Teawaves
Description: Experience a harmonious blend of crisp apples and tangy pineapples in our Apple Pineapple Tea. This delightful infusion combines the natural sweetness of apples with the tropical zest of pineapples, creating a refreshing and invigorating tea that will transport your taste buds to a sunny paradise. Fun for kids too!
Tropical Fruit Fusion: Our Apple Pineapple Tea is a tantalizing fusion of two beloved fruits. The juicy sweetness of apples perfectly complements the tangy and vibrant flavor of pineapples, resulting in a symphony of tropical delight. With each sip, you'll experience a burst of refreshing fruitiness that invigorates your senses and leaves you longing for more.
Nutritive: Red dates are packed with essential vitamins and minerals, including vitamin C, vitamin A, vitamin B6, potassium, iron, and magnesium. Apples and pineapples, also provide vitamins, minerals, fiber, and enzymes in each cup beneficial for inflammation and gut health.
Hot brew: 1 bag - 8oz water - 210°F - 4 minutes Cold brew: 1 tbsp - 8oz water - refrigerator - 7 hours
Product information
F.A.Q.
Do you offer free shipping?
FREE U.S. SHIPPING OVER $50 | INTERNATIONAL OVER $200
How should I store my tea?
Our packaging is suitable to storing tea for extended periods of time so long as you reseal the packaging as airtight as you can, keep it in a room temperature and reasonably dry place away from light. If you do plan to transfer the tea to a different container, keep it mind that not only should it be airtight, but also keep out light. Thus avoid any glass or plastic that is transparent.
How long does tea stay fresh?
The tea that teawaves offers will stay fresh for up to eighteen months with the exception of the white tea whose flavor will enhance with age.
Where does your tea come from?
All of our tea comes from five tea gardens primarily in Fujian, China where our co-founder Joey is from and has familial ties and we can trust the tea growers and tea makers.
How does caffeine content vary between types of tea?
All tea that comes from the tea plant does have caffeine
that affects people’s bodies in different ways. No matter the tea, though, one
of the most important things we can stress is that the caffeine in tea is
different from the caffeine in coffee! With that being said, as a general
rule—caffeine is more potent in more oxidized teas (black tea), less potent in non-oxidized or hardly oxidized teas (green tea, white tea) and falls in the
middle with partially oxidized tea (oolong tea).