logo
Lipton Doubles Down on Tea Innovation With First-Ever Concentrates and New Fruit & Herbal Line

Lipton Doubles Down on Tea Innovation With First-Ever Concentrates and New Fruit & Herbal Line

Yahoo23-07-2025
Reimagined Tea Formats & Flavors Meet the Modern Lifestyle at Major Retailers This Summer
HOBOKEN, N.J., July 23, 2025 /PRNewswire/ -- This summer, Lipton is reimagining the tea experience with two exciting new product lines designed to meet evolving consumer tastes, lifestyles, and wellness routines.
Kicking off the season, Lipton introduces its all-new Tea Concentrates, an innovative way to enjoy iced tea, launching exclusively at Walmart stores this July. Designed with convenience in mind, these concentrates deliver bold flavor in every pour, making them ideal for delicious hydration, mealtime pairings, or spontaneous get-togethers.
Available in three fresh-brewed varieties: Black Tea with Lemon, Green Tea with Lemonade, and Southern Sweet Black Tea - Lipton Tea Concentrates blend high-quality tea with vibrant flavor. Sold in 32 oz ready-to-mix containers, these fresh-brewed iced tea concentrates make enjoying tea quick, easy, and delicious. Just shake, pour, and mix with your favorite liquid like water, seltzer, lemonade or juice.
"Lipton Tea Concentrates offer a new take on the fresh brewed iced tea experience - without the need to prep and with the freedom to customize every sip," said Alisa Geller, Lipton Brand Director. "We're excited to introduce this innovation with Walmart and provide busy consumers a convenient, high-quality option that caters to a variety of personal tastes and preferences."
Launching nationally this August, Lipton Fruit & Herbal Teas are crafted to bring comfort and calm to your daily routine. Bursting with rich, vibrant flavor, the new line is perfect for those seeking craveable and comforting beverage experiences and ideal for easing into the season ahead.
With four feel-good flavors including Golden Chamomile, Peach Paradise, Smooth Mint, and Lemon Ginger Refresh, each variety is uniquely positioned to target moments of comfort and relaxation - morning, noon or night. The launch solidifies Lipton's presence as a brand that can be enjoyed at any time of the day with both caffeinated and new, naturally caffeine-free varieties.
"Many consumers are open to herbal teas but turned off by overly earthy or medicinal notes. That's why Lipton's Fruit & Herbal innovation puts flavor first - with bright, balanced blends that are refreshing hot or iced, crafted for repeat enjoyment without the intensity of traditional herbals," said Alex White, Research and Innovation Director - Americas, LIPTON Teas and Infusions.
With bold flavor profiles and a vibrant, modern aesthetic, Lipton Fruit & Herbal teas are designed to connect with younger consumers who are forming lasting tea rituals and seeking brands that align with their evolving tastes and wellness lifestyles. The new lineup delivers premium flavor at an everyday-friendly price.
Whether you're crafting your perfect iced tea or reaching for a soothing nighttime cup, Lipton's 2025 innovations ensure there's a tea moment for everyone - anytime, anywhere.
About Lipton
Since 1890, nature has been our tea factory. Every cup of Lipton tea is grown using rain, wind and sunshine to give you our signature rich taste and aroma. What's more, we believe that every cup of our tea should not only help brighten your day but help brighten the future of all tea farmers and their families and of course, our planet. With a commitment to sustainability and excellence, Lipton remains America's Favorite Tea brand, delivering a variety of blends for every tea lover. www.lipton.com
About LIPTON Teas and Infusions
LIPTON Teas and Infusions is the world's largest tea business, with world-class brands that are household names such as Lipton, Pukka, TAZO, T2 and PG Tips. With production sites in four continents and a presence in more than 100 countries, LIPTON Teas and Infusions' products are enjoyed by hundreds of millions of consumers around the world each day. As an independent company since July 2022, LIPTON Teas and Infusions is united in one purpose: creating value for all with every sip, from plant to cup. www.liptonteas.com
PRESS CONTACTS Jamie Warner jamie.w@infinitycreativeagency.com
Lauren Champilauren@infinitycreativeagency.com
View original content to download multimedia:https://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/lipton-doubles-down-on-tea-innovation-with-first-ever-concentrates-and-new-fruit--herbal-line-302511939.html
SOURCE LIPTON Teas and Infusions
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Anthropic cuts off OpenAI's access to its Claude models
Anthropic cuts off OpenAI's access to its Claude models

