Instead of discarding used tea bags, put their acidity, tannins, paper fibers, and dried plant material to good use around ...
Tea bags, even once already steeped for a hot brew, have a lot of use left in them still. Here's how you can use them around ...
The average tea drinker in the U.K. goes through about four bags a day -- that's nearly 1,500 tea bags tossed in the trash each year. No wonder so many people wonder whether those bags can be ...
Be it dark circles or puffiness, using tea bags for eyes is a scientifically proven method to give you instant relief. The chemicals present in caffeinated as well as herbal tea bags help in ...
Some perennial veggies provide natural fertilizer for themselves and nearby plant life. The same goes for herbs. Old and used tea bags provide nitrogen, tannic acid, and other components that help ...
Everyday use of plastics in the kitchen releases microplastics into food and beverages, but there are practical solutions.
Some tea bags release billions of tiny plastic particles when immersed in hot water, creating tea that can harm your health and increase your risk of cancer—but not all tea is equally as dangerous.
I never realized it as a kid, but drinking tea was a ritual in my family. We drank a variety of teas, each made in its own precise way. Every tea has an optimal steep time and ideal water temperature, ...
Researchers at Oregon’s South Slough National Estuarine Research Reserve are importing teabags from the UK, but they’re not using it to brew a cup of tea in between studies. These tea bags are being ...