Colección: Té de Ceilán
Savor pure Sri Lankan Ceylon tea — bright, fragrant, and crafted with care.
Whether loose‑leaf or bagged, each variety delivers authentic taste and smooth character, ideal for daily brewing or special tea moments.
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Té de puntas de plata
4.94 / 5.0
(16) 16 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $47.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $47.00 USD -
Té de punta dorada
5.0 / 5.0
(7) 7 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $57.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $57.00 USD -
Bolsitas de té puro de canela de Ceilán
4.86 / 5.0
(70) 70 reseñas totales
Precio habitual A partir de $28.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta A partir de $28.00 USD -
Bolsas de té de canela y té negro de Ceilán
4.55 / 5.0
(22) 22 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $28.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $28.00 USD -
Bolsas de té de canela y té verde de Ceilán
4.59 / 5.0
(29) 29 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $29.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $29.00 USD -
Té samahan
4.96 / 5.0
(205) 205 reseñas totales
Precio habitual A partir de $39.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta A partir de $39.00 USD -
Té de masala chai
4.83 / 5.0
(6) 6 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $55.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $55.00 USD -
Dimbula Broken Orange Pekoe Té
5.0 / 5.0
(10) 10 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $44.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $44.00 USD -
Té verde de pólvora
5.0 / 5.0
(4) 4 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $59.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $59.00 USD -
Té de canela de Ceilán
4.83 / 5.0
(6) 6 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $32.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $32.00 USD -
AgotadoBolsas de té GOTU KOLA
4.86 / 5.0
(7) 7 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $39.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $39.00 USDAgotado -
Bolsas de té oolong
4.57 / 5.0
(7) 7 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $39.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $39.00 USD -
Té de Paspanguwa
4.33 / 5.0
(3) 3 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $34.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $34.00 USD -
Té joven hyson
5.0 / 5.0
(7) 7 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $44.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $44.00 USD -
Bolsas de té de hierba de limón
4.0 / 5.0
(1) 1 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $44.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $44.00 USD -
Té de Pekoe de Dimbula Orange
5.0 / 5.0
(3) 3 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $44.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $44.00 USD -
Bolsas de té de punta dorada
5.0 / 5.0
(7) 7 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $54.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $54.00 USD -
Té de vainilla
4.5 / 5.0
(4) 4 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $32.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $32.00 USD -
Té verde sencha
5.0 / 5.0
(1) 1 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $42.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $42.00 USD -
Earl Grey Tea
5.0 / 5.0
(8) 8 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $40.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $40.00 USD -
Té de cardamomo
4.5 / 5.0
(2) 2 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $32.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $32.00 USD -
Polvo de moringa
5.0 / 5.0
(4) 4 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $44.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $44.00 USD -
Té de rizos de dimbula
5.0 / 5.0
(3) 3 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $28.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $28.00 USD -
Té de Canela y Jengibre x 40 Bolsitas
5.0 / 5.0
(1) 1 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $27.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $27.00 USD -
Té de Canela y Cúrcuma en Bolsitas x 40
5.0 / 5.0
(1) 1 reseñas totales
Precio habitual $27.00 USDPrecio habitualPrecio de oferta $27.00 USD
Saborea el té puro de Ceilán de Sri Lanka: brillante, fragante y elaborado con cuidado.
Ya sea en hojas sueltas o en bolsas, cada variedad ofrece un sabor auténtico y un carácter suave, ideal para la preparación diaria o para momentos especiales del té.
Té Dimbula Orange Pekoe: té negro clásico, calidad cultivada en la finca
El té Dimbula Orange Pekoe te trae hojas cultivadas en las frescas tierras altas de Sri Lanka. El resultado es una bebida limpia y con mucho cuerpo, con un licor cobrizo brillante, un aroma floral y cítrico y un final refrescante.
Queda perfecto solo o con un chorrito de leche. Con cada sorbo, obtienes té de Ceilán de primera calidad, ideal para las mañanas o en cualquier momento en el que desees una experiencia tradicional de té negro.
Té negro de Ceilán (hojas sueltas) – Cuerpo rico & Sabor robusto
El té negro de Ceilán de hojas sueltas ofrece una infusión profunda y enérgica con un rico color ámbar. Su sabor fuerte pero suave combina maravillosamente con platos de desayuno o pasteles.
El carácter con mucho cuerpo de este té lo convierte en una opción diaria confiable para los fanáticos del verdadero té negro de Sri Lanka.
Bolsas de té de Ceilán: prácticas & Preparación constante para todos los días
Las bolsitas de té Ceilán brindan el auténtico sabor de Ceilán en una forma rápida y fácil de preparar. Cada bolsa produce una taza suave con el mismo perfil brillante y enérgico que el té de hojas sueltas.
