NEWSLETTERS
NEWSLETTER MAY 2005
Welcome to 'The world of tea', the Nothing But Tea's bi-annual newsletter, in which we keep you up to date with all the news from Nothing But Tea and the fast growing tea world.
NEW
You may have noticed some changes occurring to our site.
Our tea tasting page is finally displayed, our shop has been upgraded and we are now offering choices of pack sizes.
Our 100g/125g packs will still be supplied in our well loved silver tins. The 250g, 500g and 1kg packs will be packed in silver heat sealed bags.
With all the improvements – both visible and unseen - the shop runs a little more smoothly now. Because of the work that we have been putting in to improve your shopping experience we have only three new teas to bring you this time – but they are really nice. Lightly smoky “African Safari Tea” is memorable; “Spring Fever” a fresh green rooibos blend is sure to please, and our “Strawberry Black Pepper” tea is an unusual flavour combination that works really well.
REVIEWS-NEW SECTION
Contented customers report on some of their favourite teas:
“The jade column is particularly beautiful, with the tightly rolled leaves curving elegantly as they open out. The column shape is generally retained for at least two infusions, but the flavour is at its best during the second and third infusions. For anyone whose previous experience of green tea is limited to lower grades, this is a good step up because the familiar green tea aroma is there, but refined”. – Ellen Wallace
The jade sword tea also has a beautiful form, fine-tipped as the name implies, but there is a regal quality to the colour and texture of the leaves – your description of silky is a good one. And the perfume from it is richer than most green teas, and distinctive. It keeps its form well with several infusions, and flavour is improved after the first cup. –Ellen Wallace
Do you fancy yourself as a tea taster? Would you like to see your comments here or used on our website.
See our guide to tea tasting on our website and submit your tea tasting notes to: reviews@nbtea.co.uk
OUR CURRENT BESTSELLERS
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Pai Mu Tan
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Temple Of Heaven
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Jasmine Phoenix Eyes
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Red Lychee Balls
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Genmaicha
TEA TALK: A Safari through Kenyan Tea
Kenya is perhaps best known around the world for its game parks and beaches - but the tea industry is a huge and important part of Kenyan economy and culture. A Kenyan safari may mean lions and zebra for some, but Safari means journey in the local Swahili language - and the most amazing journey in Kenya is through the unforgettable tea fields. Kenya vies with Sri Lanka for the most tea exported in the world, yet everyone has heard of Ceylon and India and China teas, while Kenya tea is not so well recognised.
Kenya is situated on the east coast of Africa, a tropical country straddling the equator, the warm Indian Ocean to the east, and huge fresh water Lake Uganda to the west. Note that fifteen other African countries are also tea producers large and small - though Kenya produces more tea than all the rest added together – last year topping 300,000 tonnes for the first time.
Tea is naturally a plant of the moist tropics. On the equator and at sea level the temperatures are far too hot for tea to grow. Fortunately, Kenya has plenty of high land on both sides of the Rift Valley where, at elevations from 4,500 up to 7,000 feet the air is cool and rainfall is plentiful; combined with the rich acid volcanic soils the intense natural light and high humidity, the conditions are ideal for tea. In Kenya the tea growing conditions uniquely combine quality with quantity. In the 400 square miles that are carpeted with tea there are over 1 billion tea bushes growing, and every one of those bushes is visited every ten days by a trained tea plucker who selects just the newly grown tips for harvest. No harvesting machines operate here – just human skill. At 1,500 tips per kilogram a plucker will select and pluck over 30,000 per day! The Kenya tea industry is vast and, because it is labour intensive, it can achieve the very best quality.
The ongoing peaks and dips in tea prices at the Mombasa auction affect a lot of lives. Out of Kenya’s 25 million population over 12% are involved in the tea industry in some capacity, and half a million are directly employed in producing tea. KTDA - the Kenya Tea Development Agency, is a huge co-operative of small tea farmers established in 1965 (before then only multinational companies were allowed to grow tea). Now KTDA has 430,000 individual farmers growing and selling green leaf to the 55 tea factories it manages. An amazingly complex and successful undertaking that operates effectively despite all the problems found in a developing country.
