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NEWSLETTERS

NEWSLETTER May 2006

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

Our latest tea additions include Darjeeling Autumn Leaves, Darjeeling Maharani Hills, Mayan Gold (a decadent chocolate and cocoa kernel black tea), and Sencha Sakura (an amazing cherry flavoured Sencha), Darjeeling Castleton, Assam Orangajuli and many more. We are constantly expanding our tea list and just don’t have enough space here to name all our new additions! – browse www.nbtea.co.uk for the full list.

Keep looking out for some other new teas that are on their way - an Imperial Pu Erh, and some new exotic teas like Crazy Carrot - a rooibos tea for kids, high in antioxidants.

If you visit our Accessories section you will find our new variable temperature kettle in white or brushed stainless steel. Makes correct temperature green and oolong tea brewing a doddle, just set the dial to the required temp and the kettle keeps it there – and for black tea it has the best “rolling boil” we have ever seen.

We have made some more changes to the website which we hope you approve of. We have also been incredibly lucky to be working with young photographer Andy Adams who has been taking new photos of all our teas, which you can now see in our shop. You can see his work at www.andyadamsphotography.com.

For those of you that keep asking what happened to the Liquorice mint blend we promised, we are still working on it. We have had exceptional difficulty sourcing mints that combine well with Liquorice. You wouldn’t think it was that difficult! Recently we have sourced some from Ohio and are hoping they will do the trick.

GOOD BREWING DEPENDS ON GOOD WATER

However good the tea you are brewing the average cup of tea consists of 99.5% water – and the quality of that water determines the colour, flavour and aroma extracted from your leaves.
Rain water? Bottled water? Jug filters? – lots of hassle and expense! With this Newsletter we invite you to test a brand new idea we have discovered – a disposable water softener that you pop into your kettle whenever you want a quality cup of tea. The Bellima fan filter – see brochure, is so easy to use and with our local water we were impressed by the difference. Try it now with your Assam Oranguajuli free sample and tell us in the enclosed questionnaire if it impresses you too.

World Tea Expo

This speciality tea showcase exhibition, now in its fourth year and growing strongly, took place in Las Vegas in March 2006 with over 300 stands and 4,000 attendees. Nothing But Teas’ MD was invited to present a seminar on what actually happens during tea manufacture.

OUR CURRENT BESTSELLERS

    Four Chinese teas and a Georgian tea head our current Top Five Favourites – what no Indians and Ceylons?

    1. Red Lychee Balls EC12
    2. Pai Mu Tan WC01
    3. Jasmine Phoenix Eyes EC14
    4. Georgian Old Lady WG01
    5. Snow Dragon EC07

TEA TALK:Getting to Grips with Japanese Tea

Japanese tea has many terms and names that are at first confusing – but understanding a little about its history and manufacture will enhance your enjoyment of the Japanese teas we offer.

Tea brought originally as seeds from China has been grown in Japan for over 800 years and a Japanese tea culture soon grew up, based originally on the ancient Chinese methods, utensils and traditions but, particularly during the 16th Century, was refined to reflect a period of flourishing Zen Buddhist based Japanese cultural development. The tea ceremony (Chanoyu), tea masters, tea schools (including Urasenke) and exquisite ceramic tea utensils date back to this time. Chado (The Way of Tea) then reached its purest form under the influence of artist Sen Rikyu (1522-1591) with its highly aesthetic and ritualised tea ceremony recognising the beauty of ordinary life. The basis of Chado is Harmony - expressed in four written characters:

Kei - Reverence – respect for all things and beings

wa - Harmony and Peace – deeply felt, honest sympathy with everything and everybody

sei - Purity – inner and outer purity in thought, deed and word

jaku - Quietness

When, by following the tea ceremony ritual, this state of Harmony is reached then the final goal – Tranquillity – is achieved.

Technically the history of Japanese tea has evolved through three main stages – Boiled Tea, Whipped Tea and Steeped Tea. Originally Japanese tea was made into compressed cakes for transport and storage – the tea at this time was manufactured as parched green tea using the technique learned in China. Cake tea was broken into pieces and boiled to reconstitute it. At some time in the 15th Century steaming was introduced and Japanese tea manufacture could then produce a very bright green product; eventually this crude leaf tea was powdered by grinding between stones instead of being pressed into cakes. This powdered tea (Matcha) was used for making Whipped Tea – frothed by whipping the powdered tea and hot water with a bamboo whisk. This is method still central to the tea ceremony. Finally, in the 18th Century a tea seller in Kyoto developed an entirely new method of rolling and rubbing steamed leaves by hand on a hot surface. The method produced needles of rolled leaf (Sencha) that retained a better flavour and colour and made possible the steeping of tea in a tea pot. Steeped tea developed its own much less formal ceremony (Sencha-do) which became particularly popular among literary artists who prized freedom under the hierarchical feudal system of the period.

Japan has many types of green tea the names of which reflect how the tea was grown, the type of leaves used in its manufacture, the method of manufacture, how the tea is sorted and any final processing it received. When you understand the meaning of these tea names it makes choosing a Japanese tea much more interesting than a black tea, whose name tells nothing about its process history. In our next Newsletter we will explain the essential sensory differences between Kukicha and Kokeicha, Kabusecha and Konacha, but for the moment we look at the broad manufacturing methods used that give the major different tea types.

Growing Method – Japanese tea farmers unlike any others shade some of their bushes with bamboo mats (now mainly black nylon shade material) for three weeks to increase chlorophyll and amino acid development in the young leaf. The very best teas – Gyokuro and Tencha are shade grown teas (Matcha is produced by grinding Tencha leaves). Sencha is grown in full sun and has a more bitter, less sweet taste.

Age of Leaf – young leaf makes the best tea. Japanese farmers harvest their bushes four times during the growing season (four flushes) and the first or Spring flush (Ichibancha) is the best quality. Tea made from very mature or coarse Autumn leaf produces Ban-cha.

Initial Heating – for green tea production the leaf enzymes must be destroyed or the green leaf will ferment (oxidise) to produce black tea. Most Japanese tea is steamed, but a small amount is still “pan fried” or roasted in the Chinese manner – Kamairi-cha is an example of Japanese pan fired tea – rolled into round shapes. The very rare Kamanobi-cha is pan fired and then rolled into needles.

Rolling – now, except for very expensive hand made Japanese teas, all are machine rolled. A distinction is made between needle shape (Sencha and Kamanobi-cha) and round shape (Ryoku-cha and Kamairi-cha).

Unlike teas made in countries under former British influence the manufacture of all Japanese tea is made in two stages – first the Crude Tea Process, usually undertaken in small factories operated as cooperatives where the tea is produced and dried but not graded (Aru-cha). The Refining Process which takes place in tea dealers’ central factories produces by repeated sifting, standardised leaf teas called Hon-cha and stalk teas called Ban-cha.

Why not try the following from Nothing But Tea:


Sencha Fukuju GJ05
Premium Matcha GJ07
Bancha GJ01
Genmaicha GJ03

DID YOU KNOW?

Tea grows in Europe – a small tea garden in the Azores (Portugal), an even smaller plot in Cornwall – Tregothnan Botanic Garden – but proudly selling its Darjeeling character tea to Fortnum & Mason, and a small pocket of commercial tea growing in Lucca (Italy).

Chrissie Greetham
Nothing But Tea 2006

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