Excelente para mañanas ocupadas o pausas para tomar el té mientras viajas, es ideal si deseas una calidad constante sin necesidad de preparación.
Té verde de Ceilán: ligero, fresco & Suave al paladar
El té verde de Ceilán ofrece una infusión suave y refrescante con sutiles notas vegetales y florales. De cuerpo ligero y sabor suave, es perfecto caliente o helado.
Bajo en cafeína y rico en antioxidantes, este té es adecuado para cualquiera que busque una alternativa más ligera y saludable al té negro.
Té de canela de Ceilán: reconfortante cálido y picante & Aroma natural
El té de canela de Ceilán combina hojas de té de Sri Lanka de alta calidad con canela real para obtener una taza cálida y naturalmente dulce. Espere ricas notas especiadas y un final aromático y reconfortante, perfecto para mañanas frías o noches relajantes cuando desea una calidez suave con un sabor profundo.
Canela de Ceilán & Bolsitas de té negro: mezcla equilibrada de té atrevido & Especias&
Esta mezcla combina el robusto té negro de Ceilán con un toque de canela real, lo que brinda una taza con mucho cuerpo y cálidos matices especiados.
Es ideal para aquellos que disfrutan de la profundidad clásica del té negro pero quieren una capa adicional de dulzura aromática. Ideal para acompañar desayunos o postres.
Canela de Ceilán & Bolsitas de té verde: ligero y especiado & Refrescante
Al mezclar el suave té verde de Ceilán con una sutil calidez de canela, este té crea una infusión refrescante con una suave nota especiada.
Es una elección equilibrada para quienes gustan de la frescura del té verde pero con un toque acogedor y aromático para un sorbo relajado.
Bolsitas de té de canela y jengibre x40 – Picante & Mezcla vigorizante
La mezcla de bolsitas de té de canela y jengibre combina canela caliente y jengibre picante para una taza dulce y picante.
Es ideal para las mañanas o después de las comidas cuando deseas un suave confort digestivo y una bebida cálida y aromática. La mezcla de especias brinda un aroma vivo y un final reconfortante.
Bolsitas de té de canela y cúrcuma x40 – Terroso, cálido & Mezcla calmante
Este té combina canela con cúrcuma para obtener una infusión terrosa y cálida.Espere especias suaves, un amargor sutil y un aroma relajante que funciona bien caliente o helado.
Es una excelente opción para quienes exploran tés centrados en el bienestar con un perfil de sabor distintivo.
Frequently Asked Questions
Ceylon tea has a distinctive character that sets it apart from teas grown elsewhere, and this comes down to Sri Lanka's unique geography and production methods.
Sri Lanka (formerly Ceylon under British rule) has seven different tea-growing regions, each producing teas with noticeably different profiles. The island's varied elevations, from sea level to over 6,000 feet, create dramatically different growing conditions. High-grown teas from places like Nuwara Eliya (above 4,000 feet) are light and delicate with floral notes; these are sometimes called "the champagne of Ceylon teas." Mid-elevation teas from Kandy and Dimbula offer a fuller body with copper-colored liquor and balanced flavors. Low-grown teas from Ruhuna and Sabaragamuwa produce darker, more robust brews favored in the Middle East.
What makes Ceylon tea genuinely unique, according to scientific research, is its specific composition of flavonols. Studies have identified that Ceylon black tea has a unique flavonol profile responsible for its characteristic crisp, citrus-like aroma that you don't find in teas from other origins like India or China. When people describe Ceylon tea as "bright" or having citrus notes, that's the chemistry behind the experience.
The production methods matter too. Ceylon tea is hand-picked, following the "two leaves and a bud" principle where workers carefully select only the top growth. The orthodox manufacturing process (withering, rolling, oxidizing, drying) is still used rather than the faster CTC (Cut-Tear-Curl) method used for many commercial teas. This traditional approach preserves more of the aromatic compounds and creates a more complex cup.
Sri Lanka's tea industry is heavily regulated. The Sri Lanka Tea Board oversees quality standards, and the Lion Logo certification guarantees that tea is 100% pure Ceylon, packed in Sri Lanka, and meets strict quality requirements. Sri Lanka was also the first country certified "Ozone Friendly" for tea production under the Montreal Protocol, and their teas consistently test as the cleanest in the world for pesticide residues.
DRUERA sources directly from Sri Lankan estates, which means fresher tea with more intact aromatics compared to tea that's traveled through multiple distributors and warehouses before reaching you.
Silver Tips and Golden Tips are the rarest and most expensive teas in DRUERA's collection (and among the most expensive teas in the world), and there are good reasons for the premium price.
