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Tea Library

Bits and pieces of trivia, useful facts and how to's - all about tea.  Enjoy!

Tea and Wellness: Go Organic
Understanding Indian Teas
The Tea Connection
Exotic and Rare Tea...Must Cost An Arm and Leg!
Fine Tea is Like a Fine Wine
Mom's Lipton Tea Bags
Tea Offers Coffee Drinkers an Attractive Alternative
All Teas Start the Same
Tea Production
White Tea
Green Tea
Oolong (Semi-Fermented) Tea
Black (Red) Tea

Buying Fine Tea
Storing Fine Tea
Preparing and Enjoying Fine Tea
More Cool Tea Stuff
Gourmet Iced Tea Recipe
Equipment and Preparation
The Quantity of Dry Tea Leaves
Green Tea Brewing Instructions
Oolong Tea Brewing Instructions
Very Cool Tea Philosophy
The Four Principles of Wa-Kei-Sei-Jaku or Harmony, Respect, Purity and Tranquility
Seven Secrets of Tea


Exotic and Rare Tea…Must Cost An Arm and Leg!

The cost of tea has never been a barrier for its enjoyment. In fact, fine teas are absurdly inexpensive for their quality and may very well be the world’s greatest gourmet bargain.

A pound of tea yields about 200 cups. This means that a price of $100 per pound for a rare, sought-after tea translates to only 50 cents per serving. Compare that to $5 a glass even for cheap wine - or $10 a pour for a rare Château Mouton Rothschild.

We certainly don’t advocate rushing out and buying the most expensive tea available in order to get the best. While one can suggest to a wine drinker that he or she can get much better wine for twice the price, the same is not necessarily true with tea. Price alone is not a dependable indication of the quality of tea, and certainly not for the enjoyment it will offer.

We therefore recommend that you collect several different kinds of teas rather than buying a large amount of one. This will not only add variety to your tea enjoyment, it will also help you to find your favorite teas for different occasions.

Fine Tea Is Like a Fine Wine

Fine tea offers a level of subtlety, complexity and variety of flavors that only the finest wines can rival. In fact the parallels are remarkable: tea and wine both have extraordinary colorful histories, world-wide sources and amazingly varied tastes. Fine tea, like fine wine, is associated with estate production and reflects its origin to the connoisseur. Variations in manufacture, like the variations in wine making, account for the major types of tea. Among them, black, oolong, green and white teas constitute a range of tastes as broad that of red, white and rosé wines – without, of course, the alcohol. Furthermore, many tea lovers have a shelf of fine teas to suit every occasion and mood, just the way wine lovers keep a rack of their favorite wines on hand.

Mom’s Lipton Tea Bags

Perhaps the real reason fine tea has been largely ignored is that until recently many consumers did not know there was such a thing as high quality tea. Tea has been associated with its least appealing forms: artificially flavored iced-tea, cost-conscious tea-bag brews and cups of honey-and-lemon tea for winter coughs. Discriminating tea lovers had to search far and wide for fine teas, and until a few years ago could only read about the rarest and finest single-estate teas. SpecialTeas was created to supply those rare teas from countries like China, India, Japan and Sri-Lanka to the growing number of consumers who have discovered that fine tea is the most refined and civilized beverage of them all.

Tea Offers Coffee Drinkers an Attractive Alternative

Both are enormously popular mild stimulant beverages with exotic histories. What fine tea offers the gourmet coffee drinker is a refreshingly different taste experience – just as rich and satisfying, but much more subtle, refined and with less "jolt". A cup of tea has far less caffeine than a cup of coffee but its stimulating effects are longer lasting and gentler.

Of course there are those coffee drinkers who never drink tea (and vice versa), but we suspect that many of them would add tea to their range of gourmet interests if they only knew how satisfying truly fine tea is.

All Teas Start The Same

It is hard to believe, but all tea comes from essentially the same plant, the Camellia Sinensis, a tropical relative of the Camellia Japonica that might even grow in your garden. The differences between the well-over two thousand types of tea result from variations in the processing of the leaves after they are harvested. There are essentially four different methods of manufacturing tea that give us the four major categories: white, green, oolong and black.

All truly fine teas have in common that only the most aromatic, young, top two leaves and the unopened leaf bud are used. Up to 80,000 hand-plucked shoots are needed to produce one pound of top-grade tea. The production of tea is a labor-intensive process and every step is essential to achieve superior quality.

