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Tea
Estates4
High Grown estates
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low grown estates
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process
"So I must
rise at early dawn, as busy as can be, to get my daily labor done, and
pluck the leafy tea."
Ballad of
the Tea Pluckers, 1644
The first
steps of tea making begin with three little leaves the three newest or
youngest, of the plant called Camellia Sinensis. Shortly after the sun
rises in the morning, the dainty fingers of our tea pluckers start
picking the bud leaf called the flowery orange pekoe, the second leaf
from the top called the orange pekoe and the third leaf from the top
known as the pekoe leaf from our acre upon acre of lush, green tea
fields.
This
bountiful harvest when brought to the factory, goes through the
following manufacturing process.
The first
stage called withering may take between 10 to 20 hours. Placed on drying
racks, the internal moisture of the leaf is brought down to between 60%
and 70% of the original moisture making the leaf more pliable and
amenable for the next step which is
Breaking and grinding. When the leaves are placed in the grinding or
breaking machines these machines cut or crush the leaf for the purpose
of exposing the enzymes inside the cell to further development as a
result of coming into contact with oxygen. The process continues till
the leaves begin to turn a bright copper color and 2 or 3 hours is
generally enough time to accomplish this. After this phase the tea goes
into...
the drying operation where the leaves are dried in order to remove the
balance of internal moisture until it is down to somewhere between 2%
and 7% by weight for between 30 minutes to several hours. The drying
operation is exceptionally important in that this is the process which
"seals in" all of the flavor and can represent one of the major
differences between a mediocre tea and a superb tea even though they may
come from the same estate. Following the drying operation...
the tea is exposed to a static electricity roller to remove unwanted
leaf stem or vein fiber which adds no flavor to tea but does add
additional weight, to make sure you will not be paying for this
unnecessary weight.
Packed in multi wall craft paper sacks, the tea is then transported to
the buyers thus making sure that the tea in your cup comes directly from
our tea gardens to you, with no delays in between.
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