Both are white teas, meaning they undergo the least processing of any tea type. Unlike black tea (fully oxidized) or green tea (non-oxidized but rolled and heated), white tea is simply dried with minimal handling. This gentle treatment preserves more of the tea's natural antioxidants and creates an incredibly delicate flavor.
What makes these teas so rare is the source material. Both Silver Tips and Golden Tips are made from a specific cultivar of the Camellia sinensis plant called TRI 2043, which produces distinctive silver-colored buds but yields very little tea compared to regular tea plants. Only the unopened buds are used. For Silver Tips, these buds are hand-picked early in the morning (called imperial plucking) and then carefully sun-dried. The buds are covered with fine white-silver hairs, giving them their characteristic silvery appearance.
Golden Tips are even more specialized. They're produced the same way as Silver Tips, but during the sun-drying process, the buds are misted with golden brews from the estate. This gives Golden Tips their distinctive golden-amber color and creates a richer, more honeyed flavor profile that's unique in the tea world.
The flavor differences are distinct. Silver Tips brews to a very pale, almost translucent liquor with a light, refreshing taste featuring subtle notes of pine, honey, and jasmine, with suggestions of lychee and grape. Golden Tips produces a clearer amber liquor with a velvety, honeyed mouthfeel and notes of caramel, rose petals, and fig. Both are remarkably smooth with no bitterness.
Production quantities are extremely limited. The harvest window is short (only a few days in early spring), every step requires careful hand labor, and each tea plant produces a tiny amount of suitable buds. White teas from Sri Lanka are only produced in small quantities due to the rarity of the special tea bush cultivar.
Health-wise, white tea contains higher levels of flavonoids and antioxidants than other tea types because the minimal processing preserves these compounds. The youngest tea buds (used for these teas) are packed with nutrients the plant stored over winter.
For brewing, use water around 70-80°C (160-175°F), cooler than you'd use for black tea. Steep for 1-3 minutes. Both teas can be infused multiple times, with each steeping revealing different flavor notes.
Understanding caffeine in tea is more nuanced than most people realize, but here's what you actually need to know to manage your intake.
The typical ranges per 8 oz cup, when brewed under normal conditions: Black tea contains about 40-70 mg of caffeine (USDA average around 47 mg). Oolong tea falls in the 30-55 mg range. Green tea typically delivers 20-45 mg. White tea is generally the lowest among true teas, ranging from 15-30 mg, though Silver Tips can be higher because they're made from young buds that concentrate caffeine.
For comparison, a standard cup of drip coffee contains 90-120 mg of caffeine, roughly double to triple that of black tea. The strongest teas have about half the caffeine of the weakest coffees.
Here's what's surprising: the actual caffeine content in your cup depends heavily on how you brew, not just the tea type. Water temperature, steeping time, amount of tea used, and leaf size all significantly affect extraction. Hotter water, longer steeps, more leaves, and smaller leaf particles (like in tea bags versus whole loose leaf) all increase caffeine. A black tea steeped briefly at moderate temperature might have less caffeine than a green tea steeped long in boiling water.
DRUERA's collection offers options across the caffeine spectrum:
Higher caffeine choices: Dimbula Broken Orange Pekoe, Masala Chai, Earl Grey, and other black teas. The Ceylon Cinnamon & Black Tea Bags also provide a robust caffeine level with the added warmth of cinnamon.
Moderate caffeine: Oolong Tea and Young Hyson (a medium-oxidation green tea) offer a middle ground. These can be steeped multiple times, with each successive infusion containing less caffeine.
Lower caffeine: Gunpowder Green Tea, Sencha Green Tea, and Ceylon Cinnamon & Green Tea Bags provide gentler stimulation.
Lowest caffeine (among true teas): Silver Tips and Golden Tips white teas undergo minimal processing and brew at lower temperatures, resulting in less caffeine extraction.
Naturally caffeine-free: The herbal options like Samahan Tea, Paspanguwa Tea, Gotu Kola Tea, and Lemongrass Tea contain no caffeine at all because they're not made from the Camellia sinensis plant. These are ideal for evening drinking.
One important distinction: tea caffeine affects most people differently than coffee caffeine. Tea contains L-theanine, an amino acid that promotes calm focus and moderates caffeine's stimulating effects. Many tea drinkers report sustained alertness without the jitters or crashes associated with coffee. This makes tea an excellent option if you want energy without the edge.
If you want to reduce caffeine from any tea, use cooler water, steep for a shorter time, or try a quick "rinse" where you steep briefly, discard that water, then brew your actual cup (this can remove 20-30% of the caffeine). For more caffeine, do the opposite: hotter water, longer steeping, more leaves.