Tea is an aromatic beverage made by steeping cured leaves of Camellia sinensis in hot or boiling water. It originated in China and later spread to other parts of Asia and the world. There are different varieties of tea depending on how the leaves are processed, including white, green, oolong, and black tea. Tea leaves contain antioxidants and other compounds that have been suggested to provide health benefits, but more research is still needed. Tea is now widely consumed globally and has developed diverse cultural traditions.
Recruting, Retaining and Creating remarkable content that resonates with your supporters can be tough. If you run either a Charity Lottery, Non Profit Lottery, Work Place lottery, Raffles or are responsible for Fundraising generally. This presentation may help spark some ideas for your organisation. We offer help with social media strategies, training and implementation.
Lottery marketing effectiveness case studyMichael Wolfe
Applications of predictive analytics and econometrics for measuring the effectiveness of Lottery Corp. marketing and media. This study is able to differentiate marketing effectiveness across different types of lottery games, including instant (scratch) games, draw games and high jackpot intererstate games like Powerball and Mega Millions.
Recruting, Retaining and Creating remarkable content that resonates with your supporters can be tough. If you run either a Charity Lottery, Non Profit Lottery, Work Place lottery, Raffles or are responsible for Fundraising generally. This presentation may help spark some ideas for your organisation. We offer help with social media strategies, training and implementation.
Lottery marketing effectiveness case studyMichael Wolfe
Applications of predictive analytics and econometrics for measuring the effectiveness of Lottery Corp. marketing and media. This study is able to differentiate marketing effectiveness across different types of lottery games, including instant (scratch) games, draw games and high jackpot intererstate games like Powerball and Mega Millions.
Tea - A Training Manual by Hemant SharmaHEMANT SHARMA
An amazing informative tool to enjoy everything from its origin, culture, interesting facts & right way to make or serve this awesome potent drink. So, sip in or dunk in to savour important knowledge about "Tea"
China is the first country in the world to discover, cultivate and utilize tea. According to historical data, the tea tree originated in China. As early as 5,000 years ago, our ancestors discovered that tea has the effect of detoxification.
Tea has reportedly been consumed in China from 2700 BCE. Tea was first used daily beginning in the third century CE and was originally prepared by boiling fresh leaves in water for medicinal purposes. This was the beginning of tea production and cultivation. In 350 CE, the earliest description of plantation, processing, and drinking practices was recorded. Around 800, the first seeds arrived in Japan, and by the 13th century, cultivation had spread all throughout the nation. In 1810, Chinese immigrants from Amoy introduced tea growing to the island of Formosa (Taiwan). The Dutch introduced laborer's, equipment, and seeds from China in 1833 after bringing Japanese seeds and Japanese employees to Java in 1826.
In the highlands along the border between Burma and the Indian state of Assam in 1824, tea trees were found. The British introduced the tea culture to India and Ceylon (Sri Lanka), respectively, in 1836 and 1867. They initially utilized Chinese seeds, but later on they switched to Assamese seeds. The first shipment of Chinese tea to reach Europe was sent by the Dutch East India Company in 1610. In 1669, China tea was shipped by the English East India Company from Javan ports to the London market. Later, teas produced on British plantations in Ceylon and India made their way to Mincing Lane, the hub of the London tea trade. By the late 19th and early 20th centuries, tea was produced in Russian Georgia, Sumatra, Iran, non-Asian countries including Queensland in Australia, Natal, Malawi, Uganda, Kenya, Congo, Tanzania, and Mozambique in Africa, Argentina, Brazil, and Peru in South America.
Classification of teas
Teas are divided into categories based on their country of origin, such as Chinese, Ceylon, Japanese, Indonesian, and African teas, or by smaller districts, such as Kemon from Chi-men in China's Anyway Province and Enshu from Japan.
The size of the processed leaf is another way that teas are categorized. Larger leafy grades and smaller broken grades are the results of conventional processes. Flowery pekoe (FP), orange pekoe (OP), pekoe (P), pekoe slouching (PS), and slouching (S) are the leafy grades. Broken orange pekoe (BOP), broken pekoe (BP), BOP fanning, fanning, and dust are the broken grades. While leafy grades are mostly derived from the harder and older leaves, broken grades can contain significant contributions from the more delicate shoots. In current commercial grading, broken grades account for 95 to 100% of production, although leafy grades made up a significant portion of output in the past. This change is a result of growing consumer demand for teas with lower particle size that brew quickly and strongly.
Tea contains caffeine, which improves taste and fragrance, improves focus, and takes some time to enter the bloodstream. Contrarily, a cup of coffee contains 125–185 mg of caffeine. It has been noted that those who drink coffee feel better right away. Both coffee and tea have a long history, as well as a rich and varied body of folklore surrounding their precise origins. In the present day, coffee and tea are still quite popular, with the majority of individuals regularly consuming one of the two beverages.
Coffee drinking has been linked to both positive and negative health effects. In general, moderate use, or three to four cups per day, is associated with a lower risk of Parkinson’s disease, liver cancer, type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease. A longer lifespan has also been related in research to moderate coffee drinking.
Heartburn, anxiety, jitteriness, and sleep difficulties can all result from drinking too much coffee. A causal relationship between coffee and cancer was hypothesized by studies done in the 20th century. The World Health Organization (WHO), however, withdrew coffee from its list of potential carcinogens in 2016 since several studies have refuted any causal link between coffee drinking and cancer.
Based on the work of Tom Standage, "A History of the World in Six Glasses" this exploration of three beverages: Tea, Chocolate and Coffee, asks participants to consider what role slavery, war, empire and bloody conflict has had in the history of our favorite warm bevvies. By Professor Whitney Howarth, New Hampshire
Tea - A Training Manual by Hemant SharmaHEMANT SHARMA
An amazing informative tool to enjoy everything from its origin, culture, interesting facts & right way to make or serve this awesome potent drink. So, sip in or dunk in to savour important knowledge about "Tea"
China is the first country in the world to discover, cultivate and utilize tea. According to historical data, the tea tree originated in China. As early as 5,000 years ago, our ancestors discovered that tea has the effect of detoxification.
Tea has reportedly been consumed in China from 2700 BCE. Tea was first used daily beginning in the third century CE and was originally prepared by boiling fresh leaves in water for medicinal purposes. This was the beginning of tea production and cultivation. In 350 CE, the earliest description of plantation, processing, and drinking practices was recorded. Around 800, the first seeds arrived in Japan, and by the 13th century, cultivation had spread all throughout the nation. In 1810, Chinese immigrants from Amoy introduced tea growing to the island of Formosa (Taiwan). The Dutch introduced laborer's, equipment, and seeds from China in 1833 after bringing Japanese seeds and Japanese employees to Java in 1826.
In the highlands along the border between Burma and the Indian state of Assam in 1824, tea trees were found. The British introduced the tea culture to India and Ceylon (Sri Lanka), respectively, in 1836 and 1867. They initially utilized Chinese seeds, but later on they switched to Assamese seeds. The first shipment of Chinese tea to reach Europe was sent by the Dutch East India Company in 1610. In 1669, China tea was shipped by the English East India Company from Javan ports to the London market. Later, teas produced on British plantations in Ceylon and India made their way to Mincing Lane, the hub of the London tea trade. By the late 19th and early 20th centuries, tea was produced in Russian Georgia, Sumatra, Iran, non-Asian countries including Queensland in Australia, Natal, Malawi, Uganda, Kenya, Congo, Tanzania, and Mozambique in Africa, Argentina, Brazil, and Peru in South America.
Classification of teas
Teas are divided into categories based on their country of origin, such as Chinese, Ceylon, Japanese, Indonesian, and African teas, or by smaller districts, such as Kemon from Chi-men in China's Anyway Province and Enshu from Japan.
The size of the processed leaf is another way that teas are categorized. Larger leafy grades and smaller broken grades are the results of conventional processes. Flowery pekoe (FP), orange pekoe (OP), pekoe (P), pekoe slouching (PS), and slouching (S) are the leafy grades. Broken orange pekoe (BOP), broken pekoe (BP), BOP fanning, fanning, and dust are the broken grades. While leafy grades are mostly derived from the harder and older leaves, broken grades can contain significant contributions from the more delicate shoots. In current commercial grading, broken grades account for 95 to 100% of production, although leafy grades made up a significant portion of output in the past. This change is a result of growing consumer demand for teas with lower particle size that brew quickly and strongly.
