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  2. Jasmine tea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jasmine_tea

    Jasmine tea is the local tea beverage of Fuzhou, while jasmine flowers are its municipal flower. Jasmine has symbolic meanings in the Chinese culture. For example, the crown of the Buddhist in the Ajanta wall paintings, a world heritage site, is decorated by golden jasmine flowers. The fragrance of jasmines is thought to be of heaven.

  3. Bergenia crassifolia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bergenia_crassifolia

    The leaves are winter hardy in warmer climates and change colour in the range of rust brown to brown-red. The rhizome is creeping, fleshy, thick, reaching several meters in length and 3.5 cm in diameter, with numerous root lobes, highly branched, located near the soil surface, turning into a powerful vertical root. The stem is thick, leafless ...

  4. Jasminum officinale - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jasminum_officinale

    Jasminum officinale. L. Floral wreath of jasmine representing the shield of Pakistan. Jasminum officinale, known as the common jasmine or simply jasmine, is a species of flowering plant in the olive family Oleaceae. It is native to the Caucasus and parts of Asia, also widely naturalized. It is also known as summer jasmine, [1] poet's jasmine ...

  5. List of plants used in herbalism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_plants_used_in...

    The boiled juice or a tea made from the leaves or the whole plant is taken to relieve fever and other symptoms. It is also used for dysentery, pain, and liver disorders. [143] A tea of the leaves is taken to help control diabetes in Peru and other areas. [144] Laboratory tests indicate that the plant has anti-inflammatory properties. [145 ...

  6. Vietnamese tea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vietnamese_tea

    Trà sâm dứa is a Central Vietnam delicacy, made from a herbal mix of green tea, jasmine, Aglaia duperreana flower, basil and pandan leaves. Trà atiso (artichoke tea) this is a herbal tea made from the leaves, root, stalk, and flower of the artichoke plant. The tea is a specialty of the Lam-Dong highland region, where an abundance of ...

  7. Health effects of tea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_effects_of_tea

    All tea leaves contain fluoride; however, mature leaves contain as much as 10 to 20 times the fluoride levels of young leaves from the same plant. [9] [10]The fluoride content of a tea leaf depends on the leaf picking method used and the fluoride content of the soil from which it has been grown; tea plants absorb this element at a greater rate than other plants.

  8. Herbal medicine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbal_medicine

    Leaves of Eucalyptus olida being packed into a steam distillation unit to gather its essential oil. There are many forms in which herbs can be administered, the most common of which is a liquid consumed as a herbal tea or a (possibly diluted) plant extract. [25]

  9. Herbal tea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbal_tea

    Kratom tea made from the dried leaves of the kratom tree. It has opioid-like properties and some stimulant-like effects. [14] [15] St. John's wort tea, the plant has been shown to have antidepressant properties according to a 2017 meta-analysis. [16] Ephedra tea, mainly from the plant Ephedra sinica. [17] It contains the stimulant ephedrine.