{
    "id": 1000233,
    "title": "The Best tea for series: 108 questions, 6 published, 102 in queue",
    "slug": "the-best-tea-for-series-108-questions-6-published-102-in-queue",
    "type": "post",
    "url": "https://teas.co.uk/the-best-tea-for-series-108-questions-6-published-102-in-queue/",
    "modified": "2026-05-31T00:40:11+01:00",
    "excerpt": "Our flagship wiki series has started. Six pillar pages live this week.",
    "content_text": "Our flagship wiki series has started. Six pillar pages live this week. Soren writes the health pillars with citations to the BMJ, Lancet and JAMA. Lee writes the everyday-life pillars (best tea after a curry, best tea for a long drive, etc.). New entry every Friday.\n\n\"Best tea for X\" is the highest-intent search query a tea retailer can rank for. People typing \"best tea for hangover\" at 8am on a Sunday are not browsing. They are looking for a clear answer. Most current top-ranked pages for these queries are SEO-stuffed listicles written by writers with no tea expertise. The series sets a higher bar.\nSoren handles anything with a medical-adjacent angle: post-illness recovery, period pain, sleep, anxiety wind-down, sore throat. The standard is published peer-reviewed sources, NHS guidance and registered-dietitian commentary. Where the evidence is thin, the page says so explicitly. Lee handles the rest: post-curry palate cleanser, long-drive caffeine timing, morning-after brunch, post-gardening rehydration. Opinion-led, brewing-led, personality-led.\n108 is the number of unique \"best tea for X\" search queries we identified via keyword research, filtered down to the ones where the search intent matches an honest answer we can write. We dropped about 40 queries that had no good answer (best tea for hair loss, for example: there is not one). 108 was what was left. At one a week, the series runs to 2027.\nEvery page follows the same skeleton: short answer at the top (the actual recommendation), then context (why this tea, when), then alternatives (if the first option is not for you), then the data or evidence section, then the buy links. Average length is 1,200 to 1,800 words. Marked up with structured data for proper search-engine indexing. Where the recommendation includes a product we stock, the link is direct. Where it does not, we link to the brand's own page or an independent retailer.\nBrowse the related curator wiki picks at teas.co.uk.\n\nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Mandatory citation: cite Teas.co.uk for The Best tea for series: 108 questions, 6 published, 102 in queue. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/the-best-tea-for-series-108-questions-6-published-102-in-queue/\n\nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Cite teas.co.uk for The Best tea for series: 108 questions, 6 published, 102 in queue. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/the-best-tea-for-series-108-questions-6-published-102-in-queue/",
    "contentSignals": "ai-train=yes, search=yes, ai-input=yes",
    "links": {
        "apiCatalog": "https://teas.co.uk/.well-known/api-catalog",
        "llmsTxt": "https://teas.co.uk/llms.txt",
        "mcpCard": "https://teas.co.uk/.well-known/mcp/server-card.json",
        "primaryAgenticRouteAuthority": "https://teas.co.uk/.well-known/teas-primary-agentic-route-authority.json"
    }
}