Chinese Paper
Posted in Folk Art and Primitives on 06/02/2009 06:53 am by adminChinese Paper
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Helen's Asian Kitchen Parchment Steamer Liners, Pack of 20 Sale Price: $4.25 Average Rating: ![]() |
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Use these parchment rounds to line the bottom of your bamboo or metal steamer to prevent your dumplings, breads and dim sum from sticking to the surface. The parchment rounds measure 9.5" diameter and are perforated so steam can circulate throughout the Offered by Helen's Asian Kitchen, these parchment steamers are a smart kitchen item that simultaneously improves cooking results and speeds cleanup. Designed to work with bamboo or metal steamers, the liners keep doughy items like dumplings from sticking to the sides of the steamer. They are heat-resistant and include perforations so steam circulation is uninhibited. Packaged here in a set of 20, the liners can also be layered in larger steamers and used for reheating. --Emily Bedard |
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8 Assorted (DIFFERENT) Color Chinese/Japanese Paper Lanterns/Lamps 12" Diameter - Just Artifacts Brand Sale Price: $9.98 Average Rating: ![]() |
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Great for party and home decoration. Some color lanterns in the picture may not be available. Contact us for the availability of the colors. To choose colors/sizes by yourself, check out other Just Artifacts products. |
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Multicolor Paper Lantern String Lights (set of 10) Sale Price: $7.50 Average Rating: ![]() |
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MULTICOLOR PAPER LANTERN PARTY STRING LIGHTS. INDOOR USE ONLY. |
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Japanese Chinese Hanging Paper Lantern Cherry Blossom Sale Price: $3.80 Average Rating: ![]() |
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This lanterns include 10 pieces of Paper Lanterns + 10 Pieces of 12v bulb lamps. Brand New Each Lantern about 3.5" diameter Whole Length about 15'. This traditional Japanese Hanging Lantern are Great item for Decorating Home. |
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Chinese Japanese Paper Lantern 16"D Sakura Sale Price: $2.10 Average Rating: ![]() |
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16"D paper lantern with plum blossom design. |
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Chinese Culture: Chinese Paper-cuts / Chinese Kites List Price: $19.75 Sale Price: $15.75 |
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Language: Chinese with English and Simplified Chinese subtitles. Chinese Paper-cuts shows you the history and development of Chinese Paper-cuts. All those pieces of paper-cut patterns in this documentary reveal to you the ingenuity, emotion and psychology on the part of Chinese female. Chinese paper-cuts are originally created by Chinese people. In 2002, UNESCO acknowledged Chinese paper-cuts to be World Cultural Heritage. Chinese Kites shows you how Chinese kites come into being. By revealing the differences of kites in Nan Tong, Beijing and Wei Fang and the workmanship of the kites, this documentary will help you get to knowmore about historical literary quotation about Chinese kites and variety of Chinese kites in the south and north of China respectively. All Titles in the Chinese Culture Series Chinese Culture: Chinese Embroidery / Chinese Silk Chinese Culture: Chinese Folk Music / Chinese Folk Songs Chinese Culture: Chinese Cheongsams / Costumes of Ethnic Minority Groups in China / Chinese Imperial Costume Chinese Culture: Chinese Dance / Chinese Nuo Dance / Chinese Yangge Dance Chinese Culture: Chinese Cuisine / Chinese Tea Chinese Culture: Chinese Garden / Chinese Sculpture Chinese Culture: The Chinese Acrobatics / Chinese Lion Dance Chinese Culture: Chinese Puppet / Chinese Leather Silhouette Show Chinese Culture: Chinese Figures / Chinese Pottery and Porcelain Chinese Culture: Chinese Paper-cuts / Chinese Kites |
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A Galaxy of Chinese Paper-Cuts List Price: $14.99 Sale Price: $14.99 |
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In the vast rural areas of China, paper-cuts are one of the most popular forms of art by which people express their festive feelings and pray for happiness. In the agricultural society, men in the self-contained and self-sufficient families are usually engaged in farming while women in housekeeping. During housework chores such as cooking and making clothes, women use scissors for daily housekeeping and for expressing honest wishes as well. From Shaanxi, Jilin and Shandong provinces in the North to Guizhou Province and Yangzhou City in the South, paper-cuts, bold and unconstrained or fine and delicate, can been seen all over the country. As an amalgamation of folk customs handed down from one generation to the next, paper-cuts are considered as a living fossil of national culture.This product is manufactured on demand using DVD-R recordable media. Amazon.com's standard return policy will apply. |
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Battery Powered LED Light - White Sale Price: $4.95 Average Rating: ![]() |
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Light your Paper Lanterns with this super-bright battery operated led light! Light any paper lantern with this battery operated led light. |
Chinese Tea Comes in Many Forms
You will learn many things about tea as you read this article. One of the things you will learn is that there are several ways to buy Chinese tea. You can buy tea from a tea shop (there are shops all over the country these days); you can purchase tea over
the Internet; and you can buy tea in grocery stores, convenience stores, and even
pharmacies.
