Tea: |
Irish Breakfast -
Blended Black Tea |
Region: |
India, Kenya, Assam East
of the Rift Valley |
Grade: |
Kenya
BP1 2nd flush Assam BOP. |
Manufacture Type: |
CTC
(Cut Torn and Curled) |
Cup Characteristics: |
A very full bodied cup
of tea. The strength and
malty flavour of Assams
is combined with the
brightness and lively
flavour of the best
Kenya teas. The longer
you allow this tea to
brew the stronger it
becomes. This tea is
best enjoyed with milk
since the casein in milk
renders the tannins in
tea insoluble and
reduces the
characteristic
bitterness of strong
teas |
Information: |
Per
capita, Irish
consumption of tea is
amongst the highest in
the world. The Irish
prefer a full bodied cup
of tea that if brewed
long enough one could
almost stand their spoon
upright. The strength is
achieved by buying the
best teas available from
seasonal production
periods in Assam and
Kenya. This means that
the Assam teas are from
the second flush period
during June, and the
Kenyas are from February
and August growth. 2nd
flush Assams give a deep
malty astringency and
the best make your mouth
feel dry they are so
astringent. This
astringency leads to a
malty character that is
almost so thick you feel
like you could chew it.
The seasonal Kenyas have
a golden coppery color
with an almost floral
note that give a complex
depth to the tea.
Furthermore, you will
see that the grade is
CTC - cut, torn curled.
The green leaf whilst it
is being processed
passes through a machine
the cuts, tears and then
curls the leaves into
tiny balls. This ‘mash’
ferments very quickly
after which firing takes
place to ‘lock-in’ the
flavor. These tiny tea
balls when infused
release their full
flavor, more so than
whole leaf tea. The
reason is that there is
more surface area on the
tiny balls which can
infuse as compared to
the whole leaf tea. This
is how the Irish like
their tea!
Regarding the addition
of milk, there is the
age old argument of when
to add the milk to the
cup -before you add the
tea or after. Milk-firsters
argue that adding milk
last scalds the milk
noticeably and therefore
the milk should be
warmed slowly with the
addition of tea. Milk-lasters
argue that adding milk
after the tea has been
poured is the only way
of judging the proper
amount of milk to add by
watching the color of
the tea change. Non
users of milk regard the
whole issue as silly.
|
Brewing Instructions: |
Hot Tea Brewing Method:
Bring freshly drawn cold
water to a rolling boil.
Place 1 teaspoon of tea
for each cup into the
teapot. Pour the boiling
water into the teapot.
Cover and let steep for
3-7 minutes according to
taste (the longer the
steeping time the
stronger the tea). Even
though milk and a dash
of sugar help capture
the malty character of
this tea, it is
perfectly acceptable to
consume this tea
‘straight-up’
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!
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