| Country of Origin: |
Sri Lanka
|
| Region: |
Nuwara Eliya, Dimbula, and Uva |
| Shipping Port: |
Colombo/Sri
Lanka |
| Grade: |
FP - Flowery Pekoe |
|
Altitude: |
5600 - 6400 feet above sea level |
|
Manufacture Type: |
Orthodox |
| Cup
Characteristics: |
Good body but not overpowering with
satisfying full tea flavor notes. |
| Infusion: |
Coppery bright - especially
enticing with milk |
Information:
Today the habit of tea drinking is
inexorably linked to the British despite the fact that the British
were fairly late on the tea scene in historical terms. Ironically
the first mention of tea in English literature is a translation of a
Dutchman’s travels to the east. Tea was first brought to England via
Holland on Dutch ships. Since tea was becoming an ‘in’ beverage the
British government became quite incensed that a tiny nation such as
the Netherlands would control the shipment of tea to the UK. In 1651
the British government passed the Navigation Acts which forbade the
importation of any products on non-British ships. Traders and
Dutchmen, being resourceful continued the trade in the usual manner
but for one little wrinkle - The tea was transshipped in Holland
onto British ships!
Early
in British life tea was known as a health beverage and claimed all
sorts of curative powers. In the 1650’s, Garway’s Coffee House
proclaimed that tea amongst other things:
“Tea makes the body active and lusty. Tea is declared to be the most
wholesome; preserving perfect health until extreme Old Age”
Afternoon tea was the invention of Anna, wife of the seventh Duke of
Bedford. At that time custom dictated only two planned meals per
day: a hearty breakfast and a late evening dinner. Anna in a effort
to ease the “sinking feeling” began instructing her servants to
prepare tea and cakes in the late afternoon. Thus began a
fashionable habit which still exists today.
Britain
is steeped in tea history: Think of:
High Tea, The Brown Betty,
The American War in Independence, The Opium Wars, The
Boxer Rebellion, The Clipper Ship races from Fuzchou, China
to Portsmouth UK, The Earl of Grey, English Breakfast etc.
etc.
Hot tea brewing method:
As with all top quality
teas, scoop 2-4 teaspoons of tea into the teapot. Pour in boiling
water that has been freshly drawn (previously boiled water has lost
most if its oxygen and therefore tends to be flat tasting), steep
for 2-4 minutes (to taste), stir (virtually all the leaves will
sink), pour into your cup, add milk (do not use cream) and sugar to
taste. When you are making a pot of tea - using loose tea of course
- you will see the tea leaves uncurl and expand dramatically. This
uncurling and expansion is called ‘the agony of the leaf’ .
Iced tea brewing method:
(to make
1 liter/quart): Place 5 teaspoons of tea into a teapot or heat
resistant pitcher. Pour 1 1/4 cups of freshly boiled water over the
tea. Steep for 5 minutes. Quarter fill a serving pitcher with cold
water. Pour the tea into your serving pitcher straining the leaves.
Add ice and top-up the pitcher with cold water. Garnish and sweeten
to taste. [A rule of thumb when preparing fresh brewed iced tea is
to double the strength of hot tea since it will be poured over ice
and diluted with cold water]. Please note that this tea may
tend to go cloudy or ‘milky’ when poured over ice; a perfectly
normal characteristic of some high quality black teas and nothing to
worry about!

