The Art of tea tasting
For four generations, S.D. Bell's have
been importing the finest teas in the World
to produce blends of the highest quality.
Our tradition in blending is appreciated
far and wide and we know you will appreciate
the fruits of our experience.
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S.D. Bell's use only
Orthodox loose-leaf teas. These larger-leaf
teas are generally more rare and more
expensive to produce than the mass
produced CTC teas, which are milled
into small particles to give a strong
liquor and dark colour, but which
lose their character and flavour as
a result. |
An experienced tea buyer will examine tea
as follows:
Dry leaf. For size, shape, colour and
weight. (Some teas by volume will be heavier
than others owing to size of leaf and moisture
content)
Infused liquor (liquid drink)
Hot - taste and colour
Cold - As above. For example, on cooling,
good Indian teas quickly become opaque or
'rusty'. Poorer teas slowly develop a muddy,
rather than rusty appearance.
Infused leaf (separated from liquor).
Colour, size, shape and smell. A bouquet
is sought from smelling the infused leaf.
The smell or "nose" of a woody character
should be rejected. A copper colour is sought
and a chocolate colour rejected.
The Art of blending good tea
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A buyer will select
and blend small quantities of different
teas in meticulous and sometimes complex
formulae. This is to achieve consistency
of taste, appearance, size, economy
and volume of blend. As teas from
the same garden vary from one harvest
to the next, this is an extremely
highly skilled process. |
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According to the blender's
formula, the teas are introduced into
a large drum, and slowly blended together.
|
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They are then packed
by hand. This ensures the master blender's
attention to detail extends even to
the quality of packaging. |
Tea - Orthodox Leaf and CTC (Crushed,
Turned, Curled)
Originally all tea was hand-plucked seasonally
from the bush and, during processing, was
graded and sorted. Even today, on the gardens
which produce the highest quality teas the
tea is plucked by hand, a bud and two leaves
being taken from each stalk. They are then
spread out in a warm atmosphere for withering
followed by rolling and then fermented in
a cool area and after final drying they
are passed through meshed sieves from whence
they are graded and packed into chests or
sacks for export.
Orthodox and CTC (crush, tear and curl)
are the two principal types of black teas.
Processing techniques of orthodox and CTC
teas differ considerably.
Orthodox Leaf
In the orthodox process shoots are withered,
rolled, oxidized and dried whereas in the
CTC process shoots are withered, rotor vane/CTC,
oxidized and dried. In the orthodox process
of manufacture, maceration or disruption
of the leaf cell is carried out on a Rolling
table. During rolling the juice from the
leaf comes out and the leaf is also twisted
and broken into smaller particles.
The process objectives during orthodox
rolling are therefore
- to rupture the cell walls and expose
their contents
- to bring the contents of leaf cells
in contact with air to start the process
of oxidation
- to twist the leaf and give it the desired
shape or appearance
- to break the larger twisted leaves into
smaller particles.
The combined effect of these processes
is to influence the degree of fermentation,
(and therefore strength of flavour) and
the size of leaf (and therefore speed at
which that flavour is imparted in the infusion
in the cup or pot). Orthodox Leaf tea therefore
allows much more subtle flavours, and a
much more gentle infusion.
Crushed, Turned, Curled (CTC)
Mechanisation has developed to the extent
that over 90% of teas grown throughout the
world are manufactured by a cutting-tearing-curling
process. These are the common small, brown
nutty-shaped type of teas. Teas are graded
into sizes, as is the gold-tipped flaky,
black-leaf tea, and it is the smaller leaf
CTCs, Pekoe Fannings, (PF) and Pekoe Dust
(PD) that constitute tea bags, the immersible
sachets that constitute the largest share
of the tea market today.
Much of the constituent teas in tea bags,
in a very competitive market, is not of
the best quality. However, good CTCs are
widely used and may constitute between 30
and 50% of packeted loose leaf teas. So
it is quite wrong to assume that, to be
good tea in strength and character it must
be and plucked, remain as a large leaf and
contain gold tip. These are good indications
of top quality teas, but much CTC (i.e.
without gold tip) is indeed good.
The CTC process ensures that the rich colour
and strong aggressive flavour infuses very
quickly, while teas processed in the Orthodox
method give a gentler, more subtle flavour,
and generally a lighter colour. S.D. Bells
have always specialised in the Orthodox
type, and will continue to do so.
Glossary of Tea terms:
Typical leaf gradings:
| .P |
|
Pekoe.A wiry, large, broken leaf,
usually without golden tips. Sri Lanka
produces large amounts of Pekoe. |
| ·OP |
|
Orange Pekoe. Refers to a high quality
thin, wiry leaf, rolled more tightly
than F.O.P. Picked later in the year
than F.O.P. |
| .F.O.P. |
|
Flowery Orange Pekoe. Refers to high
quality, whole leaf tea, made from the
first two leaves and bud of the shoot.
India produces large amounts of this
grade. |
| ·GFOP |
|
Golden Flowery Orange Pekoe. The golden
refers to the colourful tips at the
end of the top bud. |
| ·TGFOP |
|
Tippy Golden Flowery Orange Pekoe.
FOP with larger amount of tips |
| ·FTGFOP |
|
Finest Tippy Golden Flowery Orange
Pekoe. An even higher quality with more
tips than FOP |
| ·SFTGFOP |
|
Special Finest Tippy Golden Flowery
Orange Pekoe. Even higher quality still.
Rare. Think of a top Champagne! |
| ·S |
|
Souchong. A twisted leaf picked from
the bottom of the tea bush. China produces
this grade used in their smokey teas.
|
| Broken Leaf |
|
Broken leaf teas produce a darker
cup and infuse faster than whole leaf
teas. |
| ·BOP |
|
Broken Orange Pekoe. A small, flat,
broken leaf with medium body. |
| ·FBOP |
|
Flowery Broken Orange Pekoe |
| ·GBOP |
|
Golden Broken Orange Pekoe |
| ·GFBOP |
|
Golden Flowery Broken Orange Pekoe
|
Other |
| ·F |
|
Fannings. Crushed leaf which infuses
very quickly
|
| ·PD |
|
Pekoe Dust. Small grade, used in mass
marketed tea bags
|
| ·CTC |
|
Crushed Torn Curled |
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