Tea contains caffeine, which improves taste and fragrance, improves focus, and takes some time to enter the bloodstream. Contrarily, a cup of coffee contains 125–185 mg of caffeine. It has been noted that those who drink coffee feel better right away. Both coffee and tea have a long history, as well as a rich and varied body of folklore surrounding their precise origins. In the present day, coffee and tea are still quite popular, with the majority of individuals regularly consuming one of the two beverages.
Coffee drinking has been linked to both positive and negative health effects. In general, moderate use, or three to four cups per day, is associated with a lower risk of Parkinson’s disease, liver cancer, type 2 diabetes, and cardiovascular disease. A longer lifespan has also been related in research to moderate coffee drinking.
Heartburn, anxiety, jitteriness, and sleep difficulties can all result from drinking too much coffee. A causal relationship between coffee and cancer was hypothesized by studies done in the 20th century. The World Health Organization (WHO), however, withdrew coffee from its list of potential carcinogens in 2016 since several studies have refuted any causal link between coffee drinking and cancer.
Based on the work of Tom Standage, "A History of the World in Six Glasses" this exploration of three beverages: Tea, Chocolate and Coffee, asks participants to consider what role slavery, war, empire and bloody conflict has had in the history of our favorite warm bevvies. By Professor Whitney Howarth, New Hampshire
1. Tea is an aromatic beverage commonly prepared by pouring hot or boiling water over cured leaves
of the Camellia sinensis, anevergreen shrub native to Asia.[3]
After water, it is the most widely
consumed drink in the world.[4]
Some teas, like Darjeeling and Chinese greens, have a cooling,
slightly bitter, and astringent flavour,[5]
while others have vastly different profiles that include sweet,
nutty, floral, or grassy notes.
Tea originated in China, possibly as a medicinal drink.[6]
It came to the West via Portuguese priests
and merchants, who introduced it during the 16th century.[7]
Drinking tea became fashionable among
Britons during the 17th century, who started large scale production and commercialization of the
plant in India to bypass a Chinese monopoly at that time.[8]
The phrase herbal tea usually refers to infusions of fruit or herbs made without the tea plant, such as
steeps of rosehip, chamomile, or rooibos. These are also known as tisanes or herbal infusions to
distinguish them from "tea" as it is commonly construed.
Contents
[hide]
1 Etymology
2 Origin and history
3 Cultivation and harvesting
4 Processing and classification
5 Blending and additives
6 Content
o 6.1 Nutrients and phytochemicals
7 Tea culture
8 Preparation
o 8.1 Steeping tea
o 8.2 Black tea
o 8.3 Green tea
o 8.4 Flowering tea
o 8.5 Oolong tea
o 8.6 Premium or delicate tea
o 8.7 Pu-erh tea
o 8.8 Serving
o 8.9 Additives
9 Economics
o 9.1 Production
9.1.1 Labor and consumer safety problems
9.1.2 Certification
o 9.2 Trade
10 Packaging
o 10.1 Tea bags
o 10.2 Loose tea
o 10.3 Compressed tea
2. o 10.4 Instant tea
o 10.5 Bottled and canned tea
11 Storage
12 Gallery
13 See also
14 References
15 Bibliography
16 Further reading
17 External links
Etymology[edit]
Main article: Etymology of tea
The Chinese character for tea is 茶, originally written with an extra stroke as 荼 (pronounced tu, used
as a word for a bitter herb), and acquired its current form during the Tang Dynasty as used in the
eighth-century treatise on tea The Classic of Tea.[9][10][11]
The word is pronounced differently in the
various Chinese languages, such as chá in Mandarin,zo and dzo in Wu Chinese,
and ta and te in Min Chinese.[12]
One suggestion is that the different pronunciations may have arisen
from the different words for tea in ancient China, for example tu (荼) may have given rise
to tê;[13]
historical phonologists however argued that the cha, te and dzo all arose from the same root
with a reconstructed pronunciationdra (dr- represents a single consonant for a retroflex d), which
changed due to sound shift through the centuries.[14]
Other ancient words for tea include jia (檟,
defined as "bittertu" during the Han Dynasty), she (蔎), ming (茗) and chuan (荈), with chuan the only
other word still in use for tea.[14][15]
Most, such as Mandarin and Cantonese, pronounce it along the
lines of cha, but Hokkien varieties along the Southern coast of China and in Southeast Asia
pronounce it like teh. These two pronunciations have made their separate ways into other languages
around the world:[16]
Te is from the Amoy tê of southern Fujian province. It reached the West from the port
of Xiamen (Amoy), once a major point of contact with Western European traders such as the
Dutch, who spread it to Western Europe.
Cha is from the Cantonese chàh of Guangzhou (Canton) and the ports of Hong Kong
and Macau, also major points of contact, especially with the Portuguese, who spread it to India
in the 16th century. The Korean and Japanese pronunciations of cha, however, came not from
Cantonese, rather they were borrowed into Korean and Japanese during earlier periods of
Chinese history.
The widespread form chai came from Persian چای chay. Both the châ and chây forms are found in
Persian dictionaries.[17]
They derive from Northern Chinese pronunciation ofchá,[18]
which
passed overland to Central Asia and Persia, where it picked up the Persian grammatical suffix -
yi before passing on to Russian, Arabic, Urdu, Turkish, etc.[19]
3. English has all three forms: cha or char (both pronounced /ˈtʃɑː/), attested from the 16th century; tea,
from the 17th; and chai, from the 20th.
Languages in more intense contact with Chinese, Sinospheric languages such as Vietnamese,
Zhuang, Tibetan, Korean, and Japanese, may have borrowed their words for tea at an earlier time
and from a different variety of Chinese, so-called Sino-Xenic pronunciations. Although normally
pronounced as cha, Korean and Japanese also retain the early but now less common
pronunciations of ta and da. Japanese has different pronunciations for the word tea depending on
when the pronunciations was first borrowed into the language: Ta comes from the Tang
Dynasty court at Chang'an: that is, from Middle Chinese; da, however, comes from the
earlier Southern Dynasties court at Nanjing, a place where the consonant was still voiced, as it is
today in neighbouring Shanghainese zo.[citation needed]
Vietnamese and Zhuang have southern cha-type
pronunciations.
Origin and history[edit]
Main article: History of tea
A 19th-century Japanese painting depicting Shennong: Chinese legends credit Shennong with the invention of
tea.[20]
Tea plants are native to East and South Asia, and probably originated around the meeting points of
the lands of north Burma and southwest China.[21]
Statistical cluster analysis, chromosome number,
easy hybridization, and various types of intermediate hybrids and spontaneouspolyploids indicate
that likely a single place of origin exists for Camellia sinensis, an area including the northern part
of Burma, and Yunnan andSichuan provinces of China.[21]
Tea drinking likely began during the Shang
4. Dynasty in China, when it was used for medicinal purposes.[6]
It is believed that, soon after, "for the
first time, people began to boil tea leaves for consumption into a concentrated liquid without the
addition of other leaves or herbs, thereby using tea as a bitter yet stimulating drink, rather than as a
medicinal concoction."[6]
Chinese legends attribute the invention of tea to Shennong in 2737 BC.[20]
A Chinese inventor was
the first person to invent a tea shredder.[22]
The first recorded drinking of tea is in China, with the
earliest records of tea consumption dating to the 10th century BC.[2][23]
Another early credible record
of tea drinking dates to the third century AD, in a medical text by Hua Tuo, who stated, "to drink bitter
t'u constantly makes one think better." Another early reference to tea is found in a letter written by
the Qin Dynasty general Liu Kun.[24]
It was already a common drink during the Qin Dynasty (third
century BC) and became widely popular during the Tang Dynasty, when it was spread to Korea,
Japan, and Vietnam. In India, it has been drunk for medicinal purposes for a long but uncertain
period, but apart from the Himalayan region seems not to have been used as a beverage until the
British introduced Chinese tea there.
Tea-weighing station north ofBatumi, Russian Empire before 1915
Tea was first introduced to Portuguese priests and merchants in China during the 16th century, at
which time it was termed chá.[7]
The first record in English is from Peter Mundy an East India
Company agent writing to Macao requesting "the best sort of chaw" in 1615.[25]
In 1750, tea experts
travelled from China to the Azores, and planted tea, along with jasmine and mallow, to give it aroma
and distinction. Both green and black tea continue to grow on the islands, which are the main
suppliers to continental Portugal.Catherine of Braganza, wife of King Charles II of England, took the
tea habit to Great Britain around 1660 when it was tasted by Samuel Pepys, but tea was not widely
consumed in Britain until the 18th century, and remained expensive until the latter part of that period.