That’s not to mention every place you can get tea already brewed for you. Every dining establishment, from a five-star restaurant to a roadside diner and even the ubiquitous coffee shop, serves tea, both hot and cold. When you are buying Chinese tea to brew at home, you can get it in two forms: loose leaf tea or tea bags.
You are probably most familiar with tea bags. This is known as commercial grade tea, and it is made of dust and fannings, the by products of the tea-making process. Dust is the tiniest particles of tea, and fannings are broken tea leaves one grade larger than dust. Here’s the first thing you need to know about tea bags: You get the same health and weight-loss benefits from tea whether you brew it from dried loose tea leaves or from a paper tea bag, as long as it is white, green, oolong, or black tea. The second thing you need to know is that a paper tea bag is meant to be used only once (you will understand why that is important as you read on in this chapter). The flavor you get from a tea bag may not be as rich as the flavor from loose leaf teas, but the only way you will know which you like best is to do a taste test.
Loose leaf tea is just what it sounds like: tea that comes not in a bag, but as
full or cut tea leaves. These are leaves and buds that are harvested and processed
as explained above, and usually sold by weight. Because you are getting
more surface area from loose tea than you get from dust and fannings, you
usually get a richer flavor.
Oolong tea
The Oolong tea protects the heart by helping to lower blood pressure. Hypertension, or high blood pressure, is the most common form of heart disease, and is a major risk factor for heart-related death. A study of Chinese tea drinkers published in 2004 showed that drinking as little as a half-cup of green or oolong tea per day may lower the risk of high blood pressure by nearly 50 percent.
Researchers found that men and women who drank tea on a daily basis for at least a year were much less likely to develop hypertension than those who didn’t, and the more tea they drank, the bigger the benefits. Those who drank at least a half-cup of moderate strength green or oolong tea per day for a year had a 46-percent lower risk of developing hypertension than those who didn’t drink tea. Among those who drank more than two and a half cups of tea per day, the risk of high blood pressure was reduced by 65 percent.The evidence that tea helps prevent cancer is overwhelming.
Since the 1990s, hundreds of studies have been performed showing that Oolong tea can inhibit the formation of tumors, and slow the growth of those already formed. In 1997, researchers at the University of Kansas discovered that the antioxidant power of EGCG is about 100 times greater than vitamin C and twenty-five times greater than vitamin E in protecting DNA from the kind of free radical damage that is thought to increase the risk of cancer. Researchers also found that EGCG is able to signal cancer cells to stop reproducing by promoting apoptosis, a normal cellular process leading to the death of a cell—without harming any healthy cells. One study out of Purdue University in 1998 found that an enzyme called quinol oxidase, or NOX, is necessary for the growth of both normal and cancerous cells. The overactive form of NOX is known as tNOX, for tumor-associated NOX. In test tubes, using purified NOX protein solutions, researchers found that low doses of EGCG—such as those that could be consumed by drinking several cups of tea a day—were capable of inhibiting the activity of the tNOX cells but did not inhibit the NOX activity of healthy cells.
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Chinese tea - Drink Oolong tea for a healthy life
Article Source: ArticlesBase.com - The Metabolics Of Chinese Tea












