Non-Caffeine Fruit Teas
Fruit
teas are hot beverages that contain real fruit juice alone or infuse
the sweetness of exotic fruits with earthy teas, herbs and spices. While
some types contain real tea leaves, you can enjoy herbal or
noncaffeinated fruit teas at any time of the day, without worrying that
the caffeine will keep you awake at night. Fruit teas offer an
alternative to real teas or coffee, and you have a cornucopia of fruit
essences to choose from.
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If you enjoy a
hot cup of raspberry- or apple-infused tea, you're sipping your way to
better health. Like the fresh fruit they are made from, fruit teas
contain a variety of minerals, vitamins and antioxidants. Additionally,
drinking fruit teas that do not have added caffeine-containing teas is
good for your bones. According to a study published in the "European
Journal of Nutrition," a cup of very strong-brewed tea, which contains
about 45 milligrams of caffeine, can cause 2 to 3 milligrams of calcium
to leach from your body.
Pure Fruit Teas
Pure fruit teas
are made from infusions of flavors from the juice of fresh fruit such as
apple, cherry, raspberry, blackcurrant, blueberry, orange, strawberry
and peach. Pure fruit teas are technically not teas; they are infusions
of fruit extract or juice, also known as tisanes, You can make your own
pure fruit tea by using concentrated fruit juice or steeping fresh fruit
in hot water. The Harvard School of Public Health, however, advises
that fruit juice is high in natural sugars and should be consumed in
moderation. Although fruit teas are watered down, they still contain
fruit sugars.
Make Yours Decaf
Fruit teas may
also contain a medley of dried fruit extract, herbs and tea leaves. Any
type of tea leaves in these combinations will add caffeine; choose
decaffeinated varieties to get the flavor and texture of true tea
without the caffeine. These teas include varieties such as Earl Grey,
green tea, black tea and oolong tea, but they are processed to remove
caffeine. Fruit-infused teas include bergamot or citrus-flavored Earl
Grey tea and blackcurrant black tea and apple-flavored green tea.
Go Herbal
Most true herbal
teas do not contain caffeine, making them safe for pregnant and
breast-feeding women. The American Pregnancy Association notes that
herbal teas contain the roots, flowers, berries, seeds and leaves from a
variety of herbal plants. They do not contain actual tea leaves, making
them caffeine-free. The fruit flavor in herbal teas comes from added
fruit juices extracts or dried berries and peel. Check the ingredients
on your fruit tea to ensure that it does not contain any type of real
tea or yerba mate, which is made from the holly leaf and does contain
caffeine.
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