Kenya was a late comer into the world tea scene with the earliest commercial plantings made in the 1920’s – compare this with China’s 5,000 tea history, Indonesia from the 1700’s, Indian production from 1830, and Sri Lanka from 1870. Brooke Bond still pluck from the original bushes planted just north of Nairobi. Commercial production took off exponentially in the 1930’s and now Kenya teas feature in virtually all UK tea blends. Kenya’s spectacular export growth is the more impressive when compared with India for example where growth in exports has only been 20% in 70 years (160,000 tonnes exported annually in 1930’s and 210,000 tonnes per annum now). To support this spectacular and consistent growth the Kenya industry has pioneered and perfected many innovations in tea production, like the withering trough, continuous fermentation, the CTC and the fluid bed drier, and giant tea factories that give economy of scale.
Multinational companies grow about 40% of the Kenyan tea with small farmers under KTDA guidance growing the bulk. KTDA has 55 out of the total tea 98 factories. Kenya’s tea factories are on average four times as large as those in Sri Lanka and six times as big as those in Assam.
At the tea auction that is held in Mombasa every Monday and Tuesday, tea is sold by the producers and is bought by local and international packers. Big names Lipton, Brooke Bond, Van Rees are represented there, plus many small brokers and traders. Before the auction commences they will have seen and tasted tea samples from each of the lots and will bid for their requirements. Some 70% of Kenya's tea passes through this auction with the remainder sold by private treaty. The Mombasa auction attracts tea from surrounding countries too – Uganda, Tanzania, Malawi, Burundi and Rwanda. All these are then shipped worldwide from Mombasa port for blending and packing in consuming countries.
Of the 300,000 tonnes of Kenya tea produced only 7% is retained for local drinking. For the rest there are three main customers – UK, Pakistan, and Egypt, who together purchase nearly three quarters. US consumption of Kenya tea is very small – of the 46 billion cups drunk in USA only 800 million are grown in Kenya. The main reason for this small uptake is that Kenya grows high quality CTC black tea. This is ideally suited to England’s “strong tea with milk and sugar” taste but is not so popular with Americans and most Europeans who drink their teas without milk. Prior to WW2 the US drank equal amounts of green and black tea of orthodox manufacture; but since then tastes have changed towards iced tea that now forms 70% of the US tea market.
With the rising popularity of the teabag Kenya has since the 1970’s (as has the rest of Africa) concentrated solely on black CTC tea - but globally this is fast becoming an oversupplied and stagnating market. KTDA is known for making the very best quality of CTC teas and has recently diversified into producing fine specialty leaf teas using traditional orthodox tea equipment imported from India. This new orthodox line is now in production at Kangaita Tea Factory within view of the snowy tip of Mount Kenya and the specialty black teas made there are available from Nothing But Tea – Mt Kenya OP, Aberdare FOP, Muthaiga OF, Uhuru BOP, and Simba BOPF – and look out for our distinctive new African Safari Tea so reminiscent of safari camp fires – African Safari Tea (Order Code BK06) is a large leaf Kenya tea with a hint of the smokiness of a Lapsang Souchong.
DID YOU KNOW?
1. Latest health benefit claim for green tea is effectiveness against prostate cancer. Early studies showed that green tea catechin could inhibit cancer cell growth in the test tube but in April 2005, Italian scientists revealed the results of a clinical study. In a one year trial, dosing 30 men at high risk of developing prostate cancer with green tea extract produced just one case of the disease compared with nine cases in the control group of 30 who received no tea. The dose rate was equivalent to just over the daily average green tea intake in China.
2.The earliest known advertisement for tea was in the form of a book - Lu Yu’s “Book of Tea” (C’ha Ching) published about AD 780 and commissioned by Chinese tea merchants to popularize their wares.
Foot Note
We are always looking for ways to improve our site and our service. If you have any comments or feedback, or anything you would like to see here, please write to chrissie@nbtea.co.uk
