does a cup of tea count as water
MsCristie
Posts: 27 Member
Does my 8 ounce cup of tea count as 8 ounces of water? Or in addition to my tea do I need to drink the water. I know water alone is better, I was just wondering. Thank you
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Replies
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I drink herbal tea with a few drops of liquid stevia as sweetner and I count it towards my water amount. I would think it'd be a personal preference sort of thing.0
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Any fluid counts as fluid, including fluid in fruit, vegetables, fish, meat etc.
Our bodies are clever enough to recognise that, the whole 'it must be water and only water to count as fluid' thing is utter nonsense.0 -
What do you think, OP? Does the addition of the tea to the water change the chemical compound such that your body cannot utilize the water?0
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It counts as water. It may have some small caloric impact (probably less than 5 calories unless you're adding milk or sugar) which you may find it worthwhile to track. There's nothing particularly magical about water relative to other methods of maintaining hydration.0
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Just stay hydrated and don't obsess about ridiculous things.0
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a cup of tea is acup of tea- w hich as 0 calories
its made with water and has alot
BUT NO0 -
Don't know if it matters or not. But in any case I do try to drink at least 64 ounce of pure water a day and stay away from sodas. I have one every now and then but no more than one in a day. I find the more water I drink, the more I crave it. Getting my 64 ounces a day in is no longer a hassle. I'm even going to the restroom less often now that my body is used to it.0
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The common wisdom is not to count caffeinated beverages but that it's OK to count non-caffeinated beverages because caffeine is a diuretic.
However, more recent evidence suggests this is true only at very high doses (the equivalent of 5-7 cups of coffee a day) http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/caffeinated-drinks/AN016610 -
does it have water in it?0
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Thank you all, I appreciate you answering my question. I felt that it counts but had someone else tell me it doesn't so I thought I'd ask.0
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What do you think, OP? Does the addition of the tea to the water change the chemical compound such that your body cannot utilize the water?
This.0 -
Yes it is .0
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What do you think, OP? Does the addition of the tea to the water change the chemical compound such that your body cannot utilize the water?
THIS0 -
a cup of tea is acup of tea- w hich as 0 calories
its made with water and has alot
BUT NO
Why? If I ate the tea leaves then drank the water they'd still mix in my stomach but by your logic it would count as water.
If you use the logic you're stating, only water drank on a completely empty stomach classes as water otherwise it's mixing with food.0 -
Thank you all, I appreciate you answering my question. I felt that it counts but had someone else tell me it doesn't so I thought I'd ask.
Yeah, there is a common misconception that gets perpetuated that water that has caffeine in it does not count, but that is not supported by the scientific evidence or the common logic of it (when you break it down and think about it).0 -
I count it0
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At school we were told that your body gets most of the water it needs from food (60? perhaps? not sure though) and the rest from drinks. By this, then it would count as water. It all gets muddled in your stomach anyway!
I tend not to count it as personal preference because I drink too much. Today I've had 2.5litres water as well as 10 cups of tea and will probably have a few more before bed (eek).0 -
It takes your body longer to breakdown the water from any type of mixed drink but eventually water is the result and therefore counts. Caffeine will reduce hydration and will not provide as much water for use by your body as water or beverages without caffeine. Don't know of any research that tries to guess the difference but every doctor will warn against drinking too much caffeine.
Yes it counts but isn't as fast or good for your body as plain water.
Please use regular or tap water or a filter, we have WAY more plastic pollution than any one can imagine and while some plastics are recyclable, they have limited cycles unlike glass or aluminum.0 -
Your body uses it as water so why not count it?0
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