Tea smuggling during the 18th century led to Britain’s masses being able to afford and consume tea,
and its importance eventually influenced the Boston Tea Party. The British government eventually
eradicated the tax on tea, thereby eliminating the smuggling trade by 1785.[26]
In Britain and Ireland,
tea had become an everyday beverage for all levels of society by the late 19th century, but at first it
was consumed as a luxury item on special occasions, such as religious festivals, wakes, and
5. domestic work gatherings such as quiltings.[27]
The price in Europe fell steadily during the 19th
century, especially after Indian tea began to arrive in large quantities.
The first European to successfully transplant tea to the Himalayas, Robert Fortune, was sent by the
East India Company on a mission to China in 1848 to bring the tea plant back to Great Britain. He
began his journey in high secrecy as his mission occurred in the lull between the Anglo-
Chinese First Opium War (1839–1842) and Second Opium War(1856–1860), at a time when
westerners were not held in high regard.[28]
Tea was introduced into India by the British, in an attempt to break the Chinese monopoly on
it.[29]
The British brought Chinese seeds into Northeast India, but the plants failed; they later
discovered that a different variety of tea was endemic to Assam and the northeast region of India
and that it was used by local tribes. Using the Chinese planting and cultivation techniques, the
British launched a tea industry by offering land in Assam to any European who agreed to cultivate it
for export.[29]
Tea was originally consumed only by anglicized Indians; it became widely popular in
India in the 1950s because of a successful advertising campaign by the India Tea Board.[29]
Cultivation and harvesting[edit]
A tea plantation, Bandung in Indonesia
Camellia sinensis is an evergreen plant that grows mainly
in tropical and subtropical climates.[30]
Some varieties can also tolerate marine climates and are
cultivated as far north as Cornwall in the United Kingdom,[31]
Perthshire in
Scotland,[32][33][34]
Washington state in the United States,[35]
Vancouver Island in Canada,[36]
and
experimentally in Pembrokeshire, Wales[37]
in the Northern Hemisphere. Also as far south
as Hobart on the Australian island of Tasmania,[38][39]
and Waikato in New Zealand[40]
in the Southern
Hemisphere.
6. Leaves of Camellia sinensis, the tea plant
Tea plants are propagated from seed and cuttings; about 4 to 12 years are needed for a plant to
bear seed and about three years before a new plant is ready for harvesting.[30]
In addition to a zone
8 climate or warmer, tea plants require at least 127 cm (50 in) of rainfall a year and prefer acidic
soils.[41]
Many high-quality tea plants are cultivated at elevations of up to 1,500 m (4,900 ft) above
sea level. While at these heights the plants grow more slowly, they acquire a better flavour.[42]
Two principal varieties are used: Camellia sinensis var. sinensis, which is used for most Chinese,
Formosan and Japanese teas, and C. s.var. assamica, used in Pu-erh and most Indian teas (but
not Darjeeling). Within these botanical varieties, many strains and modern clonal varieties are
known. Leaf size is the chief criterion for the classification of tea plants, with three primary
classifications being,[43]
Assamtype, characterised by the largest leaves; China type, characterised by
the smallest leaves; and Cambodian type, characterised by leaves of intermediate size.
A tea plant will grow into a tree of up to 16 m (52 ft) if left undisturbed,[30]
but cultivated plants are
generally pruned to waist height for ease of plucking. Also, the short plants bear more new shoots
which provide new and tender leaves and increase the quality of the tea.[44]
Only the top 1–2 in of the mature plant are picked. These buds and leaves are called 'flushes'.[45]
A
plant will grow a new flush every seven to 15 days during the growing season. Leaves that are slow
in development tend to produce better-flavoured teas.[30]
Pests of tea include mosquito bugs of the
genus Helopeltis (which are true bugs that must not be confused with the dipteran) that can tatter
leaves, so they may be sprayed with insecticides.
Processing and classification[edit]
Main article: Tea processing
7. Common processing methods of tea leaves
Fresh tea leaves in various stages of growth; the smaller the leaf, the more expensive the tea
Tea is generally divided into categories based on how it is processed.[46]
At least six different types
are produced:
White: Wilted and unoxidized
Yellow: Unwilted and unoxidized, but allowed to yellow
Green: Unwilted and unoxidized
Oolong: Wilted, bruised, and partially oxidized
Black: Wilted, sometimes crushed, and fully oxidized (called 'red tea' in China)
Post-Fermented: Green tea that has been allowed to ferment/compost ('black tea' for the
Chinese)
The most common are white, green, oolong, and black. Some varieties, such as traditional oolong
and Pu-erh, a post-fermented tea, can be used medicinally.
After picking, the leaves of C. sinensis soon begin to wilt and oxidize unless immediately dried.
An enzymatic oxidation process triggered by the plant's intracellular enzymes causes the leaves to
turn progressively darker as their chlorophyll breaks down and tannins are released. This darkening
is stopped at a predetermined stage by heating, which deactivates the enzymes responsible. In the
production of black teas, halting by heating is carried out simultaneously with drying.
8. Tea harvest on the eastern shores of the Black Sea, circa 1905–15
Without careful moisture and temperature control during manufacture and packaging, growth of
undesired molds and bacteria may make tea unfit for consumption.
Blending and additives[edit]
Main article: Tea blending and additives
Although single-estate teas are available, almost all tea in bags and most loose tea sold in the West
is blended. Such teas may combine others from the same cultivation area or several different ones.
The aim is to obtain consistency, better taste, higher price, or some combination of the three.
Tea easily retains odors, which can cause problems in processing, transportation, and storage. This
same sensitivity also allows for special processing (such as tea infused with smoke during drying)
and a wide range of scented and flavoured variants, such as bergamot(found in Earl Grey), vanilla,
and spearmint.
Content[edit]
Caffeine constitutes about 3% of tea's dry weight, translating to between 30 mg and 90 mg per 8-oz
(250-ml) cup depending on type, brand,[47]
and brewing method.[48]
Tea also contains small amounts of theobromine and theophylline, which
are stimulants and xanthines similar to caffeine.[49]
Because of modern environmental pollution, fluoride and aluminium also sometimes occur in tea.
Certain types of brick tea made from old leaves and stems have the highest levels.[50][51]
Nutrients and phytochemicals[edit]
Main article: Health effects of tea
Black and green teas contain no essential nutrients in significant content, with the exception of
the dietary mineral, manganese at 0.5 mg per cup or 26% of the Daily Value.[52]
Tea leaves contain
9. diverse polyphenols, including flavonoids, epigallocatechin gallate (commonly noted as EGCG) and
other catechins.[53][54]
It has been suggested that green and black tea may protect against cancer[55]
or other diseases such
as obesity[56]
or Alzheimer's disease,[57]
but the compounds found in green tea have not been
conclusively demonstrated to have any effect on human diseases.[58][59]
One human study
demonstrated that regular consumption of black tea over four weeks had no beneficial effect in
lowering blood cholesterol levels.[60]
Tea culture[edit]
Main article: Tea culture
Masala chai from India with garnishes
Turkish tea served in typical small glass and corresponding plate
10. Iced tea with a slice of lemon
Tea may be consumed early in the day to heighten calm alertness; it contains L-
theanine, theophylline, and bound caffeine[5]
(sometimes calledtheine). Decaffeinated brands are
also sold. While herbal teas are also referred to as tea, most of them do not contain leaves from the
tea plant.
While tea is the second most consumed beverage on Earth after water, in many cultures it is also
consumed at elevated social events, such asafternoon tea and the tea party. Tea ceremonies have
arisen in different cultures, such as the Chinese and Japanese tea ceremonies, each of which
employs traditional techniques and ritualised protocol of brewing and serving tea for enjoyment in a
refined setting. One form of Chinese tea ceremony is the Gongfu tea ceremony, which typically uses
small Yixing clay teapots and oolong tea.
Turkish tea is an important part of Turkish cuisine, and is the most commonly consumed hot drink,
despite the country's long history of coffeeconsumption. In 2004 Turkey produced 205,500 tonnes of
tea (6.4% of the world's total tea production), which made it one of the largest tea markets in the
world,[61]
with 120,000 tons being consumed in Turkey, and the rest being exported.[62]
In 2010 Turkey
had the highest per capita consumption in the world at 2.7 kg.[63]
As of 2013, the per-capita
consumption of Turkish tea exceeds 10 cups per day and 13.8 kg per year.[64]
Tea is grown mostly
in Rize Province on the Black Sea coast.[65]
Ireland has, for a long time, been one of the biggest per-capita consumers of tea in the world. The
national average is four cups per person per day, with many people drinking six cups or more. Tea in
Ireland is usually taken with milk or sugar and is slightly spicier and stronger than the traditional
English blend. The two main brands of tea sold in Ireland are Lyons and Barry's. The Irish love of tea
is perhaps best illustrated by the stereotypical housekeeper, Mrs. Doyle in the popular sitcom Father
Ted.
