Pat wrote:
EvelynVogtGamble wrote:
"UNDYED"??????? *I've never encountered tea that was not the color
nature MADE it! *("Green" tea is simply picked sooner, I think -
although there may be a drying process involved for what I consider
"normal" tea, like Oolong and English Breakfast.)
Yes, undyed.... Most "regular" tea like Lipton's has been treated with
dye - in fact lots of people use it to dye fabric - which is why it
leaves a bad stain on anything where it's been spilled. You can't do
this with undyed tea.
I've always suspected that of Thai iced tea, which turns the water a
vivid rusty red. (God only knows what I'm putting in my body when I drink
it, but I love the flavor.) But I had no idea that other tea was dyed.
Why on earth would anyone dye tea to begin with? Because customers want
their tea to have a pretty color? But if nobody had ever dyed tea to begin
with, it probably wouldn't even occur to anyone that tea should have any
other color. Potatoes have a boring color, after all, but I haven't heard
anyone suggest that they should be dyed.
Joyce
--
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