and your show hosts) are offering up for grabs… teas we tried but didn’t like, extra tea we’ll never drink before it goes to waste, any tea we have that is worth offering up to someone else instead of pitching in the trash. Leave a list of teas you’ve got sitting around if you’d like to contribute to the STeaP-encouraged tea exchange! :)


STeaP #37: Untitled

This episode features two teas with similar flavors: Adagio’s Foxtrot (boiling, 7 minute steep) and Felicitea’s Sloth Tea (3 minutes, rumbling). This is Felciitea’s first time on STeaP, so give Summer (the masterful tea blender behind the Felicitea name) a friendly welcome. You can also add both Summer and Ilya to your friends list over at our community.

For photos from this episode, visit our Flickr pool, and for more episodes and other tea tidbits, visit STeaPtv.com. Contact Joe and Brandice via steap@steaptv.com.


More Plants to Make Tea Out Of

I just ran across a great post at Get Rich Slowly that talks about making tea out of Raspberry leaves. There’s also a nice list of other edible “weeds” that can be eaten or steeped.

I simply tug up the young raspberry sprouts (under one foot tall) and let them dry between two window screens, laying flat on the sidewalk for a few days in the sun. (I bought my screens at garage sales.)

That’s probably a better way to do it than in the microwave. :)


STeaP #36: Two Hosts One Cup (of Pu)

This is the “giving pu-erh another chance” episode. In trying both Golden Moon’s Pu-Erh (four minutes boiling) and Adagio’s Pu-Erh Poe (five minutes boiling), we have mostly likely succeeded in disappointing pu-erh lovers around the globe a second time. Let us know, pu-erh lovers… what are we doing wrong, or do Joe and Brandice just not get pu-erh?

For photos from this episode, visit our Flickr pool, and for more episodes and other tea tidbits, visit STeaPtv.com. Contact Joe and Brandice via steap@steaptv.com.


STeaP #35: Au Naturale

Today STeaP is looking to nature for tea, and finding some in it’s own backyard. We will be trying two tisanes, Dandelion Leaf Tea, steeped for 7 minutes in boiling water, made by Joe himself, and a Sassafras Root Tea, steeped for 5 minutes in boiling water, made by someone else himself.

For photos from this episode, visit our Flickr pool, and for more episodes and other tea tidbits, visit STeaPtv.com. Contact Joe and Brandice via steap@steaptv.com.


Boulder Tangerine Giveaway

As mentioned in our recent episode, we do indeed have an extra tin of Boulder Dushanbe’s Boulder Tangerine Herbal Tea:

The first person to email me with the name of the Arkansas Razorbacks mascot whose name is relevant to our recent episode will receive the tin.

GO! :)


How To: Dandelion Tea & Sassafras Tea

On May 12, Joe and Brandice will be trying two homemade teas: dandelion tea and sassafras tea. Here are the directions for making your own if you’d like to try it with them:

Dandelion tea

(Note: This is how we did it for the show, sure there are probably other ways to go about it.)

Go out and pick a handful of young dandelion leaves, preferably leaves from plants that don’t yet have flowers and that have not been exposed to herbicides or pesticides. The older and larger the leaves, the more bitter they will be. And as far as avoiding herbicides and pesticides, well that just makes sense.

Wash and dry the leaves. Joe and Amy used a commercially available veggie wash with water and then placed the leaves between two paper towels to dry. Once the leaves are no longer wet, to finish drying them, place the sandwiched leaves and paper towels in the microwave. Run the microwave for about 8 seconds (depending on microwave strength), making sure not too scorch the leaves. If you hear anything pop or sizzle, stop the microwave immediately. The leaves should now be dried and crispy, the paper towel having absorbed moisture from the leaves. If not fully dried, flip the leaves over and run the microwave again.

Use 1-2 heaping teaspoons per cup of water, treating it like a white tea, steeping it in boiling water for 7 minutes.

Alternatively, if you don’t want to do it yourself, there are tea companies that sell dandelion tea (eg. Dragonwater)

A health benefit of dandelion leaf tea: It lowers cholesterol.

Sassafras tea

(Note: Again, this is how we did it, but there are alternate ways of preparing sassafras tea)

Find a young sassafras tree, about 4 feet tall. Pull up the tree and cut off a portion of the thick roots. Wash the root and cut it into 2-3 inch pieces. Let the root dry for about a week in a cool dry place (the cool dry place in essential to avoid mold growth). Strip the bark off of the root, keeping the bark and discarding the inside part of the root. Chop up the bark into small sections. (A little involved, we know.)

Use 1 teaspoon of root bark per cup of water. Steep in boiling water for 5 minutes.

There have been concerns that sassafras tea is not healthy because it contains safrole which has been found to be carcinogenic in mice/rats, but it has also been shown that an occasionally cup of sassafras tea is not harmful, just don’t drink it every day.

Some trivia about sassafras:

  • In the 1800’s sassafras was a main ingredient in the original “root beer”.
  • Native Americans sometimes used it to help bring down a fever.
  • The tea has been used as a “blood purifier” and will promote perspiration and urination. It has been used to treat gout and arthritis.
  • Modern herbalists claim that sassafras tea is a good liver detoxer and general stimulant.

STeaP #34: The Flaming Bloody Fireball

Today’s pairing was supposed to be a duo of fruity herbals, but an atomic fire broke out in the studio and we quickly realized that these two teas have absolutely nothing in common. Check out the episode to find out what we thought of Dragonwater’s Blood Orange and Boulder Dushanbe’s Boulder Tangerine, both prepared at boiling temperature with a five minute steep.

Disclaimer: No one was actually harmed or lit on fire during this filming. Joe briefly lost his mind and thought he was on fire, but we’re not liable for his mental health or its effect on your viewing pleasure.

For photos from this episode, visit our Flickr pool, and for more episodes and other tea tidbits, visit STeaPtv.com. Contact Joe and Brandice via steap@steaptv.com.


STeaPToday: Stash Powdered Green

A special mini-STeaP to review Stash’s Green Tea Powder on my way to work. For more tea goodness, check out STeaPtv.com.