11. Tea is prevalent in most cultures in the Middle East. In Arab culture, tea is a focal point for social
gatherings.
In Pakistan, tea is called chai (written as .)ےئاچ Both black and green teas are popular and are
known locally as sabz chai and kahwah, respectively. The popular green tea called kahwah is often
served after every meal in the Pashtun belt of Balochistan and in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, which is
where the Khyber Pass of the Silk Road is found.
In the transnational Kashmir region, which straddles the border between India and Pakistan,
Kashmiri chai or noon chai, a pink, creamy tea with pistachios, almonds, cardamom, and sometimes
cinnamon, is consumed primarily at special occasions, weddings, and during the winter months
when it is sold in many kiosks.
In central and southern Punjab and the metropolitan Sindh region of Pakistan, tea with milk and
sugar (sometimes with pistachios, cardamom, etc.), commonly referred to as chai, is widely
consumed. It is the most common beverage of households in the region. In the northern Pakistani
regions of Chitral and Gilgit-Baltistan, a salty, buttered Tibetan-style tea is consumed. In Iranian
culture, tea is so widely consumed, it is generally the first thing offered to a household guest.[66]
In India, tea is one of the most popular hot beverages. It is consumed daily in almost all homes,
offered to guests, consumed in high amounts in domestic and official surroundings, and is made with
the addition of milk with or without spices. It is also served with biscuits dipped in the tea and eaten
before consuming the tea. More often than not, it is drunk in "doses" of small cups (referred to as
"Cutting" chai if sold at street tea vendors) rather than one large cup. On 21 April 2012, the Deputy
Chairman of Planning Commission (India), Montek Singh Ahluwalia, said tea would be declared as
national drink by April 2013.[67][68]
The move is expected to boost the tea industry in the country.
Speaking on the occasion,Assam Chief Minister Tarun Gogoi said a special package for the tea
industry would be announced in the future to ensure its development.[69]
In the United States, 80% of tea is consumed as iced tea.[70]
Sweet tea is native to the southeastern
US, and is iconic in its cuisine.
Switzerland has its own unique blend of iced tea, made with the basic ingredients like black tea,
sugar, lemon juice and mint, but a variety of Alp herbs are also added to the concoction. Apart from
classic flavours like lemon and peach, exotic flavours like jasmine and lemongrass are also very
popular.
In the United Kingdom, it is consumed daily and often by a majority of people across the country,
and indeed is perceived as one of Britain's cultural beverages. In British homes, it is customary good
manners for a host to offer tea to guests soon after their arrival. Tea is generally consumed at home;
outside the home in cafés. Afternoon tea with cakes on fine porcelain is a cultural stereotype,
sometimes available in quaint tea-houses. In southwest England, many cafes serve a 'cream tea',
12. consisting of scones, clotted cream, and jam alongside a pot of tea. Throughout the UK, 'tea' may
also refer to the evening meal.
In Burma (Myanmar), tea is consumed not only as hot drinks, but also as sweet tea and green tea
known locally as laphet-yay and laphet-yay-gyan, respectively. Pickled tea leaves, known locally
as laphet, are also a national delicacy. Pickled tea is usually eaten with roasted sesame seeds,
crispy fried beans, roasted peanuts and fried garlic chips.
Preparation[edit]
Teakettle boiling water over hot coals at a tea house in Jiufen, Taiwan
Teas of different levels of oxidation (L to R): green, yellow, oolong, and black
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Steeping tea[edit]
The traditional method of preparing tea is to place loose tea leaves directly (or in a tea infuser) into
a tea pot or teacup, pour freshly boiled water over the leaves, and allow the infused liquid to steep
(or "brew"). After a few minutes, the infuser is removed, or the tea is poured through a strainer while
13. serving. Strength should be varied by the amount of tea leaves used, not changing the steeping
time.
Most green teas should be allowed two or three minutes, although other types may vary between
thirty seconds and ten minutes.
Quantity also varies by tea type, with a basic recipe calling for one slightly heaped teaspoon (about 5
ml) for each teacup of water (200–240 ml) (7–8 oz). Stronger teas to be drunk with milk (such
as Assam) are often prepared more heavily, while more delicate high-grown varieties (such as
a Darjeeling) more lightly.
Optimum brewing temperature depends on tea type. Camellia sinensis naturally
contains tannins having bitter properties accentuated by both temperature and steeping time. These
tannins are enhanced by oxidation during processing. Teas with little or no oxidation, such as a
green or white, are best at lower temperatures between 65 and 85 °C (149 and 185 °F), while more
oxidized teas require 100 °C (212 °F) to extract their large, complex, flavourful phenolic molecules.
In addition, boiling reduces the dissolved oxygen content of water, which would otherwise react with
phenolic molecules to degrade them.
Type Water temp. Steep time Infusions
White tea 65 to 70 °C (149 to 158 °F) 1–2 minutes 3
Yellow tea 70 to 75 °C (158 to 167 °F) 1–2 minutes 3
Green tea 75 to 80 °C (167 to 176 °F) 1–2 minutes 4–6
Oolong tea 80 to 85 °C (176 to 185 °F) 2–3 minutes 4–6
Black tea 99 °C (210 °F) 2–3 minutes 2–3
Flowering tea 100 °C (212 °F) 2–3 minutes 4–5
14. Pu'er tea 95 to 100 °C (203 to 212 °F) Limitless Several
Tisanes 99 °C (210 °F) 3–6 minutes Varied
Some tea sorts are often brewed several times using the same leaves. Historically in China, tea is
divided into a number of infusions. The first is immediately poured out to wash the tea, and then the
second and further infusions are drunk. The third through fifth are nearly always considered the best,
although different teas open up differently and may require more infusions to produce the best
flavour.[71]
One way to taste a tea throughout its entire process is to add hot water to a cup containing the
leaves and sample it every 30 seconds. As the tea leaves unfold (known as "The Agony of the
Leaves") the taste evolves.[72]
A tea cosy or a teapot warmer are often used to keep the temperature of the tea in a teapot constant
over periods of 20–60 minutes.
A traditional cup of black tea
Black tea[edit]
Popular varieties of black tea include Assam, Nepal, Darjeeling, Nilgiri, Turkish, Keemun,
and Ceylon teas.
Many of the active substances in black tea do not develop at temperatures lower than 90 °C
(194 °F).[73]
As a result, black tea in the West is usually steeped in water near its boiling point, at
around 99 °C (210 °F). The most common fault when making black tea is to use water at too low a
temperature. Since boiling point drops with increasing altitude, it is difficult to brew black tea properly
in mountainous areas. Warming the tea pot before steeping is critical at any elevation.
Western black teas are usually brewed for about four minutes and are usually not allowed to steep
for less than 30 seconds or more than about five minutes (a process known
15. as brewing or mashing in Britain). In many regions of the world, however, actively boiling water is
used and the tea is often stewed. In India, black tea is often boiled for fifteen minutes or longer to
make Masala chai, as a strong brew is preferred. Tea should be strained while serving.
A food safety management group of the International Organization for Standardization (ISO) has
published a standard for preparing a cup of tea (ISO 3103: Tea — Preparation of liquor for use in
sensory tests), primarily intended for standardizing preparation for comparison and rating purposes.
Green tea[edit]
In regions of the world that prefer mild beverages, such as the West and Far East, green tea should
be steeped in water around 80 to 85 °C (176 to 185 °F), the higher the quality of the leaves the lower
the temperature. Regions such as North Africa or Central Asia prefer a bitter tea, and hotter water is
used. In Morocco, green tea is steeped in boiling water for 15 minutes.
The container in which green tea is steeped is often warmed beforehand to prevent premature
cooling. High-quality green and white teas can have new water added as many as five or more
times, depending on variety, at increasingly higher temperatures.
Flowering tea[edit]
Flowering tea or blooming tea should be brewed at 100 °C (212 °F) in clear glass tea wares for up to
three minutes. First pull 1/3 water to make the tea ball wet and after 30 seconds add the boiling
water up to 4/5 of the capacity of the tea ware. The boiling water can help the tea ball bloom quickly
and with a strong aroma of the tea. The height of glass tea ware should be 8–10 cm, which can help
the tea and flowers bloom completely. One tea ball can be brewed 4-5 times.
