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History of Tea
Tea is nearly 5,000 years old
and was discovered, as legend has it, in 2737 B.C. by a Chinese
Emperor when some tealeaves accidentally blew into a pot of boiling
water. In the 1600s, tea became popular throughout Europe and the
American colonies. Since colonial days, tea has played a role in
American culture and customs. Today American schoolchildren learn
about the famous Boston Tea Party protesting the British tea tax
-- one of the acts leading to the Revolutionary War. During this
century, two major American contributions to the tea industry occurred.
In 1904, iced tea was created at the World's Fair in St. Louis,
and in 1908, Thomas Sullivan of New York developed the concept of
tea in a bag. Tea breaks down into three basic types: Black,
Green, and Oolong. In the U.S., over 90 percent of
the tea consumed is black tea, which has been fully oxidized or
fermented and yields a hearty-flavored, amber brew. Some of the
popular black teas include English Breakfast (good breakfast choice
since its hearty flavor mixes well with milk), Darjeeling (a blend
of Himalayan teas with a flowery bouquet suited for lunch) and Orange
Pekoe (a blend of Ceylon teas that is the most widely used of the
tea blends). Green tea skips the oxidizing step. It has a more delicate
taste and is light green/golden in color. Green tea, a staple in
the Orient, is gaining popularity in the U.S. due in, part to recent,
scientific studies linking green tea drinking with reduced cancer
risk. Oolong tea, popular in China, is partly oxidized and is a
cross between black and green tea in color and taste. While flavored
teas evolve from these three basic teas, herbal teas contain no
true tealeaves. Herbal and "medicinal" teas are created from the
flowers, berries, peels, seeds, leaves, and roots of many different
plants.
STORY OF TEA began in
ancient China over 5,000 years ago. According to legend, the Shen
Nong, an early emperor was a skilled ruler, creative scientist,
and patron of the arts. His far-sighted edicts required, among other
things, that all drinking water be boiled as a hygienic precaution.
One summer day while visiting a distant region of his realm, he
and the court stopped to rest. In accordance with his ruling, the
servants began to boil water for the court to drink. Dried leaves
from the near by bush fell into the boiling water, and a brown liquid
was infused into the water. As a scientist, the Emperor was interested
in the new liquid, drank some, and found it very refreshing. Therefore,
according to legend, tea was created. (This myth maintains such
a practical narrative, that many mythologists believe it may relate
closely to the actual events, now lost in ancient history.)
CHINA: Tea consumption
spread throughout the Chinese culture reaching into every aspect
of the society. In 800 A.D., Lu Yu wrote the first definitive book
on tea, the Ch'a Ching. This amazing man was orphaned as a child
and raised by scholarly Buddhist monks in one of China's finest
monasteries. However, as a young man, he rebelled against the discipline
of priestly training, which had made him a skilled observer. His
fame as a performer increased with each year, but he felt his life
lacked meaning. Finally, in mid-life, he retired for five years
into seclusion. Drawing from his vast memory of observed events
and places, he codified the various methods of tea cultivation and
preparation in ancient China. The vast definitive nature of his
work, projected him into near sainthood within his own lifetime.
Patronized by the Emperor himself, his work clearly showed the Zen
Buddhist philosophy to which he was exposed as a child. It was this
form of tea service that Zen Buddhist missionaries would later introduce
to imperial Japan.
JAPAN: The returning
Buddhist priest brought the first tea seeds to Japan. Yeisei, who
had seen the value of tea in China in enhancing religious mediation.
As a result, he is known as the "Father of Tea" in Japan. Because
of this early association, tea in Japan has always been associated
with Zen Buddhism. Tea received almost instant imperial sponsorship
and spread rapidly from the royal court and monasteries to the other
sections of Japanese society.
JAPANESE TEA CEREMONY:
Tea was elevated to an art form resulting in the creation of the
Japanese Tea Ceremony ("Cha-no-yu" or "the hot water for tea").
