Best of Health Tea
Teacrafted herbal pu-erh and oolong teas from Cascadia mountains! Made for a tea ceremony or a simple morning cup of tea.
Wild-foraged & hand-made in Seattle, WA.
'Till next year, TeaFestPDX, and thanks for all the fish!
It was our first time!
Best of Health! Tea is a Seattle tea company that wild-forages every plant by hand in the mountains of Washington State, then crafts the leaves into authentic pu'erh- and oolong-style teas using traditional Chinese and Taiwanese tea-making methods.
Our teas don't contain a single leaf of Camellia sinensis (the tea plant), so they're naturally caffeine-free. Instead, we create True Herbal Pu'erhs and True Herbal Oolongs from wild local plants.
Think of it like making Peking duck... using chicken. 🙃 The same traditional techniques, but with an entirely different ingredient.
Local. Wild-foraged. Organic. Handcrafted - from every leaf to every package.
Licking a 9-volt battery...
Lately, at tea festivals around the Pacific Northwest, I've been trying to describe the tongue-tingling sensation of the wild-foraged Sichuan pepper in our True Herbal Aged Fireweed GABA Sheng pu'erh-style tea cakes we make.
My go-to comparison? - "It's like licking a 9-volt battery."
Only then did I realize that, growing up in the former USSR, I had simply assumed licking a 9-volt battery (you know, the kind from a smoke alarm) was a nearly universal childhood experience.
Apparently... it wasn't.
Wait... what were you all doing as kids?!
Did you never "borrow" carbide from construction sites, toss it into puddles, and watch it bubble away while making flammable gas?
Did you never crack open an old car battery, melt the lead over a campfire, and cast little fishing sinkers, soldiers, or random trinkets?
Apparently my childhood wasn't "normal" - it was just... educational.
So what's the weirdest, most questionable thing you did as a kid that would make today's parents have a heart attack?
06/26/2026
🍊 A Little Orange. A Big Surprise.
At first glance, it looks like nothing more than a tiny dried orange, only about 1½ - 2 inches across, as though someone captured a bit of summer sunshine and preserved it for another day. Bring it to your nose, and you'll discover the aroma of sweet citrus and fresh honeycomb.
Now here's the fun part...
If I handed it to you and asked what was inside, chances are you would never guess.
Inside is a GABA tea, crafted using the traditional processing methods of young (sheng) pu'erh - except it isn't made from the tea plant at all.
That's right.
No Camellia sinensis.
No caffeine.
Meet the Tea Orange.
Tea oranges have been enjoyed in southern China for generations. Traditionally, a small fresh orange is hollowed out, temporarily filled with rice to help it keep its shape while drying, then the rice is removed and the dried shell is filled with tea.
We decided to take that tradition one step further.
Instead of drying an empty orange shell first, we place our Himalayan blackberry tea inside while the peel is still fresh. As the orange slowly dries, the peel naturally contracts around the tea, gently compressing it. For weeks, the tea and citrus peel mature together, exchanging aromas until they become something neither could have become alone.
But the tea itself has quite a story.
Instead of tea leaves, we wildforage the tender spring shoots of wild Himalayan blackberry from the mountains of Washington State in the Pacific Northwest. Here, Himalayan blackberry is an aggressive invasive species. Rather than seeing it as a problem, we see an opportunity to transform an abundant local plant into something beautiful.
The young shoots are processed through all of the same steps used to produce traditional Chinese sheng pu'erh. Those techniques naturally develop the tannin structure and polyphenol complexity that give the infusion a remarkably authentic tea character - despite containing no tea leaves and absolutely no caffeine.
The tea then undergoes an anaerobic finishing process that naturally creates its GABA content.
GABA (gamma-aminobutyric acid) is a compound naturally found in the human nervous system and is associated with relaxation and a sense of calm. GABA teas have become popular among tea lovers who enjoy their gentle, grounding character without relying on caffeine.
Blackberries themselves have been appreciated for centuries. All members of the Rubus - the raspberry family (blackberry being one of them) are naturally rich in anthocyanins, polyphenols, fiber, ellagic acid, vitamins, and minerals. Modern research continues to explore their potential roles in supporting cardiovascular health, healthy blood sugar regulation, gut health, and reducing oxidative stress. And, of course, all the members of the raspberry family are also renowned for their women's health benefits!
Yet perhaps the most fascinating part is this:
It still drinks like tea.
