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Tea (rec.drink.tea) Discussion relating to tea, the world's second most consumed beverage (after water), made by infusing or boiling the leaves of the tea plant (C. sinensis or close relatives) in water.

MAGIC Oolong Tea No. 6



 
 
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  #1 (permalink)  
Old 23-03-2007, 10:28 PM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Harvey Fenwick Lung
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Posts: 6
Default MAGIC Oolong Tea No. 6

Several years ago someone gave me some tea that a Vietnamese fellow
got in an Asian shop in Boston's Chinatown. (Is that Politically
Correct now?)

It was "Golden Child" Magic Oolong Tea Number 6 (Best for Men). It did
have a noticeable stimulating effect (for a man, if you know what I
mean). I've searched the internet for this tea without any success.
I've even asked several Asian folks to look for it if they visit any
similar shops, but nothing yet.

Anyone got a clue where you can buy this brand of tea?

  #2 (permalink)  
Old 23-03-2007, 11:53 PM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Shen[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 402
Default MAGIC Oolong Tea No. 6

On Mar 23, 2:28 pm, Harvey Fenwick Lung wrote:
Several years ago someone gave me some tea that a Vietnamese fellow
got in an Asian shop in Boston's Chinatown. (Is that Politically
Correct now?)

It was "Golden Child" Magic Oolong Tea Number 6 (Best for Men). It did
have a noticeable stimulating effect (for a man, if you know what I
mean). I've searched the internet for this tea without any success.
I've even asked several Asian folks to look for it if they visit any
similar shops, but nothing yet.

Anyone got a clue where you can buy this brand of tea?


Very often oolong w/ginseng is promoted for virility. Often, there may
be damiana in it as well (which can be an aphrodesiac).
Is there ginseng in your tea?
Shen

  #3 (permalink)  
Old 24-03-2007, 12:19 AM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Harvey Fenwick Lung
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 6
Default MAGIC Oolong Tea No. 6

On 23 Mar 2007 16:53:04 -0700, "Shen" wrote:

On Mar 23, 2:28 pm, Harvey Fenwick Lung wrote:
Several years ago someone gave me some tea that a Vietnamese fellow
got in an Asian shop in Boston's Chinatown. (Is that Politically
Correct now?)

It was "Golden Child" Magic Oolong Tea Number 6 (Best for Men). It did
have a noticeable stimulating effect (for a man, if you know what I
mean). I've searched the internet for this tea without any success.
I've even asked several Asian folks to look for it if they visit any
similar shops, but nothing yet.

Anyone got a clue where you can buy this brand of tea?


Very often oolong w/ginseng is promoted for virility. Often, there may
be damiana in it as well (which can be an aphrodesiac).
Is there ginseng in your tea?
Shen


I have a sheet that came with the tea, it describes all of their teas.
Number 6 has some Ginseng among many other ingredients such as Radix
Rehmanniae Praeparata, Fructis Corni,... about 15 total. I don't
think it's the Ginseng, since I can buy that. The tea has a funny
smell, reminds me of mushrooms.
  #4 (permalink)  
Old 24-03-2007, 12:25 AM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Magicleaf
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 93
Default MAGIC Oolong Tea No. 6

Do you like this rare tea for its taste or for its performance, the
reason i ask is that there are many all natural alternatives that are
easier to find that can achieve similar or better results.

  #5 (permalink)  
Old 24-03-2007, 04:53 AM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
SN
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 244
Default MAGIC Oolong Tea No. 6

off-topic here but,
just get some viagra, itll give you more virility than any plant,
by the time you endup finding a plant that works for you, you would've
spent more money than viagra would cost, and wasted important time.

  #6 (permalink)  
Old 24-03-2007, 05:45 AM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
A.G.McDowell
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1
Default MAGIC Oolong Tea No. 6

In article , Harvey Fenwick
Lung writes
Several years ago someone gave me some tea that a Vietnamese fellow
got in an Asian shop in Boston's Chinatown. (Is that Politically
Correct now?)

