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Tea (rec.drink.tea) Discussion relating to tea, the world's second most consumed beverage (after water), made by infusing or boiling the leaves of the tea plant (C. sinensis or close relatives) in water. |
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For discussion, excerpted from "Teatime" by Aubrey Franklin, appointed "Tea
Ambassador" by the Tea Council of the U.S.A., Inc., © 1981, ISBN: 0-8119-0414-8, pps. 48-50: "The world's great auction centers are Calcutta and Cochin in India, Colombo in Sri Lanka, Jakarta in Indonesia, Mombasa in East Africa, and London...The United States receives its tea either direct from the countries where it was grown or through London. Before the auction, the tea chests are arranged side by side in long rows in the warehouse. A hole is bored in each chest and a sample of the tea it contains taken out. The samples are then sent to the leading tea buyers. If a buyer likes the sample he or she bids on it. Sometimes as many as 50,000 chests, or 5,000,000 pounds, of tea are sold in one day at these auctions. ....the buyer either ships it to fill an order, or sends samples to importers throughout the world. Most of the American importers or the packers who buy this tea direct are located in the major tea-buying centers of New York, Boston, Philadelphia, Chicago, New Orleans, Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Seattle. ....Then the tea starts is sea voyage to the United States, which usually takes seven weeks from Calcutta. As the aluminum foil-lined tea chests arrive in the principal U.S. ports of entry for tea, they are placed in bonded warehouses. By provisions set forth in the Tea Act of 1897, the tea cannot be moved from these warehouses until it is either approved or disapproved for entry by the U.S. Board of Tea Experts... This Board - which operates under the Food and Drug Administration, but is paid for by the tea industry...Its members are six men chosen from the tea trade and one from the government. The U.S. Board of Tea Experts meets once each year, usually in February or March. The purpose of this meeting, held in the office of the government member in New York, is to set up minimum standards for the tea you will drink during the following year. These standards go into effect on May 1 of each year. Board members...brew the tea to be judged... Perhaps one hundred samples of tea are submitted to the Board and judged during its annual meeting...Tea that do not meet this [the minimum standard] standard will not be admitted to the United States. Most of the 200 million pounds of tea imported into the country each year, though, is of higher grade than the standard. Should an importer object to the rejection of his tea by the U.S. Board of Tea Experts, he may take his case to the Board of Appeals. This Board, made up of three members, will call in three different tea-tasters from the trade to judge the rejected tea. The decision of the Board is final. If it rejects the tea the shipment will not be permitted to enter." After that, the book relates the tea going to the blenders and packaged as loose, instant, or in teabags ready for the grocer either straight from the packer or through wholesalers. It doesn't seem to address, however, estate teas or blends purchased by consumers like us who've gotten away from grocery store tea. Still, it's interesting...any comments on the process described above? -- ~~Bluesea~~ Spam is great in musubi but not in email. Please take out the trash before sending a direct reply. |
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