The best description of this The Irish-Greek journalist-historian
probably wrote complex art form Lafcadio Hearn, one of the few foreigners
ever to be granted Japanese citizenship during this era. He wrote
from personal observation, "The Tea ceremony requires years of training
and practice to graduate in art...yet the whole of this art, as
to its detail, signifies no more than the making and serving of
a cup of tea. The supremely important matter is that the act be
performed in the most perfect, most polite, most graceful, most
charming manner possible”. Such a purity of form, of expression
prompted the creation of supportive arts and services. A special
form of architecture (chaseki) developed for "tea houses", based
on the duplication of the simplicity of a forest cottage. The cultural/artistic
hostesses of Japan, the Geishi, began to specialize in the presentation
of the tea ceremony. As more and more people became involved in
the excitement surrounding tea, the purity of the original Zen concept
was lost. The tea ceremony became corrupted, boisterous, and highly
embellished. "Tea Tournaments" were held among the wealthy where
nobles competed among each other for rich prizes in naming various
tea blends. Rewarding winners with gifts of silk, armor, and jewelry
was totally alien to the original Zen attitude of the ceremony.
Three great Zen priests restored tea to its original place in Japanese
society: Ikkyu (1394-1481)-a prince who became a priest and was
successful in guiding the nobles away from their corruption of the
tea ceremony. Murata Shuko (1422-1502)-the student of Ikkyu and
very influential in re-introducing the Tea ceremony into Japanese
society. Sen-no Rikkyu (1521-1591)-priest who set the rigid standards
for the ceremony, largely used intact today. Rikyo was successful
in influencing the Shogun Toyotomi Hideyoshi, who became Japan's
greatest patron of the "art of tea". A brilliant general, strategist,
poet, and artist this unique leader facilitated the final and complete
integration of tea into the pattern of Japanese life. So complete
was this acceptance that tea was viewed as the ultimate gift, and
warlords paused for tea before battles.
EUROPE: While tea was
at this high level of development in both Japan and China, information
concerning this then unknown beverage began to filter back to Europe.
Earlier caravan leaders had mentioned it, but were unclear as to
its service format or appearance. (One reference suggests the leaves
be boiled, salted, buttered, and eaten!) The first European to personally
encounter tea and write about it was the Portuguese Jesuit Father
Jasper de Cruz in 1560. Portugal, with her technologically
advanced navy, had been successful in gaining the first right of
trade with China. It was as a missionary on that first commercial
mission that Father de Cruz had tasted tea four years before. The
Portuguese developed a trade route by which they shipped their tea
to Lisbon, and then Dutch ships transported it to France,
Holland, and the Baltic countries. (At that time Holland
was politically affiliated with Portugal. When this alliance was
altered in 1602, Holland, with her excellent navy, entered into
full Pacific trade in her own right.) When tea finally arrived in
Europe, Elizabeth I had more years to live, and Rembrandt was only
six years old. Because of the success of the Dutch navy in the Pacific,
tea became very fashionable in the Dutch capital, The Hague. This
was due in part to the high cost of the tea (over $100 per pound),
which immediately made it the domain of the wealthy. Slowly, as
the amount of tea imported increased, the price fell as the volume
of sale expanded. Initially available to the public in apothecaries
along with such rare and new spices as ginger and sugar, by 1675
it was available in common food shops throughout Holland. As the
consumption of tea increased dramatically in Dutch society, doctors
and university authorities argued back and forth as to the negative
and/or positive benefits of tea. Known as "Tea Heretics",
the public largely ignored the scholarly debate and continued to
enjoy their new beverage though the controversy lasted from 1635
to roughly 1657. Throughout this period France and Holland led Europe
in the use of tea. As the craze for things oriental swept Europe,
tea became part of the way of life. The social critic Marie de Rabutin-Chantal,
the Marquise de Seven makes the first mention in 1680 of adding
milk to tea. During the same period, Dutch inns provided the first
restaurant service of tea. Tavern owners would furnish guests with
a portable tea set complete with a heating unit. The independent
Dutchman would then prepare tea for himself and his friends outside
in the tavern's garden. Tea remained popular in France for only
about fifty years, being replaced by a stronger preference for wine,
chocolate, and exotic coffees.