It was "Golden Child" Magic Oolong Tea Number 6 (Best for Men). It did
have a noticeable stimulating effect (for a man, if you know what I
mean). I've searched the internet for this tea without any success.
I've even asked several Asian folks to look for it if they visit any
similar shops, but nothing yet.

Anyone got a clue where you can buy this brand of tea?

If you look it up, you will see that at least one natural remedy in this
area (cantharidin) is better described as a dangerous irritant poison
with a stimulating side-effect than the reverse. I have never understood
why people will gamble their health on substances that probably haven't
even been properly clinically tested for effectiveness, let alone frills
like assaying to provide a consistent dosage or safety testing. Can you
imagine the FDA collating responses from across the country to produce a
warning for "this little tea that a friend of mine said he got in an
Asian shop in Chinatown"?
--
A.G.McDowell
  #7 (permalink)  
Old 24-03-2007, 10:03 AM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Magicleaf
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 93
Default MAGIC Oolong Tea No. 6

That would be the smart thing to do, you can still swallow the blue
diamond with a nice oolong, kill two birds with one stone

  #8 (permalink)  
Old 24-03-2007, 12:15 PM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Harvey Fenwick Lung
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 6
Default MAGIC Oolong Tea No. 6

On 23 Mar 2007 21:53:24 -0700, "SN" wrote:

off-topic here but,
just get some viagra, itll give you more virility than any plant,
by the time you endup finding a plant that works for you, you would've
spent more money than viagra would cost, and wasted important time.


Don't need that stuff. I found the tea enhances the urge.

  #9 (permalink)  
Old 24-03-2007, 12:19 PM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Harvey Fenwick Lung
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 6
Default MAGIC Oolong Tea No. 6

On 23 Mar 2007 17:25:04 -0700, "magicleaf" wrote:

Do you like this rare tea for its taste or for its performance, the
reason i ask is that there are many all natural alternatives that are
easier to find that can achieve similar or better results.


The tea tastes like regular oolong tea with a hint of different
flavors. I haven't had it for a few years, but I ran into the little
envelope the bags came in( I saved one).

I liked the tea, but drank it once in a while, probably because the
supply was limited.

  #10 (permalink)  
Old 24-03-2007, 02:51 PM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Scott Dorsey
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 442
Default MAGIC Oolong Tea No. 6

It was "Golden Child" Magic Oolong Tea Number 6 (Best for Men). It did
have a noticeable stimulating effect (for a man, if you know what I
mean). I've searched the internet for this tea without any success.
I've even asked several Asian folks to look for it if they visit any
similar shops, but nothing yet.


Does this oolong tea actually contain any oolong tea? That may give you
some notion of how much of those other items are in there.
--scott
--
"C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."
  #12 (permalink)  
Old 24-03-2007, 08:38 PM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Shen[_2_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 402
Default MAGIC Oolong Tea No. 6

On Mar 23, 2:28 pm, Harvey Fenwick Lung wrote:
Several years ago someone gave me some tea that a Vietnamese fellow
got in an Asian shop in Boston's Chinatown. (Is that Politically
Correct now?)

It was "Golden Child" Magic Oolong Tea Number 6 (Best for Men). It did
have a noticeable stimulating effect (for a man, if you know what I
mean). I've searched the internet for this tea without any success.
I've even asked several Asian folks to look for it if they visit any
similar shops, but nothing yet.

Anyone got a clue where you can buy this brand of tea?