Oolong tea[edit]
Oolong tea should be brewed around 185 to 205 °F, with the brewing vessel warmed before pouring
the water. Yixing purple clay teapots are the traditional brewing-vessel for oolong tea which can be
brewed multiple times from the same leaves, unlike green tea, seeming to improve with reuse. In the
Chinese and Taiwanese Gongfu tea ceremony, the first brew is discarded, as it is considered a rinse
of leaves rather than a proper brew.
Premium or delicate tea[edit]
16. A strainer is often used when tea is made with tea-leaves in a teapot
Some teas, especially green teas and delicate oolong teas, are steeped for shorter periods,
sometimes less than 30 seconds. Using a tea strainer separates the leaves from the water at the
end of the brewing time if a tea bag is not being used. However, the black Darjeeling tea, a premium
Indian tea, needs a longer than average steeping time. Elevation and time of harvest offer varying
taste profiles; proper storage and water quality also have a large impact on taste.
Pu-erh tea[edit]
Pu-erh teas require boiling water for infusion. Some prefer to quickly rinse pu-erh for several
seconds with boiling water to remove tea dust which accumulates from the ageing process, then
infuse it at the boiling point (100 °C or 212 °F), and allow it to steep from 30 seconds to five minutes.
Serving[edit]
To preserve the pretannin tea without requiring it all to be poured into cups, a second teapot may be
used. The steeping pot is best unglazed earthenware; Yixing pots are the best known of these,
famed for the high-quality clay from which they are made. The serving pot is generally porcelain,
which retains the heat better. Larger teapots are a post-19th century invention, as tea before this
time was very rare and very expensive. Experienced tea-drinkers often insist the tea should not be
stirred around while it is steeping (sometimes called winding or mashing in the UK). This, they say,
will do little to strengthen the tea, but is likely to bring the tannins out in the same way that brewing
too long will do. For the same reason, one should not squeeze the last drops out of a teabag; if
stronger tea is desired, more tea leaves should be used.
Additives[edit]
Further information: Tea blending and additives
Tea is often taken with milk
Tea spiced with cinnamon andcardamom covered with a layer of cream
The addition of milk to tea in Europe was first mentioned in 1680 by the epistolist Madame de
Sévigné.[74]
Many teas are traditionally drunk with milk in cultures where dairy products are
17. consumed. These include Indian masala chai and British tea blends. These teas tend to be very
hearty varieties of black tea which can be tasted through the milk, such as Assams, or the East
Friesian blend. Milk is thought to neutralise remaining tannins and reduce acidity.[75][76]
The Han
Chinese do not usually drink milk with tea but the Manchus do, and the elite of the Qing Dynasty of
the Chinese Empire continued to do so. Hong Kong-style milk tea is based on British colonial
habits. Tibetansand other Himalayan peoples traditionally drink tea with milk or yak butter and salt.
In Eastern European countries (Russia, Poland and Hungary) and in Italy, tea is commonly served
with lemon juice. In Poland, tea with milk is called a bawarka ("Bavarian style"), and is often drunk by
pregnant and nursing women. In Australia, tea with milk is white tea.
The order of steps in preparing a cup of tea is a much-debated topic, and can vary widely between
cultures or even individuals. Some say it is preferable to add the milk before the tea, as the high
temperature of freshly brewed tea can denature the proteins found in fresh milk, similar to the
change in taste of UHT milk, resulting in an inferior-tasting beverage.[77]
Others insist it is better to
add the milk after brewing the tea, as most teas need to be brewed as close to boiling as possible.
The addition of milk chills the beverage during the crucial brewing phase, if brewing in a cup rather
than using a pot, meaning the delicate flavour of a good tea cannot be fully appreciated. By adding
the milk afterwards, it is easier to dissolve sugar in the tea and also to ensure the desired amount of
milk is added, as the colour of the tea can be observed.[citation needed]
Historically, the order of steps was
taken as an indication of class: only those wealthy enough to afford good-quality porcelain would be
confident of its being able to cope with being exposed to boiling water unadulterated with
milk.[78]
Higher temperature difference means faster heat transfer so the earlier you add milk the
slower the drink cools. A 2007 study published in theEuropean Heart Journal found certain beneficial
effects of tea may be lost through the addition of milk.[79]
Many flavourings are added to varieties of tea during processing. Among the best known are
Chinese jasmine tea, with jasmine oil or flowers, the spices in Indian masala chai, and Earl Grey tea,
which contains oil of bergamot. A great range of modern flavours have been added to these
traditional ones. In eastern India, people also drink lemon tea or lemon masala tea. Lemon tea
simply contains hot tea with lemon juice and sugar. Masala lemon tea contains hot tea with roasted
cumin seed powder, lemon juice, black salt and sugar, which gives it a tangy, spicy taste. Adding a
piece of ginger when brewing tea is a popular habit of Sri Lankans, who also use other types of
spices such as cinnamon to sweeten the aroma.
Other popular additives to tea by the tea-brewer or drinker include sugar, liquid honey or a solid
Honey Drop, agave nectar, fruit jams, and mint. In China, sweetening tea was traditionally regarded
as a feminine practice. In colder regions, such as Mongolia, Tibet and Nepal, butter is added to
provide necessary calories. Tibetan butter tea contains rock salt and dre, a butter made
from yak milk, which is churned vigorously in a cylindrical vessel closely resembling a butter churn.
The same may be said for salt tea, which is popular in the Hindu Kush region of northern Pakistan.
18. Alcohol, such as whisky or brandy, may also be added to tea.
The flavour of the tea can also be altered by pouring it from different heights, resulting in varying
degrees of aeration. The art of high-altitude pouring is used principally by people in Northern Africa
(e.g. Morocco, Algeria, Mauritania, Libya and Western Sahara), but also in West Africa
(e.g. Guinea, Mali, Senegal) and can positively alter the flavour of the tea, but it is more likely a
technique to cool the beverage destined to be consumed immediately. In certain cultures, the tea is
given different names depending on the height from which it is poured. In Mali, gunpowder tea is
served in series of three, starting with the highest oxidisation or strongest, unsweetened tea (cooked
from fresh leaves), locally referred to as "strong like death", followed by a second serving, where the
same tea leaves are boiled again with some sugar added ("pleasant as life"), and a third one, where
the same tea leaves are boiled for the third time with yet more sugar added ("sweet as love"). Green
tea is the central ingredient of a distinctly Malian custom, the "Grin", an informal social gathering that
cuts across social and economic lines, starting in front of family compound gates in the afternoons
and extending late into the night, and is widely popular in Bamako and other large urban areas.
In Southeast Asia, particularly in Singapore and Malaysia, the practice of pouring tea from a height
has been refined further using black tea to which condensed milk is added, poured from a height
from one cup to another several times in alternating fashion and in quick succession, to create a tea
with entrapped air bubbles creating a frothy "head" in the cup. This beverage, teh tarik, literally,
"pulled tea" (which has its origin as a hot Indian tea beverage), has a creamier taste than flat milk tea
and is extremely popular in the region. Tea pouring in Malaysia has been further developed into an
art form in which a dance is done by people pouring tea from one container to another, which in any
case takes skill and precision. The participants, each holding two containers, one full of tea, pour it
from one to another. They stand in lines and squares and pour the tea into each other's pots. The
dance must be choreographed to allowanyone who has both pots full to empty them and refill those
of whoever has no tea at any one point.
Economics[edit]
Tea factory in Taiwan
See also: List of countries by tea consumption per capita
19. Tea is the most popular manufactured drink consumed in the world, equaling all others – including
coffee, chocolate, soft drinks, and alcohol – combined.[4]
Most tea consumed outside East Asia is
produced on large plantations in the hilly regions of India and Sri Lanka, and is destined to be sold to
large businesses. Opposite this large-scale industrial production are many small "gardens,"
sometimes minuscule plantations, that produce highly sought-after teas prized by gourmets. These
teas are both rare and expensive, and can be compared to some of the most expensive wines in this
respect.
India is the world's largest tea-drinking nation,[80]
although the per capita consumption of tea remains
a modest 750 grams per person every year. Turkey, with 2.5 kg of tea consumed per person per
year, is the world's greatest per capita consumer.[81]
Production[edit]
In 2003, world tea production was 3.21 million tonnes annually.[82]
In 2010, world tea production
reached over 4.52 million tonnes after having increased by 5.7% between 2009 and
2010.[83]
Production rose by 3.1% between 2010 and 2011. The largest producers of tea are the
People's Republic of China, India, Kenya, Sri Lanka, and Turkey.
Percentage of total tea production in 2008
Less than 0.5% or insignificant quantities
From 0.5 to 1%.
From 1 to 5%.
From 5 to 10%.
From 10 to 20%.
