niisonge
Thanks for the interpretation. Plugging the Chinese characters ÄÉÃ׸»ÎøºÚ²è
meaning nano enriched selenium black tea into Google I found this link
a little more informative:
http://tinyurl.com/ybwd4y4
Basically the Chinese arent getting enough selenium in their diet.
Ironically I have a medical condition that benefits from selenium. At
this time of year it comes in the form of Brazil nuts which are so
rich with the mineral the daily allowance is only 3-4 nuts. Anymore
and you risk poisoning.
PS I like how Google comes up with Ottawa Stack from WoDui ;-). I use
the Google translator so much Im starting to understand Chinese more
through the mistranslation than if I go through the grammar myself.
Ive always envied people who understand a second language.
On Dec 12, 7:47 am, niisonge > wrote:
> I just read the other page about nanotechnology processing. They are
> using it with Chinese herbal medicine to increase the effectiveness,
> and even to produce new medicinal effects from herbs by reducing
> particle size the the nano level. This kind of medicine could then be
> formulated into injections, tablet form, etc.
>
> Navigating to the page on types of nano teas, they look like instant
> tea packets And that's exactly what they are. There's oolong tea,
> white tea, yellow tea, red tea, green tea, black tea, puer tea, etc.
> Basically, it's all instant tea that's readily dissolvable in either
> cold or hot water.
>
> I tried to navigate to the page where it says how small the particles
> are, but that didn't open.
>
> But instant tea packets were around long before nanotechnology. So I
> don't know what this tea has to do with that. It could be just some
> kind of marketing gimmick. Whatever the case, I don't think nanotech
> should be used in food.