It sounds like you are taking an adaption of a classical chinese
medicine formula called "Golden Book Tea" which comes in raw herbs,
patent medicine (tea pills) and sometimes in tea sachets.
This is a formula often used to stimulate libido, treat diarrhea, cold
limbs and extremities, bad digestion and treat infertility and sexual
dysfunction in men. Basically, for kidney yang deficiency and for qi
deficiency. It is a medicinal tea. It contains: rehmannia, diocorea,
cornus fruit, moutan bark, poria ( which is a fungus and smells like
mushrooms), alisma rhizome, cinnamon and aconite bark.
I have seen this tea in Chinese herb stores in both our Chinatowns and
packaged in a yellow, orange, red and blue box (mostly bright orangey-
yellow) with a contented, lounging Chinese gentleman on the box.
In my professional opinion, Americans have way too much access to
Chinese medicine without guidance. Why don't you see a licensed
Acupuncture/herbalist for direction? If this tea has a good deal of
circulation stimulating herbs in it, you can possibly endanger youself
in terms of your cardiac/pulmonary well-being.
Most herbs stores in Chinatowns either have a practitioner on duty or
can refer you. Both the treatment and the perscriptions are very
inexpensive. Raw herbs made into a tea are more palatable to the
American patient.
I am thinking that the oolong is used , in this tea, to disguise the
herbal taste. Rehmannia is a dried fruit with a "pruney" taste. Cornus
is a bitter tuber. Oolong, and other teas, improve circulation by
moderating vascular and arterial plaque and cholesterol.
Please see a practitioner before you continue to take this tea,
ESPECIALLY, if you in the least bit overweight or have blood pressure
or circulation issues. IT IS MEDICINE.
Shen

  #13 (permalink)  
Old 24-03-2007, 09:34 PM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Harvey Fenwick Lung
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 6
Default MAGIC Oolong Tea No. 6



On 24 Mar 2007 13:38:22 -0700, "Shen" wrote:

On Mar 23, 2:28 pm, Harvey Fenwick Lung wrote:
Several years ago someone gave me some tea that a Vietnamese fellow
got in an Asian shop in Boston's Chinatown. (Is that Politically
Correct now?)

It was "Golden Child" Magic Oolong Tea Number 6 (Best for Men). It did
have a noticeable stimulating effect (for a man, if you know what I
mean). I've searched the internet for this tea without any success.
I've even asked several Asian folks to look for it if they visit any
similar shops, but nothing yet.

Anyone got a clue where you can buy this brand of tea?


It sounds like you are taking an adaption of a classical chinese
medicine formula called "Golden Book Tea" which comes in raw herbs,
patent medicine (tea pills) and sometimes in tea sachets.
This is a formula often used to stimulate libido, treat diarrhea, cold
limbs and extremities, bad digestion and treat infertility and sexual
dysfunction in men. Basically, for kidney yang deficiency and for qi
deficiency. It is a medicinal tea. It contains: rehmannia, diocorea,
cornus fruit, moutan bark, poria ( which is a fungus and smells like
mushrooms), alisma rhizome, cinnamon and aconite bark.
I have seen this tea in Chinese herb stores in both our Chinatowns and
packaged in a yellow, orange, red and blue box (mostly bright orangey-
yellow) with a contented, lounging Chinese gentleman on the box.
In my professional opinion, Americans have way too much access to
Chinese medicine without guidance. Why don't you see a licensed
Acupuncture/herbalist for direction? If this tea has a good deal of
circulation stimulating herbs in it, you can possibly endanger youself
in terms of your cardiac/pulmonary well-being.
Most herbs stores in Chinatowns either have a practitioner on duty or
can refer you. Both the treatment and the perscriptions are very
inexpensive. Raw herbs made into a tea are more palatable to the
American patient.
I am thinking that the oolong is used , in this tea, to disguise the
herbal taste. Rehmannia is a dried fruit with a "pruney" taste. Cornus
is a bitter tuber. Oolong, and other teas, improve circulation by
moderating vascular and arterial plaque and cholesterol.
Please see a practitioner before you continue to take this tea,
ESPECIALLY, if you in the least bit overweight or have blood pressure
or circulation issues. IT IS MEDICINE.
Shen



Well, I am not taking it since I don't have any right now.

 




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