AMERICAS: By 1650, the
Dutch were actively involved in trade throughout the Western world.
Peter Stuyvesant brought the first tea to America to the colonists
in the Dutch settlement of New Amsterdam (later re-named New York
by the English). Settlers here were confirmed tea drinkers. In addition,
indeed, on acquiring the colony, the English found that the small
settlement consumed more tea at that time then all of England put
together.
ENGLAND: Great Britain
was the last of the three great sea-faring nations to break into
the Chinese and East Indian trade routes. This was due in part to
the unsteady ascension to the throne of the Stuarts and the Cromwellian
Civil War. The first samples of tea reached England between 1652
and 1654. Tea quickly proved popular enough to replace Ale as the
national drink of England. As in Holland, it was the nobility that
provided the necessary stamp of approval and so insured its acceptance.
King Charles II had married, while in exile, the Portuguese Infanta
Catherine de Braganza (1662). Charles himself had grown up in the
Dutch capital. As a result, both he and his Portuguese bride were
confirmed tea drinkers. When the monarchy was re-established, the
two rulers brought this foreign tea tradition to England with them.
As early as 1600, Elizabeth I had founded The John Company for the
purpose of promoting Asian trade. When Catherine de Braganza married
Charles, she brought as part of her dowry the territories of Tangier
and Bombay. Suddenly, the John Company had a base of operations.
The John Company was granted the unbelievably wide monopoly
of all trade east of the Cape of Good Hope and west of Cape Horn.
Its powers were almost without limit and included among others the
right to: Legally acquire territory and govern it. Coin money. Raise
arms and build forts. Form foreign alliances. Declare war. Conclude
peace. Pass laws. Try and punish lawbreakers. It was the single
largest, most powerful monopoly to ever exist in the world. In addition,
its power was based on the importation of tea. At the same time,
the newer East India Company floundered against such competition.
Appealing to Parliament for relief, the decision was made to merge
the John Company and the East India Company (1773). Their
re-drafted charts gave the new East India Company a complete and
total trade monopoly on all commerce in China and India. As a result,
the price of tea was kept artificially high, leading to later global
difficulties for the British crown. Tea mania swept across England
as it had earlier spread throughout France and Holland. Tea importation
rose from 40,000 pounds in 1699 to an annual average of 240,000
pounds by 1708.
POPULARI(TEA): Prior
to the introduction of tea into Britain, the English had two main
meals-breakfast and dinner. Breakfast was Ale, bread, and beef.
Dinner was a long, massive meal at the end of the day. It was no
wonder that Anna, the Duchess of Bedford (1788-1861) experienced
a "sinking feeling" in the late afternoon. Adopting the European
tea service format, she invited friends to join her for an additional
afternoon meal at five o'clock in her rooms at Belvoir Castle. The
menu centered on small cakes, bread and butter sandwiches, assorted
sweets, and, of course, tea. This summer practice proved so popular,
the Duchess continued it when she returned to London, sending cards
to her friends asking them to join her for "tea and walking in the
fields”. (London at that time still contained large open meadows
within the city.) The practice of other quickly picked up inviting
friends to come for tea in the afternoon social hostesses. A common
pattern of service soon merged. The first pot of tea was made in
the kitchen and carried to the lady of the house who waited with
her invited guests, surrounded by fine porcelain from China. The
hostess warmed the first pot from a second pot (usually silver)
that was kept heated over a small flame. Food and tea was then passed
among the guests, the main purpose of the visiting being conversation.
TEA CUISINE: Tea cuisine
quickly expanded in range to quickly include wafer thin crust less
sandwiches, shrimp, or fish pates, toasted breads with jams, and
regional British pastries such as scones (Scottish) and crumpets
(English).At this time two distinct forms of tea services evolved:
"High" and "Low".
