Tea Processing
The freshly gathered shoots are collected and a method of withering,
rolling, fermenting and drying, produces the fine teas of India. Black
tea makes up 98 percent of the international tea trade and is the familiar
colored tea, flavored with a delicate aroma and should be without any
bitterness. Green tea does not go through the fermenting process and
the leaves are heated (roasted in an iron pan or steamed) to prevent
fermentation. It makes a pale greenish-yellow tea, which is milder and
slightly bitter.
In the final sorting or grading, tea acquires the colorful names that
are used in the tea trade. They do not refer to the quality but to the
size and appearance of the tea. There are two main grades - leaf and
broken leaf.
• Leaf grades: These have larger
leaves and are classified as Orange Pekoe and Pekoe.
• Broken leaf grades: Broken Orange
Pekoe and Broken Pekoe.
Within the broken leaf type there are further divisions which include:
• Fannings: All small leaf teas.
They make stronger tea than broken leaves.
• Dust: The smallest leaf particle
size and it is certainly not "dust from the factory floor".
It can take five years to train a tea taster’s palate capable
of tasting one to three hundred teas in a day. People imagine that a
tea taster drinks the liquid until he is awash with it, but, as in the
case with wine tasting, this is not so. The taster will take a large
spoonful of tea, suck the liquid onto the taste buds all over the tongue,
savour it, and spit it out.
The process of blending takes place after further professional tasting.
Usually a blend may be made up of different teas from various tea gardens.
The blender’s expertise guarantees consistency - to ensure tea
picked and packed throughout the year in different seasonal conditions
does not vary in quality, aroma or taste.
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