What makes mint and herbs different in the cup
The cooling sensation in peppermint tea is not temperature, it's chemistry. Menthol, the primary active compound in Mentha piperita, activates the cold-sensitive receptors on the tongue and palate without actually lowering the temperature of the liquid. It's the same mechanism as menthol in a balm or a cold inhaler: a physical sensation that arrives immediately and is difficult to ignore. Spearmint takes a gentler approach: lower in menthol, higher in carvone, which gives it the slightly sweeter, greener character that distinguishes it from peppermint's sharper edge.
Moroccan Mint is something else again. Moroccan mint is a specific variety of spearmint, known for its particularly clean, mild, and sweet character — lighter and less aggressive than standard peppermint, with a soft, lingering finish rather than a sharp menthol edge. The name alone carries centuries of North African tradition, where mint tea is less a drink and more a gesture of welcome. T2's Moroccan Mint captures that same spirit: a pure herbal blend of dehydrated spearmint leaves, no tea base, naturally caffeine-free, and as clean on the palate as the tradition it draws from.
Herbaceous blends is where the collection moves from sharp to earthy. Liquorice Legs brings the deep, naturally sweet root alongside mint. Tummy Tea layers herbaceous botanicals around a digestive occasion. The Quiet Mind and Detox weave chamomile, nettle, and other herbs into blends that are slower and more grounding than straight mint.
FAQ
What is the difference between peppermint and spearmint?
Peppermint (Mentha piperita) is a natural hybrid of watermint and spearmint, and contains significantly more menthol than spearmint. It's sharper, cooler, and more immediately assertive. Spearmint (Mentha spicata) has a lighter menthol content and higher levels of carvone, which gives it a sweeter, greener character. In blends, spearmint tends to round what peppermint sharpens. Just Peppermint uses pure peppermint for the full, uncompromised menthol experience; Mint Mix and Moroccan Mint both lean on spearmint for a gentler expression.
What gives peppermint tea its cooling sensation?
The cooling effect of peppermint comes from menthol, a naturally occurring compound in the Mentha piperita plant. Menthol activates the TRPM8 receptor on the tongue and throat, the same receptor that responds to cold temperatures, creating the sensation of coolness without any actual drop in temperature. It's the same mechanism used in mentholated balms and cold remedies. Peppermint tea produces this effect purely through the plant compound, with no additives.
Is peppermint tea caffeinated?
No. Pure peppermint is a herbal tisane, made from the peppermint plant with no tea base, and is naturally caffeine-free. The same applies to all of the herbaceous blends in this collection, including Tummy Tea, Liquorice Legs, and Mint Mix.