More than 20%
20. Percentage of total global tea production by country in 2007
The following table shows the amount of tea production (in tonnes) by leading countries in recent
years. Data are generated by the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations as of
February 2012.[82]
Rank Country[82]
2008 2009 2010 2011
1 China 1,257,600 1,359,000 1,450,000 1,623,000
2 India 987,000 972,700 991,180 1,063,500
3 Kenya 345,800 314,100 399,000 377,912
4 Sri Lanka 318,700 290,000 282,300 327,500
5 Turkey 198,046 198,601 235,000 221,600
6 Vietnam 173,500 185,700 198,466 206,600
7 Iran 165,717 165,717 165,717 162,517
8 Indonesia 150,851 146,440 150,000 142,400
21. Rank Country[82]
2008 2009 2010 2011
9 Argentina 80,142 71,715 88,574 96,572
10 Japan 96,500 86,000 85,000 82,100
Total World 4,211,397 4,242,280 4,518,060 4,321,011
Labor and consumer safety problems[edit]
Multiple recent reports have found that most Chinese and Indian teas contain residues of banned
toxic pesticides.[84][85][86][87]
Tea production in Kenya, Malawi, Rwanda, Tanzania, and Uganda has been reported to make use
of child labor according to the U.S. Department of Labor's List of Goods Produced by Child Labor or
Forced Labor[88]
(a report on the worst forms of child labor).
Certification[edit]
Workers who pick and pack tea on plantations in developing countries can face harsh working
conditions and may earn below the living wage.[89]
A number of bodies independently certify the production of tea. Tea from certified estates can be
sold with a certification label on the pack. The most important certification schemes are Rainforest
Alliance, Fairtrade, UTZ Certified, and Organic,[citation needed]
which also certify other crops such as
coffee, cocoa and fruit. Rainforest Alliance certified tea is sold by Unilever brands Lipton and PG
Tips in Western Europe, Australia and the US. Fairtrade certified tea is sold by a large number of
suppliers around the world. UTZ Certified announced a partnership in 2008 with Sara Lee
brand Pickwick tea.
Production of organic tea has risen since its introduction in 1990 at Rembeng, Kondoli Tea Estate,
Assam.[90]
6,000 tons of organic tea were sold in 1999.[91]
About 75% of organic tea production is sold
in France, Germany, Japan, the United Kingdom, and the United States.[citation needed]
Trade[edit]
According to the FAO in 2007, the largest importer of tea, by weight, was the Russian Federation,
followed by the United Kingdom, Pakistan, and the United States.[92]
Kenya, China, India and Sri
Lanka were the largest exporters of tea in 2007 (with exports of: 374229, 292199, 193459 and
22. 190203 tonnes respectively).[92][93]
The largest exporter of black tea is Kenya, largest producer (and
consumer) India.[93][94]
Packaging[edit]
Tea bags[edit]
Tea bags
Main article: Tea bag
In 1907, American tea merchant Thomas Sullivan began distributing samples of his tea in small bags
of Chinese silk with a drawstring. Consumers noticed they could simply leave the tea in the bag and
reuse it with fresh tea. However, the potential of this distribution/packaging method would not be fully
realised until later on. During World War II, tea was rationed in the United Kingdom. In 1953
(after rationing in the UK ended), Tetley launched the tea bag to the UK and it was an immediate
success.
The "pyramid tea bag" (or sachet) introduced by Lipton[95]
and PG Tips/Scottish Blend in
1996,[96]
attempts to address one of the connoisseurs' arguments against paper tea bags by way of
its three-dimensional tetrahedron shape, which allows more room for tea leaves to expand while
steeping.[citation needed]
However, some types of pyramid tea bags have been criticised as being
environmentally unfriendly, since their synthetic material is not as biodegradable as loose tea leaves
and paper tea bags.[97]
Loose tea[edit]
23. A blend of loose-leaf black teas
The tea leaves are packaged loosely in a canister, paper bag, or other container such as a tea
chest. Some whole teas, such as rolledgunpowder tea leaves, which resist crumbling, are
sometimes vacuum packed for freshness in aluminised packaging for storage and retail. The loose
tea must be individually measured for use, allowing for flexibility and flavor control at the expense of
convenience. Strainers, tea balls, tea presses, filtered teapots, and infusion bags prevent loose
leaves from floating in the tea and over-brewing. A traditional method uses a three-piece lidded
teacup called a gaiwan, the lid of which is tilted to decant the tea into a different cup for
consumption.
Compressed tea[edit]
Compressed tea (such as Pu-erh) is produced for convenience in transport, storage, and ageing. It
can usually be stored longer without spoilage than loose leaf tea.
Compressed tea is prepared by loosening leaves from the cake using a small knife, and steeping the
extracted pieces in water. During the Tang dynasty, as described by Lu Yu, compressed tea was
ground into a powder, combined with hot water, and ladled into bowls, resulting in a "frothy"
mixture.[98]
In the Song dynasty, the tea powder would instead be whisked with hot water in the bowl.
Although no longer practiced in China today, the whisking method of preparing powdered tea was
transmitted to Japan by Zen Buddhistmonks, and is still used to prepare matcha in the Japanese tea
ceremony.[99]
Compressed tea was the most popular form of tea in China during the Tang dynasty.[100]
By the
beginning of the Ming dynasty, it had been displaced by loose leaf tea.[101]
It remains popular,
however, in the Himalayan countries and Mongolian steppes. In Mongolia, tea bricks were
ubiquitous enough to be used as a form of currency. Among Himalayan peoples, compressed tea is
consumed by combining it with yak butter and salt to produce butter tea.[102]
Instant tea[edit]
"Instant tea", both hot and cold, is an alternative to the brewed products. Similar to freeze-
dried instant coffee, but not requiring boiling water, instant tea was developed in the
1930s. Nestlé introduced the first commercial product in 1946, while Redi-Tea debuted instant iced
tea in 1953.
Delicacy of flavour is sacrificed for convenience. Additives such as chai, vanilla, honey or fruit, are
popular, as is powdered milk.
During the Second World War British and Canadian soldiers were issued an instant tea known as
'Compo' in their Composite Ration Packs. These blocks of instant tea, powdered milk, and sugar
were not always well received. As Royal Canadian Artillery Gunner, George C Blackburn observed:
24. But, unquestionably, the feature of Compo rations destined to be remembered beyond all others is
Compo tea...Directions say to "sprinkle powder on heated water and bring to the boil, stirring well,
three heaped teaspoons to one pint of water."
Every possible variation in the preparation of this tea was tried, but...it always ended up the same
way. While still too hot to drink, it is a good-looking cup of strong tea. Even when it becomes just
cool enough to be sipped gingerly, it is still a good-tasting cup of tea, if you like your tea strong and
sweet. But let it cool enough to be quaffed and enjoyed, and your lips will be coated with a sticky
scum that forms across the surface, which if left undisturbed will become a leathery membrane that
can be wound around your finger and flipped away...[103]
Bottled and canned tea[edit]
Main article: Canned tea
Canned tea is sold prepared and ready to drink. It was introduced in 1981 in Japan.
In 1983, Swiss-based Bischofszell Food Ltd., was the first company to bottle ice tea on an industrial
scale.[104]
Storage[edit]
Storage conditions and type determine the shelf life of tea. Black tea's is greater than green's. Some,
such as flower teas, may last only a month or so. Others, such as pu-erh, improve with age.
To remain fresh and prevent mold, tea needs to be stored away from heat, light, air, and moisture.
Tea must be kept at room temperature in an air-tight container. Black tea in a bag within a sealed
opaque canister may keep for two years. Green tea deteriorates more rapidly, usually in less than a
year. Tightly rolled gunpowder tea leaves keep longer than the more open-leafed Chun Mee tea.
Storage life for all teas can be extended by using desiccant or oxygen-absorbing packets, vacuum
sealing, or refrigeration in air-tight containers (except green tea, where discrete use of refrigeration
or freezing is recommended and temperature variation kept to a minimum).[105]
Gallery[edit]
Da Hong Pao tea, an oolong tea
25.
Fuding Bai Hao Yinzhen tea, a white tea
Green pu-erh tuo cha, a type of compressed raw pu-erh
Huoshan Huangya tea, a yellow tea
Loose dried tea leaves
Taiwanese High Mountain oolong
26.
