Raspberry Leaf Tea
- Women seeking raspberry leaf's traditional support for menstrual comfort
- Adults looking for a caffeine-free herbal tea with raspberry leaf
- Those supporting uterine tone with raspberry leaf during wellness routines
About Buddha Teas - Raspberry Leaf Tea
Buddha Teas Raspberry Leaf Tea is an herbal tisane made from Rubus idaeus (red raspberry leaf), traditionally used to support uterine tone and overall reproductive wellness. Caffeine-free and prepared as a simple whole-leaf steep, it's a popular choice among women seeking gentle, plant-based support during menstrual cycles or as part of a prenatal wellness routine (consult your OB or midwife before use during pregnancy).
Why It's Worth Considering: Buddha Teas uses unbleached tea bags and avoids artificial flavors or additives, letting the naturally astringent, subtly earthy leaf speak for itself.
Why Gabriel Recommends This
How to Take
Who Benefits
Best For
- Women seeking raspberry leaf's traditional support for menstrual comfort
- Adults looking for a caffeine-free herbal tea with raspberry leaf
- Those supporting uterine tone with raspberry leaf during wellness routines
- Individuals incorporating raspberry leaf into a natural women's health regimen
Cautions
- Fish/shellfish allergy (use algal omega-3 instead)
- Taking blood thinners (consult physician — may enhance effect)
- Scheduled surgery within 2 weeks (may increase bleeding)
- Bleeding disorders
What to Expect
Compare Omega-3 Sources
| Feature | Fish Oil (this) | Krill Oil | Algal Oil | Cod Liver Oil |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EPA+DHA Content | High (concentrated) | Moderate | Moderate-High | Moderate + Vit A/D |
| Absorption | Good (triglyceride form) | Excellent (phospholipid) | Good | Good + fat-soluble vitamins |
| Best For | Therapeutic dose, heart/brain | General wellness | Vegan option | Vitamin A+D + omega-3 |
| Sustainability | Varies by brand | Sustainable harvest | Most sustainable | Traditional, sustainable |
| Burp Factor | Low (if enteric coated) | Very low | None | Moderate |
Frequently Taken Together
Frequently Asked Questions
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For general health, 1-2g of combined EPA+DHA daily. For therapeutic use (triglycerides, inflammation, mood), 2-4g combined EPA+DHA. Check the label for EPA+DHA content per serving — many fish oils have only 300mg per 1000mg capsule, requiring 6-8 capsules for a therapeutic dose. Concentrated formulas provide 600-900mg per capsule.
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EPA (eicosapentaenoic acid) is primarily anti-inflammatory — best for joint pain, cardiovascular health, and mood disorders. DHA (docosahexaenoic acid) is structural — it comprises 40% of brain polyunsaturated fats and is critical for cognitive function, eye health, and fetal development. Most people benefit from both; higher EPA for inflammation, higher DHA for brain health.
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Low-quality fish oil can cause fishy aftertaste and burping. Solutions: take with food, choose enteric-coated capsules, refrigerate the bottle (slows breakdown), or use a concentrated triglyceride-form fish oil (higher quality = less burping). If you still experience burps, the oil may be oxidized — check the expiration date and smell the capsule.
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Krill oil has better absorption per gram (phospholipid form) and contains astaxanthin (antioxidant), but it's significantly more expensive per mg of EPA+DHA. For therapeutic doses (2-4g EPA+DHA), fish oil is more practical and cost-effective. Krill oil is a good choice for general wellness at maintenance doses.
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Fish oil has mild blood-thinning properties. If you're taking warfarin, aspirin, or other anticoagulants, consult your physician before starting high-dose omega-3. At standard doses (1-2g), the risk is low, but your INR may need monitoring. Stop fish oil 1-2 weeks before scheduled surgery.
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Look for: third-party tested for heavy metals and oxidation (IFOS 5-star rated), triglyceride form (not ethyl ester), high EPA+DHA per capsule (600mg+ combined), and molecular distillation for purity. The Gabriel Score evaluates all of these quality signals automatically.
Real Reviews. Real Sources.
Compatibility Guide
Works Well With
Take Separately From
No significant interactions identified. Always consult your healthcare provider.
Research Behind This
Practitioner Insights
Who This Is For
✓ Great For
⚠ Important Notes
† These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.
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