Tea Production

The following chart shows the different steps of production.
Tea Production

White Tea

During the plucking, great care has to be given to the selection of the leaves. Usually only the youngest leaves, still covered with short white hair or down are used. The production of most varieties of white tea consists of only two steps: Steaming and drying (some white teas are very slightly fermented). The absence of withering, rolling and oxidation leaves the appearance of the leaves essentially unaltered. The white down of the unprocessed leaves is clearly visible and gives the final tea leaves their sliver-white appearance.

When infused, white tea has a pale yellow cup color and a delicate, fresh flavor. The two most popular white teas are the White Peony (also called "Pai Mu Tan" or "Bai Mudan") and the treasured Silver Needle.

Green Tea

The intent during the production of green tea is to preserve the healthy, natural and active substances of the fresh leaves so they may be released into the cup at the time of infusion.

After picking, the green leaves are spread out in the hot air to wither. Once they have become soft and pliable, they are traditionally pan-fried in woks. This prevents the leaves from oxidizing (usually called fermenting) as it occurs during the production of black tea. The subsequent rolling gives the leaves their style: twisted, curly or balled as well as increased durability. Rolling also helps to regulate the release of the natural substances and flavor during the steeping. In the final step, the leaves are dried by firing whereby the natural fragrances and flavors are stabilized; the leaves keep their green color.

The resulting green teas are high in nutrients and minerals; their health benefits are the subject of a great number of medical studies.

Oolong Tea (Semi-fermented)

Almost exclusively produced in China and Formosa (Taiwan), oolong teas fall between the unfermented green teas and the fully fermented black teas. They are processed to be full-bodied teas and are therefore made from larger, more mature leaves.

Immediately upon plucking, the leaves are spread out in direct sunlight to wither. Withering reduces the moisture content and softens the leaves. The leaves are then put into bamboo baskets and shaken briskly to bruise the leaf edges. In the next step, the leaves are spread out in the shade to dry. The process of shaking and spreading of the leaves is repeated numerous times. The bruised leaf edges begin to turn red through the oxidation process (fermentation) while the centers of the leaves remain green.

The amount of fermentation depends on the type of oolong and can vary from approximately 20% for a "green" oolong, to 60 % for a classic Formosa oolong.Once the desired level of fermentation is reached, the process must be stopped immediately. This is done by pan-firing the leaves at high temperatures, which produces a lower moisture content than is found in green tea, and ensures a longer shelf life for oolongs.

Black Tea (Red Tea)

Unlike green or oolong teas, black teas, during the production process, undergo a full oxidation (usually called fermentation) which causes the leaves to turn black and gives them their characteristic flavor.

After picking, the green leaves are spread out on tiers of racks to wither for about 12 to 18 hours. During the long withering process, the leaves lose most of their moisture, becoming soft and pliable so they can be rolled.

During the rolling, the membranes of the leaves are broken, allowing the juices and essential oils that give the tea its aroma to develop. After rolling, the leaves are brought into large, cool, humid rooms where they are spread in layers of about four inches high to oxidize. During the oxidation process, the leaf color darkens, and the initially bitter juices mellow. The characteristic flavors of black tea – ranging from flowery to fruity, nutty and spicy – begin to emerge. The oxidation process must be stopped at the point where the aroma and flavor have fully developed. This is done by firing the leaves in large ovens. The flavorful juices dry on the surface of the leaves and remain relatively stable until exposed to boiling water during infusion.

In the last step, the leaves must be sorted by size. During the production process, many tea leaves are broken or crushed so that the finished tea consists of full leaves, broken leaves and smaller particles (fannings). Since the necessary steeping time increases with the size of the leaf, the tea must be sorted into lots of equal leaf size.

Buying Fine Tea

Have you ever experienced that frustrating feeling, when walking into a wine store or receiving a wine catalogue, of being overwhelmed by the selection of wines and prices? The same situation can easily happen with teas.

The variety of fine teas is huge. There are over 2,000 different types of teas available, making it one of the most difficult tasks for tea merchants to select an assortment and present it to the customer in a understandable way.

The best recommendation we can give to newcomers to fine tea is to try different kinds of teas and to experiment with their preparation. An excellent way to do that is with tea samplers. Such samplers should come with advice on how to prepare the tea as well as enough tea to brew a few pots. Once you have brewed the second or third pot of your favorite tea from the sampler, you will be on your way to becoming "hooked" on the pleasures fine teas provide.

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