A spicy Thai salad made with young, fresh tea leaves
Globally[edit]
Zealong (New Zealand-grown)
Lipton
Australia[edit]
Dilmah
Bushell's (Unilever)
Lipton (Unilever)
Tetley (Tata Global Beverages)
Bangladesh[edit]
M. M. Ispahani Limited
James Finlay Bangladesh
Canada[edit]
Tea shops and restaurants
Bridgehead Coffee (Ottawa)
Tim Hortons (National)
Camellia Sinensis (Quebec)
DavidsTea (Quebec)
France[edit]
Betjeman & Barton
Fauchon
Kusmi Tea
28. Netherlands[edit]
Douwe Egberts (Pickwick)
New Zealand[edit]
Zealong
Dilmah
Nepal[edit]
Giribandhu Tea Estate
Rakura tea
Sri Lanka[edit]
Dilmah
George Steuart Group (Steuarts Tea, 1835 Steuart Ceylon)
Bogawantalawa (BPL Teas)
United Kingdom[edit]
The UK market is dominated by five brands - PG Tips and Tetley, Premier Foods (was bought by an
Indian firm: India's Apeejay Surrendra Group), Associated British food and Bettys & Taylors. Tetley
leads the market with 27% share, followed by PG Tips with about 24% share. Premier food is in third
place, with about 13% share, Associated British food is 4th with about 11% share and Bettys &
Taylors 5th with about 6% share. Though Betty's and Taylor's has risen dramatically with the
Taylor's Tea & Coffee and Betty's brands proving more popular, also the famous Yorkshire Tea is
part of Betty's and Taylor's Group (Source: ACNielsen Total Cov GB 52 we 25.02.08)
Ahmad Tea
Associated British Foods
Bettys and Taylors of Harrogate
Brooke Bond (no longer trading under this name - see PG Tips) (Unilever)
Clipper tea
Horniman's Tea
Jacksons of Piccadilly
Lancashire Tea
Lipton (Unilever)
29. Lyons Tea (Unilever)
Matthew Algie
Nambarrie (Twinings)
PG Tips (Unilever)
Premier Foods
Ringtons
Scottish Blend (Unilever)
Taylors of Harrogate ( Betty's and Taylor's Group)
Twinings (Associated British Foods)
Typhoo (formerly owned by Premier Foods, now owned by Apeejay Surrendra Group)[1]
Whittard of Chelsea
Yorkshire Tea- a brand of Taylor's Tea ( Betty's and Taylor's Group)
United States[edit]
American Tea Room
Argo Tea
Bigelow Tea Company
Capital Teas
Celestial Seasonings
Enzo's Private Selection
Good Earth Tea
Harney & Sons
Honest Tea
Hugo Tea Company
Imperial Tea Court
Luzianne
Mighty Leaf Tea
Numi Organic Tea
Peet's Coffee & Tea
Red Diamond
Red Rose Tea
Republic of Tea
Salada tea
Stash Tea
Talbott Teas (owned by Jamba Juice)
30. Tavalon Tea
Tazo
Tea Forté
TeaGschwendner
Teavana (owned by Starbucks)
Tetley (Tata Tea Limited)
Upton Tea
Yogi Tea
Bottled tea[edit]
Argo Tea
AriZona Beverage Company
Cha Dao Tea Company
Ito En
Honest Tea
Lipton
Nestea
Snapple
SoBe
Sweet Leaf Tea
Tazo
Turkey Hill
a syrup or sirup (from Arabic: ;شراب sharāb, beverage, wine, via Latin: sirupus)[1]
is a
thick, viscous liquid consisting primarily of a solution of sugar in water, containing a large amount of
dissolved sugars but showing little tendency to deposit crystals. The viscosity arises from the
multiple hydrogen bonds between the dissolved sugar, which has many hydroxyl (OH) groups, and
the water.
Syrups can be made by dissolving sugar in water or by reducing naturally sweet juices such
as cane juice, sorghum juice, or maple sap.Corn syrup is made from corn starch using an enzymatic
process that converts it to sugars.
Contents
[hide]
1 Culinary syrup
2 Syrups for beverages
31. o 2.1 Simple syrup
o 2.2 Flavoured syrup
o 2.3 Gomme syrup
3 See also
4 References
5 External links
Culinary syrup[edit]
There are a range of syrups used in food production, including:
Glucose syrup
Corn syrup
Maple syrup
High fructose corn syrup, widely used in the US[2][3][4][5]
Golden syrup, a by-product of refining crystallized sugar
Syrups for beverages[edit]
A variety of beverages call for sweetening to offset the tartness of some juices used in the drink
recipes. Granulated sugar does not dissolve easily in cold drinks or ethyl alcohol. Since the following
syrups are liquids, they are easily mixed with other liquids in mixed drinks, making them superior
alternatives to granulated sugar.
Simple syrup[edit]
A basic sugar-and-water syrup used by bartenders as a sweetener to make cocktails. Simple syrup
is made by stirring granulated sugar into hot water in a saucepan until the sugar is dissolved and
then cooling the solution. Generally, the ratio of sugar to water can range anywhere from 1:1 to 2:1
by weight, and similarly by volume due to air in the granulated sugar. For pure sucrose the
saturation limit is about 5:4 by volume. Syrup can be used as a sweetener. However, since the syrup
jells readily when pectin is added, its primary culinary use is as a base for fruit sauces, toppings,
and preserves. Sugar substitutes such as agave nectar can also be used to make simple syrups.
Flavoured syrup[edit]
Flavoured syrups are made by infusing simple syrups with flavouring agents during the cooking
process. A wide variety of flavouring agents can be used, often in combination with each other, such
as herbs (rosemary), spices (chipotle chilis; cardamom), or aromatics (orange peel; lemongrass;
ginger). For instance, syrupus aromaticus is prepared by adding certain quantities of orange
flavouring and cinnamon water to simple syrup. This type of syrup is commonly used at coffee bars,
especially in the United States, to make flavoured drinks. Infused simple syrups can be used to
create desserts, or, to add sweetness and depth of flavour to cocktails.
32. Gomme syrup[edit]
Gomme syrup (or gum syrup; gomme is French for "gum") is an ingredient commonly used in mixed
drinks. It is also commonly used as a sweetener for iced coffee in Japan. Like bar syrups, it is a 2:1
sugar and water mixture, but has an added ingredient of gum arabic. Gomme syrup is made with the
highest percentage of sugar to water possible, while the gum arabic prevents the sugar from
crystallizing and adds a smooth texture
This article needs additional citations for verification. Please
help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources.
Unsourced material may be challenged and removed. (March 2013)
Fruit-flavoured squash before and after being mixed with water.
Squash (also called cordial) is a non-alcoholic concentrated syrup that is usually fruit-flavoured and
usually made from fruit juice, water, and sugar or a sugar substitute. Modern squashes may also
contain food colouring and additional flavouring. Some traditional squashes contain herbal extracts,
most notably elderflower and ginger.
Contents
[hide]
1 Drinks
2 Preparation
o 2.1 Serving
o 2.2 Storage
3 Ingredients
o 3.1 Flavourings
4 Terminology
5 Fruit juice content
6 Low-sugar squashes
7 Squash in British culture
33. 8 World markets
o 8.1 Advertising
9 See also
10 References
11 External links
Drinks[edit]
Squash must be mixed with a certain amount of water or carbonated water before drinking. As
a drink mixer, it may be combined with an alcoholic beverage to prepare a cocktail(see preparation).
Citrus fruits (particularly orange, lime and lemon) or a blend of fruits and berries are commonly used
as the base of squash.[1]
Popular blends are apple with blackcurrant, raspberry with pomegranate,
and orange or peach with mango. Less popular single-fruit squashes are also produced, such as
pineapple, pomegranate, raspberry, and strawberry. Barley water is sometimes considered a type of
squash.
Traditional squashes are usually flavoured with ginger, chokeberries (often with spices
added), elderflower, and sometimes orange or lemon.
Squash commands a large share of the fruit juices and soft drinks market.
Squash is popular in the United
Kingdom, Argentina, Bangladesh, Malta, Pakistan, Ireland, India, Indonesia, Israel, Scandinavia, So
uth Africa, Kenya, Australia, Cyprus, New Zealand, and Hong Kong.
It is generally not available in the United States. When it is available there, it is quite expensive.
Some Americans make it at home. This process involves boiling water and sugar together on a low
heat, then adding fruit juice and lemon juice (or citric acid). Plant extracts may also be added.
Preparation[edit]
Squash is prepared by combining one part concentrate with four or five parts water (carbonated or
still). Double-strength squash and traditional cordials, which are thicker, are made with two parts
concentrate. Some squash concentrates are quite weak, and these are sometimes mixed with one
part concentrate and two or three parts water. It is usually made with cold water, but old-fashioned
cordials are often made with warm water. In convenience stores and supermarkets, ready-diluted
squash is sold in cans, cartons, and plastic bottles.