"Low Tea”
(served in the low part of the afternoon) was served in aristocratic
homes of the wealthy and featured gourmet tidbits rather than solid
meals. The emphasis was on presentation and conversation.
"High Tea” or "Meat
Tea" was the main or "High" meal of the day. It was the major
meal of the middle and lower classes and consisted of mostly full
dinner items such as roast beef, mashed potatoes, peas, and of course,
tea.
Penny Universities: Tea
was the major beverage served in the coffee houses, but they were
so named because coffee arrived in England some years before tea.
Exclusively for men, they were called "Penny Universities" because
for a penny any man could obtain a pot of tea, a copy of the newspaper,
and engage in conversation with the sharpest wits of the day. The
various houses specialized in selected areas of interest, some serving
attorneys, and some authors, others the military. They were the
forerunner of the English Gentlemen's Private Club. One such
beverage house was owned by Edward Lloyd and was favored by ship
owners, merchants, and marine insurers. That simple shop was the
origin of Lloyd's, the worldwide insurance firm. Attempts
to close the coffee houses were made throughout the eighteenth century
because of the free speech they encouraged, but such measures proved
so unpopular they were always quickly revoked.
Experiencing the Dutch "tavern
garden teas", the English developed the idea of Tea Gardens.
Here ladies and gentlemen took their tea out of doors surrounded
by entertainment such as orchestras, hidden arbors, flowered walks,
bowling greens, concerts, gambling, or fireworks at night. It was
at just such a Tea Garden that Lord Nelson, who defeated Napoleon
by sea, met the great love of his life, Emma, later Lady Hamilton.
Women were permitted to enter a mixed, public gathering for the
first time without social criticism. At the gardens were public,
British society mixed here freely for the first time, cutting across
lines of class and birth.
T.I.P.S.: Tipping as
a response to proper service developed in the Tea Gardens of England.
Small, locked wooden boxes were placed on the tables throughout
the Garden. Inscribed on each were the letters "T.I.P.S." which
stood for the sentence "To Insure Prompt Service". If a guest wished
the waiter to hurry (and so insure the tea arrived hot from the
often-distant kitchen) he dropped a coin into the box on being seated
"to insure prompt service". Hence, the custom of tipping servers
was created.
RUSSIA: Imperial Russia
was attempting to engage China and Japan in trade at the same time
as the East Indian Company. The Russian interest in tea began as
early as 1618 when the Chinese embassy in Moscow presented several
chests of tea to Czar Alexis. By 1689, the Trade Treaty of Newchinsk
established a common border between Russia and China, allowing caravans
to then cross back and forth freely. Still, the journey was not
easy. The trip was 11,000 miles long and took over sixteen months
to complete. The average caravan consisted of 200 to 300 camels.
As a result of such factors, the cost of tea was initially prohibitive
and available only to the wealthy. By the time Catherine the Great
died (1796), the price had dropped some, and tea was spreading throughout
Russian society. Tea was ideally suited to Russian life: hearty,
warm, and sustaining. The Samovar, adopted from the Tibetan
"hot pot", is a combination bubbling hot water heater and teapot.
Placed in the center of the Russian home, it could run all day and
serve up to forty cups of tea at a time. Again showing the Asian
influence in the Russian culture, guests sipped their tea from glasses
in silver holders, very similar to Turkish coffee cups. The Russian
have always favored strong tea highly sweetened with sugar, honey,
or jam. With the completion of the Trans-Siberian Railroad in 1900,
the overland caravans were abandoned. Although the Revolution intervened
in the flow of the Russian society, tea remained throughout a staple.
Tea (along with vodka) is the national drink of the Russians today.