TechCrunch

time21 minutes ago

  • TechCrunch

Anthropic cuts off OpenAI's access to its Claude models

In Brief Anthropic has revoked OpenAI's access to its Claude family of AI models, according to a report in Wired. Sources told Wired that OpenAI was connecting Claude to internal tools that allowed the company to compare Claude's performance to its own models in categories like coding, writing, and safety. TechCrunch has reached out to Anthropic and OpenAI for comment. In a statement to Wired, an Anthropic spokesperson said, 'OpenAI's own technical staff were also using our coding tools ahead of the launch of GPT-5,' which is apparently 'a direct violation of our terms of service.' (Anthropic's commercial terms forbid companies from using Claude to build competing services.) Meanwhile, an OpenAI spokesperson said, 'While we respect Anthropic's decision to cut off our API access, it's disappointing considering our API remains available to them.' Anthropic executives had already shown resistance to providing access to competitors, with Chief Science Officer Jared Kaplan previously justifying the company's decision to cut off Windsurf (a rumored OpenAI acquisition target, subsequently acquired by Cognition) by saying, 'I think it would be odd for us to be selling Claude to OpenAI.'

Trump should heed, not hide, the jobs numbers
Trump should heed, not hide, the jobs numbers

Washington Post

time22 minutes ago

  • Washington Post

Trump should heed, not hide, the jobs numbers

Here's a life hack for readers who are trying to lose weight and are discouraged by the numbers on the scale: Take a hammer to the thing. If that seems too destructive, donate it to the Salvation Army and, if you must keep a scale in the house, buy a new model that tops out at 150 pounds. The secret behind this hack is psychology. It's hard to eat less than your body wants, which is why people who try to lose weight often fail and feel miserable. But if no working scale is available, you can't fail: Eat as much as you like; the numbers will never climb. Sound crazy? It is. But the president has just used a version of this trick to deal with a sagging American jobs market. For months, commentators have been asking why tariffs aren't weighing on the economy more heavily. Importers — including many manufacturers — have been worried that they will. But the headline jobs and gross domestic product data have looked pretty good. Then came Friday's jobs report. The Bureau of Labor Statistics, a unit of the Labor Department, revised its estimates for May and June payrolls sharply downward, by more than 250,000 jobs, and estimated that the economy added only 73,000 jobs in July, well below analysts' expectations. Virtually all these new jobs came from health care and social services. The numbers contain no sign of the manufacturing boom that President Donald Trump has promised. This is not the sort of jobs report any president wants to see; it's the kind that portends falling approval ratings and party losses at the next election. So Trump took immediate, decisive action: He hopped on Truth Social and announced that he would fire Erika McEntarfer, the commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistics. This move was so boneheaded, William Beach, who served as bureau commissioner during the first Trump administration, called it 'totally groundless' and 'a dangerous precedent' that 'undermines the statistical mission of the Bureau.' A hearty second to that. Trying to intimidate the Bureau of Labor Statistics is the policy equivalent of smashing your bathroom scale. It's banana republic stuff, and it won't work any better in the United States. On the margin, a few voters might be fooled into thinking economic conditions are better than they really are. But the trick can work only so far — as the Biden administration found out when it tried to gaslight voters into believing that everything in the White House was going just great. The people most susceptible to the spin fall into two groups: the president's base, who don't need it, and high-information voters who pay close attention to economic data, many of whom will understand how the numbers have been juked, and most of whom probably already know which side they're voting for next time around. Everyone will be paying closer attention to what's happening in their own experience. Are wages rising? Are their friends and relatives being laid off? Is it easy to find another job? If they're getting the wrong answers to these questions, it really doesn't matter what numbers the bureau is putting out. That is, it doesn't matter politically. Bureau of Labor Statistics numbers matter tremendously in other ways. They feed into a great deal of market activity as well as vital social science, both of which are possible only if the numbers are trustworthy. The statistics are also, of course, one of the president's essential guides to economic policy. This guide is now telling the administration that it is moving in the wrong direction. A wise politician would take heed and course-correct to avoid bumbling deeper into the woods. Instead, Trump wants to shoot the messenger so his supporters won't realize he's led them astray. He might be able to find a new BLS commissioner who will cook the numbers to make them more aesthetically pleasing, though this would not be easy. As economist Scott Winship of the American Enterprise Institute pointed out, a lot of people work on these numbers, 'So absent mass firings at BLS, this solves nothing.' But even if Trump managed to bully the guides into telling him what he wants to hear, what then? Eventually voters will look around and notice the truth: America is losing its way.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store