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You are here: Home : Destination Guide : Food : History Of Tea

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A Short History of Tea

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food facts
 

Where: Begun in China, now consumed throughout the world in Japan, England, America, Russia and India as an international culture and institute
Serving Suggestion: Green Tea - serve black, honey but no sugar. Black teas - take with milk and sugar to taste. Try an English cream tea served with scones or cake and cream at 4pm.
Health: Teas cleansing properties are thought to alieviate pains and strengthen the immune system.

 
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More tea is consumed throughout the world than any other liquid, except water. Derived from the leaves of the Camellia Sinensis tree, the infusion is valued for its medicinal properties, as well as enjoyed as a beverage.

 


image: Justine Shapiro stops for high tea in Turkey
Justine Shapiro stops for high tea in Turkey


Origins and History

Tea was first discovered in China around 2700 BC. It originated in the mountains around Sichuan and Yunnan, and according to earliest legend Emperor Shen Nung first sampled the drink when some unidentified leaves fell into his pot of hot water. Allegedly, Shen Nung used to wander the country recording the effects of infusions made from the leaves and berries of various plants. He discovered that tea cured him of a stomach ache contracted as a result of drinking a toxic herb.

Tea drinking became an elaborate art form during the Tang Dynasty (616 – 907). This was the heyday of the Chinese Empire, and traders journeyed to China from the Middle East to obtain silk, porcelain and tea. Over time, the practice of drinking tea spread across Asia, and later to Europe and the America.

Teas Around the World

There are three basic types of tea. Black tea is fully oxidised and is the most popular variety in Europe & the US, green tea, a staple in the Orient, is non-oxidised and has more delicate flavour, and Oolong tea, which is partly oxidised and is a cross between the other two in flavour and taste.

Whatever the type of tea they favour, different countries have their own unique history of tea-drinking tradition and taste.

Japan

A Buddhist Priest called Yeisei was the first person to bring tea seeds from China to Japan. He had observed the beneficial use of tea in meditation, and from this early use tea has continued to be associated with Zen Buddhism.

It quickly gained popularity in the imperial court and other sectors of society, and became elevated to an art form universally known as the ‘Japanese Tea Ceremony’. The ceremony involves making and serving tea in the most perfect, polite and gracious manner, and it requires years of training to administer at a tea ceremony.

America

The first tea was brought to the United States in the 1650s, by a Dutchman called Peter Stuyvesant. At this time the city now known as New York was a Dutch colony called New Amsterdam. When the British acquired the colony they were astonished at how popular tea was with the colonial women.

By 1720, the tea trade was centred in New York, Boston and Philadelphia. However, the colonial people were disgruntled at the tough taxes imposed on tea by the British. Their resentment reached a fever pitch in December 1767, when the men of Boston dressed up as Indians, openly purchased smuggled tea and threw hundreds of pounds of British tea into the port. These events went down in history as the Boston Tea Party, and precipitated the American Revolution.

At the beginning of the 20th century the Americans invented iced tea, now a popular summertime beverage. At around the same time a New Yorker named Thomas Sullivan first came up with the eminently practical concept of tea bags. These days, tea is enjoying a revival in popularity with health conscious Americans but is secondary to the American staple brew of coffee.

England

By the 17th century Dutch traders brought tea to Europe, where it rapidly gained popularity. When the Dutch Infanta Catherine Braganza married King Charles II in 1662, she brought with her to England a chest of tea. It immediately became the beverage of choice in English high society, replacing ale as the national drink.

The English serve tea with milk, and add sugar to taste. Afternoon tea is an English institution, accompanied by sandwiches, scones or cake.

India

India is responsible for cultivating much of the world’s tea, and Indian varieties such as Darjeeling, Assam and Nilgiri are amongst the most popular. However the first plantations in India were only established by the British colonisers in the 19th century.

Russia

The Russians first encountered tea in 1618, when the Chinese made a gift of several chests to Tsar Alexis. By the end of the 17th century China and Russia were engaged in trade relations, but the journey between the two countries was long and hazardous and the cost of tea was extortionate. It was another hundred years before the price of tea fell sufficiently for the habit to percolate through to all sectors of society. These days tea and vodka are the Russian national drinks. The Russians make tea in using a samovar, a large water heater and tea pot, and drink it strong and sweet.

 
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MORE INFORMATION

World of Tea
Great news, info & fun tea facts, sponsored by Stash Tea.

Tea Time
Online tea-lovers shop

Books:
All the Tea in China, Kyril Bonfiglioli; Black Spring Press, 1991

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