AMERICA: It was not until
1670 that English colonists in Boston became aware of tea, and it
was not publicly available for sale until twenty years later. Tea
Gardens were first opened in New York City, already aware of tea
as a former Dutch colony. The new Gardens were centered on the natural
springs, which the city fathers now equipped with pumps to facilitate
the "tea craze". The most famous of these, "tea springs" was at
Roosevelt and Chatham (later Park Row Street).By 1720 tea was a
generally accepted staple of trade between the Colony and the Mother
country. It was especially a favorite of colonial women, a factor
England was to base a major political decision on later. Tea trade
was centered in Boston, New York, and Philadelphia, future centers
of American rebellion. As tea was heavily taxed, even at this early
date, contraband tea was smuggled into the colonies by the independent
minded American merchants from ports far away and adopted herbal
teas from the Indians. The directors of the then John Company (to
merge later with the East India Company) fumed as they saw their
profits diminish and they pressured Parliament to take action. It
was not long in coming.
Tea and the American Revolution:
England had recently completed the French and Indian War, fought,
from England's point of view, to free the colony from French influence
and stabilize trade. It was the feeling of Parliament that as a
result, it was not unreasonable that the colonists shoulder the
majority of the cost. After all. the war had been fought for their
benefit. Charles Townshend presented the first tax measures, which
today are known by his name. They imposed a higher tax on newspapers
(which they considered far too outspoken in America), tavern licenses
(too much free speech there), legal documents, marriage licenses,
and docking papers. The colonists rebelled against taxes imposed
upon them without their consent and which were so repressive. New,
heavier taxes were leveled by Parliament for such rebellion. Among
these was, in June 1767, The Tea Tax that was to become the
watershed of America's desire for freedom. (Townshend died three
months later of a fever never to know his tax measures helped create
a free nation.) The colonists rebelled and openly purchased imported
tea, largely Dutch in origin. The John Company, already in deep
financial trouble saw its profits fall even further. By 1773, the
John Company merged with the East India Company for structural stability
and pleaded with the Crown for assistance. The new Lord of the Treasury,
Lord North, as a response to this pressure, granted to the new Company
permission to sell directly to the colonists, bypassing the colonial
merchants and pocketing the difference. In plotting this strategy,
England was counting on the well-known passion among American women
for tea to force consumption, it was a major miscalculation. Throughout
the colonies, women pledged publicly at meeting and in newspapers
not to drink English sold tea until their free rights (and those
of their merchant husbands) were restored.
The Boston Tea Party:
By December 16 events had deteriorated enough that the men of Boston,
dressed as Indians (remember the original justification for taxation
had been the expense of the French and Indian War) threw hundreds
of pounds of tea into the harbor. Such leading citizens as Samuel
Adams and John Hancock took part. England had had enough. In retaliation,
the port of Boston was closed and the city occupied by royal troops.
The colonial leaders met and revolution declared. The Trade Continued
in the Orient Though concerned over developments in America, English
tea interests still centered on the product's source-the Orient.
There the trading of tea had become a way of life, developing its
own language known as "Pidgin English". Created solely to
facilitate commerce, the language was composed of English, Portuguese,
and Indian words all pronounced in Chinese. Indeed, the word "Pidgin"
is a corrupted form of the Chinese word for “does business”. So
dominant was the tea culture within the English speaking cultures
that many of these words came to hold a permanent place in our language.
"Mandarin" (from the Portuguese "mandar" meaning to order)
- the court official empowered by the emperor to trade tea. "Cash"
(from the Portuguese "caixa" meaning case or money box)-the
currency of tea transactions. "Caddy" (from the Chinese word
for one pound weight)-the standard tea trade container. "Chow"
(from the Indian word for food cargo)-slang for food.
The Opium Wars: Not only
was language a problem, but also so was the currency. Vast sums
of money were spent on tea. To take such large amounts of money
physically out of England would have financially collapsed the country
and been impossible to transport safely half way around the world.
With plantations in newly occupied India, the John Company saw a
solution. In India, they could grow the inexpensive crop of opium
and use it as a means of exchange. Because of its addictive nature,
the demand for the drug would be lifelong, insuring an unending
market. Chinese emperors tried to maintain the forced distance between
the Chinese people and the "devils". However, disorder in the Chinese
culture and foreign military might prevented it. The Opium Wars
broke out with the English ready to go to war for free trade (their
right to sell opium). By 1842 England had gained enough military
advantages to enable her to sell opium in China undisturbed until
1908.