Most experienced tea drinkers immediately recognize that something is unusual, yet very few realize they aren't drinking Camellia sinensis. It feels every bit as structured and refined as a carefully crafted tea rather than a typical herbal infusion.
The flavor unfolds gradually:
🍊 Bright citrus.
🍯 Soft honey sweetness.
🌿 Deep woody and floral notes with a delicate custard-like finish.
The liquor begins as a pale golden infusion before gradually deepening into a rich amber with subtle green highlights over successive infusions.
The body is clean, elegant, and beautifully structured, finishing with lingering honey notes that invite another sip.
Even the orange itself becomes part of the experience. Rather than serving as simple packaging, it slowly shapes the tea during drying, becoming an inseparable part of the finished creation.
How do you brew it?
Gong Fu (pour-through) style
Each Tea Orange contains approximately 0.53 oz of tea, enough for an exceptionally long Gong Fu session. Brew the whole orange for an afternoon of exploration, or break it apart and enjoy several separate sessions.
Use freshly boiling water (212°F). This tea loves heat. Begin with short infusions and gradually lengthen each steep as the flavors evolve from bright citrus to honey sweetness and finally to rich woody-floral complexity.
Everyday brewing
One Tea Orange can produce well over 2½ gallons of delicious tea.
Simply break off a portion (about 0.1 oz per quart of water) into your favorite thermos or teapot, pour in freshly boiling water, and enjoy throughout the day.
Some of our customers have even discovered an unexpected bonus: after brewing, both the softened orange peel and the tea inside are completely edible. Several have even told us their children enjoy eating them as a pleasantly citrusy treat.
Sometimes the most extraordinary teas are the ones that quietly challenge our assumptions about what tea can be.
At Best of Health Tea Company of Seattle, we believe tea is more than a single plant. It is a craft, a tradition, and an invitation to slow down, be fully present, and discover something entirely new.
If you've ever wondered whether there are still completely unexplored frontiers in the world of tea, perhaps this little orange is where your next journey begins.
06/11/2026
Just that:
Linden. Tilia cordata. But the way you have never experienced it...at the portland tea Festival this June 27th, perhaps?
Who knows... (spoiler: we do, at the Best of Health Tea Company of Seattle!)
05/26/2026
A unique photo of the iconic Seattle landmark taken from a drone in a run-up to the 3rd annual Eugene Tea Festival!
Over 65 vendors, hundreds of teas - one day only - May 31st!
05/09/2026
"20+", Eugene Tea Festival?
Just our booth alone will have at least 35 different unique teas manufactured right here, in Washington State! 🤣
Come one, come all - you will not be disappointed: the Eugene Tea Festival is becoming one of the largest in the PNW! 67 vendors this year!
The perfect tea cup to sample over 100+ teas at the Eugene Tea Festival! Limited availability, secure your cup now through pre-registration or purchase a cup day-of (while supplies last). 🍵🫖
If by chance tomorrow (May 3rd), between 10:00 and 16:00, you feel inclined to finally discover what kind of teas I create (over 35 kinds), then you are most welcome to stop by - and bring friends or acquaintances - the Spring Craft Fair at the_LuckyPen in Redmond: https://maps.app.goo.gl/KHCZbETkurZPyxc56
For the Day of thy Mother draweth nigh (May 10), and behold, the pale horse is made ready, and the rider hath set his foot in the stirrup; and that which cometh cannot be turned aside... yet deliverance remaineth still possible - if ye find for her a gift with us!
Join us to celebrate Earth Day and honor the 40th "anniversary" of the Chernobyl Disaster.
Come to our community clean-up this Sunday, April 26th in Redmond.
Meetup at the Redmond Value Village at 10:50am
by Bear Creek Trail and the location from 11:00am to 2 pm is the Sammamish River Trail.
Gloves, bags, tools, water will be provided, butdo not forget your hat for the sun.
Let's clean up, connect, and do something good for the
planet together. Bring friends, family, and good vibes!
It's is a real pity to see art thrown away. So we're going to make our signature origami-style packaging for our hand-made real herbal pu'erh teas by re-purposing these donated unwanted works of art!
We said it before, and we'll say it again: our teas are not a purchase - they are an investment!
Not only does pu'erh-style tea only gets better and more valuable withtime, but you get an original art work as a free bonus! 😍
Our next appearance is on May 3rd in Redmond, WA's "The Lucky Pen" the_luckypen (google maps has it) at the Spring Craft Fair where many local talented artists will present their works and crafts.
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