VOL. X, NO. 11
California State University, Long Beach September 18, 2002
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Heather Clarke
Diversions Editor

Ben D. Dimapindan
Sports Editor

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. News  
 

Less caffeine could make tea more popular


By Sarah Bataych
Special to the On-line Forty-Niner

Coffee lovers may face a greater dilemma than how they take their coffee. Soon, a greater issue than cream and sugar may be their health.
 
Communications major Jay Mitchell loves his morning cup of coffee because it wakes him up. While Mitchell is not alone in his craving of caffeine jolt, the coffee he is consuming may have an adverse effect on his health in the long run.
 
Typically, a plain, fresh 8-ounce cup of coffee contains an average of 100 to 115 milligrams of caffeine per cup. According to the Tea Council of America, the average adult can consume about 300 milligrams per day with no evidence of harmful effects. So, more than three cups a day could be damaging to your health.
 
In comparison to coffee, the same size cup of tea contains at least half the amount of caffeine as coffee, with 50 milligrams per cup, and can taste just as good.
 
“I prefer tea over coffee because the herbs taste better than the beans and it’s less sweet,” said Ricky McCarthy, a sophomore business major.
 
Although herbal teas do have a unique flavor and can be soothing, they have virtually no nutritional value. According to Gail Frank, professor of nutrition at Cal State Long Beach and national spokesman for the American Dietetic Association, teas are broken into three categories: black tea, green tea and oolong tea, which all contain the antioxidant, polyphenols. Each tea has an active ingredient that has a health benefit, with green tea being the richest source of catechins, an anti-cancer component.
 
According to the Cancer Research Journal, tea acts as a mechanism that deactivates cancer cells that may be charged in our body from carcinogens we take in on a daily basis. Medical research done among Japanese, who drink high levels of green tea, found reduced rates of stomach cancer and overall health related death rates.
 
So in a society of coffee chains on every corner offering coffee in any way imaginable, can tea make such an impact on American society that coffee has?
According to Kristen Lee, operations manager and certified tea master at Cha for Tea, located at 5720 E. Seventh St., it can.
 
“We use green tea as a base in our blended drinks and in the healthy food we make,” she said. “The blended drinks we make are becoming very popular with all the different flavors and the pearls you can add to any drink.”
 
The pearls Lee is talking about are the little tapioca balls made of sweet potato commonly known as boba. These pearls, a variety of flavored drinks and late hours makes Cha for Tea an up-and-coming competitor to any coffee house.
 
With America emphasizing a healthier nation and specialty tea houses popping up, we may soon see a significant rise in tea purchases and a decrease in health issues.



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