America Enters the Tea Trade:
The first three American millionaires, T. H. Perkins of Boston,
Stephen Girard of Philadelphia, and John Jacob Astor of New York,
all made their fortunes in the China trade. America began direct
trade with China soon after the Revolution was over in 1789. America's
newer, faster clipper ships out sailed the slower, heavier English
"tea wagons" that had until then dominated the trade. This forced
the English navy to update their fleet, a fact America would have
to address in the War of 1812.The new American ships established
sailing records that still stand for speed and distance. John Jacob
Astor began his tea trading in 1800. He required a minimum profit
on each venture of 50% and often made 100%. Stephen Girard of Philadelphia
was known as the "gentle tea merchant". His critical loans to the
young (and still weak) American government enabled the nation to
re-arm for the War of 1812. The orphanage founded by him still perpetuates
his good name. Thomas Perkins was from one of Boston's oldest sailing
families. The Chinese trust in him as a gentleman of his word enabled
him to conduct enormous transactions half way around the world without
a single written contract. His word and his handshake was enough
so great was his honor in the eyes of the Chinese. It is to their
everlasting credit that none of these men ever paid for tea with
opium. America was able to break the English tea monopoly because
its ships were faster and it paid in gold.
The Clipper Days: By
the mid-1800 the world was involved in a global clipper race as
nations competed with each other to claim the fastest ships. England
and America were the leading rivals. Each year the tall ships would
race from China to the Tea Exchange in London to bring in the first
tea for auction. Though beginning half way around the world, the
mastery of the crews was such that the great ships often raced up
the Thames separated by only by minutes. However, by 1871 the newer
steamships began to replace these great ships.
Global Tea Plantations Develop:
The Scottish botanist/adventurer Robert Fortune, who spoke fluent
Chinese, was able to sneak into Mainland China the first year after
the Opium War. He obtained some of the closely guarded tea seeds
and made notes on tea cultivation. With support from the Crown,
various experiments in growing tea in India were attempted. Many
of these failed due to bad soil selection and incorrect planting
techniques, ruining many a younger son of a noble family. Through
each failure, however, the technology was perfected. Finally, after
years of trial and error, fortunes made and lost, the English tea
plantations in India and other parts of Asia flourished. The great
English tea marketing companies were founded and production mechanized
as the world industrialized in the late 1880's.
Tea Inventions in America;
Iced Tea and Teabags: America stabilized her government, strengthened
her economy, and expanded her borders and interests. By 1904, the
United States was ready for the world to see her development at
the St. Louis World's Fair. Trade exhibitors from around the world
brought their products to America's first World's Fair. One such
merchant was Richard Blechynden, a tea plantation owner. Originally,
he had planned to give away free samples of hot tea to fair visitors.
However, when a heat wave hit, no one was interested. To save his
investment of time and travel, he dumped a load of ice into the
brewed tea and served the first "iced tea". It was (along with the
Egyptian fan dancer) the hit of the Fair. Four years later, Thomas
Sullivan of New York developed the concept of "bagged tea". As a
tea merchant, he carefully wrapped each sample delivered to restaurants
for their consideration. He recognized a natural marketing opportunity
when he realized the restaurants were brewing the samples "in the
bags" to avoid the mess of tealeaves in the kitchens. Tea Rooms,
Tea Courts, and Tea Dances Beginning in the late 1880's in both
America and England, fine hotels began to offer tea service in tearooms
and tea courts. Served in the late afternoon, Victorian ladies (and
their gentlemen friends) could meet for tea and conversation. Many
of these tea services became the hallmark of the elegance of the
hotel, such as the tea services at the Ritz (Boston) and the Plaza
(New York).By 1910, hotels began to host afternoon tea dances as
dance craze after dance craze swept the United States and England.
Often considered wasteful by older people they provided a place
for the new "working girl" to meet men in a city, far from home
and family. (Indeed, the editor of Vogue once fired a large number
of female secretarial workers for "wasting their time at tea dances").
VARI(TEA):
English Breakfast: The
prototype of this most popular of all teas was developed over a
hundred years ago by the Scottish Tea Master Drysdale in EdInburgh.
It was marketed simply as "Breakfast Tea". It became popular in
England due to the craze Queen Victoria created for things Scottish
(the summer home of Victoria and Albert was the Highland castle
of Balmoral). Teashops in London, however, changed the name and
marketed it as "English Breakfast Tea". It is a blend of fine black
teas, often including some Keemun tea. Many tea authorities suggest
that the Keemun tea blended with milk creates a bouquet that reminds
people of "toast hot from the oven" and maybe the original source
for the name. It should be offered with milk or lemon. (One never
serves lemon to a guest if they request milk-the lemon is never
used. It would curdle the milk.) It may also be used to brew iced
tea.
Irish Breakfast: The
Irish have always been great tea drinkers, and they drink their
tea brewed very strong. In fact, there is a common tea saying among
the Irish that a "proper cup of tea" should be "strong enough for
a mouse to trot on”. Along the same line, the Irish believed there
were only three types of tea fit to drink. The first and best of
quality was in China with the Chinese, of course. The second best
was sent directly to Ireland. The third and lowest in quality was
sent to the English. Irish Breakfast because of its robust flavor
is usually drunk only in the morning (except for the Irish who drink
it all day). Usually it is blended from an Assam tea base. Because
of its full taste, it is served with lots of sugar (loose is considered
correct here-sugar cubes are an English matter) and milk (milk,
NEVER CREAM, is served with tea. Cream is too heavy for tea and
belongs with coffee. The milk is always served at room temperature,
never cold, as it cools the tea too quickly).Caravan: This excellent
tea was created in imperial Russia from the teas brought overland
by camel from Asia. Because the trade route was dangerous and supplies
unsteady, Russian tea merchants blended the varying incoming tea
cargoes, selling a blend rather then a single tea form. It was usually
a combination of China and India black teas. Like the Irish, the
Russian favored this tea all day long.
Earl Grey: Earl Grey
(1764-1845) was an actual person who, though he was prime minister
of England under William IV, is better remembered for the tea named
after him. Tea legends say a Chinese Mandarin gave the blend to
him seeking to influence trade relations. A smoky tea with a hint
of sweetness to it, it is served plain and is the second most popular
tea in the world today. It is generally a blend of black teas and
bergamot oil.
Black Teas and Oolong Darjeeling:
Refers to tea grown in this mountain area of India. The mountain
altitude and gentle misting rains of the region, produce a unique
full bodied but light flavor with a subtly lingering aroma reminiscent
of Muscatel. Reserved for afternoon use, it is traditionally offered
to guests plain. One might take a lemon with it, if the Darjeeling
were of the highest grade, but never milk. (Milk would "bury" the
very qualities that make it unique.
Oolong: The elegant tea
is sometimes known as the "champagne of teas". Originally grown
in the Fukien province of China, it was first imported to England
in 1869 by John Dodd. Today, the highest grade Oolongs (Formosa
Oolongs) are grown in Taiwan. A cross between green and black teas,
it is fermented to achieve a delicious fruity taste that makes milk,
lemon, and sugar unthinkable. With such clarity, it is perfect for
afternoon use with such tea fare as cucumber sandwiches and madelaines.
Green Teas: Green tea
makes up only ten percent of the world's produced tea. The Japanese
tea service (in which green tea is used), is an art form in and
of itself. The serving of a full Japanese tea service would be beyond
the ability of most properties and as a result, should not be attempted.
Green tea is not generally part of the afternoon tea tradition as
appropriate to hotel use.
China TeasKeemun: Is
the most famous of China's black teas. Because of its subtle and
complex nature, it is considered the "burgundy of teas". It is a
mellow tea that will stand alone as well as support sugar and/or
milk. Because of its "wine-like" quality, lemon should not be offered
as the combined tastes are too tart.
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