Serving[edit]
When ordering squash in restaurants, people are often asked by their server whether they would like
it "strong" or "weak". It is commonly served cold, often with ice, but, especially with traditional
cordials, is often served warm in winter, just as tea or coffee would be. The most common squash to
be served warm was spiced berry, a type that has almost gone out of fashion but is still made by
34. some companies specialising in traditional cordials. However, the market for spiced berry cordial has
recently been taken over by cheaper companies manufacturing modern flavours of squash such as
lemon, orange & apple and blackcurrant squash. Another squash served warm would be
peppermint, traditionally used as a treatment for an upset stomach.
Diluted squash is often used as a base for making cocktails, and as a flavouring or sweetener. Gin
can be mixed with diluted squash to make a cocktail similar to a gin and juice.
Storage[edit]
Most cordials and squashes contain preservatives such as potassium sorbate or (in traditional
cordials) sulphites, as they are designed to be stored on shelves. They keep well because of the
preservatives and their high sugar content. Nonetheless, they are commonly kept in refrigerators.
Ingredients[edit]
Ingredients in squashes and cordials have evolved over the years. A traditional cordial contains
three ingredients: sugar, juice or plant extract and some water. Usually it can contain an acidifier
such as citric acid or in very old-fashioned cordials lemon juice, or even spices such as cinnamon or
cloves. Recreations of these traditional preparations often contain a preservative especially sulphur
dioxide, although sugar alone will keep it fresh for quite a long time. Modern squash drinks are
generally more complex and sugar free squash even more so; the ingredients are usually water,
sweetener such as aspartame or sodium saccharin, juice in a low quantity (typically 5-10 percent),
large quantities of flavouring, preservatives and sometimes a colour such as anthocyanin. In the
middle are ordinary squashes, which contain sugar, water, a larger amount of juice, preservatives,
colouring such as anthocyanin and often a small amount of flavouring. Although colours such
as Allura Red AC and Sunset Yellow FCF are occasionally used in squash, most modern British
companies are gradually aiming to use natural colours such as beta carotene or anthocyanins, and
natural flavourings.
Flavourings[edit]
Traditional squashes may be flavoured with elderflowers, lemon, pomegranate, apple, strawberry,
chokeberry (often with spices such as cinnamon or cloves added), orange, pear, or raspberry.
Modern squashes usually have simpler flavours, such as orange, apple, summer fruit (mixed
berries), blackcurrant, apple and blackcurrant, peach, pineapple,mango, lime, or lemon.
Terminology[edit]
"Cordial", "dilute juice", and "squash" are similar products, although the products known as cordials
tend to be thicker and stronger, requiring less syrup and more water to be blended. "High juice" is
not a brand of squash but rather a type that contains a larger amount of juice, around 45%.
35. Squash is often colloquially known as "juice", especially when talking to young children because they
might not understand the term "squash".[citation needed]
But this term is a misnomer; no squash is pure
juice. Squashes are commonly called according to the fruit from which they are made. More rarely,
they may be called "fruit drink", especially if they are ready-diluted in a plastic bottle or paper carton
(e.g., Fruit Shoot).
Fruit juice content[edit]
Squashes are measured by their juice content, the average being 30%. A variety of squash that
contains a larger amount of fruit juice, up to half or more of the volume in juice, is sold in markets as
"high juice", and squashes are quite often called "juice" when talking to children, especially these
high-juice beverages, although this may be confusing. However, many squashes contain less than
20% juice, and some as little as 5-10%. The latter are typically low in nutritional value, and the high
juice versions are reasonably higher in nutrients, although one downside is that it is high in sugar
and does not contain fibre or minor nutrients. That goes with almost all squashes. A low juice squash
may state "with real fruit juice" on the label.
Low-sugar squashes[edit]
Squashes labelled "no added sugar" are artificially sweetened, usually with aspartame, acesulfame
K, saccharin or sucralose, which is much cheaper for the manufacturers than both HFCS and natural
sugar. They are very low in calories, sometimes having as few as 4 per 100ml diluted, and they are
marketed towards families seeking low calorie alternatives. They tend to be very low in fruit juice, as
fruit juice contains natural sugars, so they usually also contain natural or artificial flavourings
(isoamyl acetate for pear or banana, or mixed with malic acid to make an apple-like flavour, ethyl
methylphenylglycidate for strawberry, octyl acetate for orange, allyl hexanoate for pineapple etc.) to
make up for the lack of fruit juice taste.
Squash in British culture[edit]
Squashes make up a part of the beverage diets of children in the UK,[citation needed]
besides fizzy drinks,
sweetened juice-based drinks such as cranberry drink and pulp-free fruit juices. At parties, play
dates, picnics, day care centres, preschools and excursions, low-sugar squashes are usually the
only options served to children alongside plain water.
World markets[edit]
Manufacturers of squash include Britvic (under the Robinsons and MiWadi brands), Hamdard (under
the Rooh Afza brand in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh), Nichols (under
theVimto brand), Suntory (under the Ribena brand) and Coca-Cola (under the Kia-Ora brand).
Australian brands include Cottee's, Bickford's, P&N Beverages and Golden Circlecordials. Indian
36. brands include Kissan and Rasna. In Israel, fruit squashes are produced by such companies
as Assis, Prigat and Primor.
Advertising[edit]
Squash companies can use many types of advertising to encourage their products to appeal to
customers. These include pictures, such as children picking fruit (picture on Robinson's squash) or
anthropomorphic fruit (picture on Ribena), behind-the-label "fruity fun" such as word
searches, crossword puzzles, word scrambling etc., tickets to experiences such as film tickets,
football or other sport match tickets, weekend breaks, new film releases or theme park trips
See also[edit]
Kopi Luwak
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sumatran kopi luwak farmer holds civet feces with embedded coffee beans. Sumatra, Indonesia
Kopi luwak (Indonesianpronunciation: [ˈkopi ˈlu.aʔ]), or civet coffee, refers to the seeds of coffee
berries once they have been eaten and defecated by the Asian palm civet (Paradoxurus
hermaphroditus).[1]
The name is also used for marketing brewed coffee made from the beans.
Producers of the coffee beans argue that the process may improve coffee through two mechanisms,
selection and digestion. Selection occurs if the civets choose to eat coffee berries containing better
beans. Digestive mechanisms may improve the flavor profile of the coffee beans that have been
eaten. The civet eats the berries for the beans' fleshy pulp, then in the digestive tract, fermentation
occurs. The civet's Protease enzymes seep into the beans, making shorter peptides and more
free amino acids.[2]
Passing through a civet'sintestines the beans are then defecated with other fecal
matter and collected.
The traditional method of collecting feces from wild civets has given way to intensive farming
methods in which civets in battery cagesystems are force fed the coffee beans. This method of
production has raised ethical concerns about the treatment of civets due to "horrific conditions"
including isolation, poor diet, small cages and a high mortality rate.[3][4]
A 2013 BBC investigation of
intensive civet farming in Sumatra found conditions of animal cruelty.[5]
Intensive farming is also
criticised by traditional farmers because the civets do not select what they eat, so the beans are of
poor quality compared to beans collected from the wild.[6]
According to an officer from theTRAFFIC
conservation programme, the trade in civets to make kopi luwak may constitute a significant threat to
wild civet populations.[7]
Although kopi luwak is a form of processing rather than a variety of coffee, it has been called one of
the most expensive coffees in the world with retail prices reaching €550 / US$700 per
kilogram,[8]
close to the €850 / US$1,100 price of Black Ivory coffee. The price paid to collectors in
the Philippines is closer to US$20 per kilogram.[1]
The price of farmed (considered low-grade by
connoisseurs) kopi luwak in large Indonesian supermarkets is from US$100 per kilogram (five times
the price of a high quality local arabica coffee). Genuine kopi luwak from wild civets is difficult to
purchase in Indonesia and proving it is not fake is very difficult - there is little enforcement regarding
use of the name "kopi luwak", and there's even a local cheap coffee brand named "Luwak", which
costs under US$3 per kilogram but is occasionally sold online under the guise of real kopi luwak.
37. An investigation by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) Asia found fraud to be rife in
the kopi luwak industry, with producers willing to label coffee from caged civets with a "wild sourced"
or similar label.[9]
A BBC investigation revealed similar findings.[5]
Kopi luwak is produced mainly on the islands of Sumatra, Java, Bali and Sulawesi in
the Indonesian Archipelago. It is also widely gathered in the forest or produced in the farms in the
islands of the Philippines (where the product is called kape motit in the Cordillera region, kapé
alamíd in Tagalog areas, and kapé melô or kapé musang in Mindanao island), and in East
Timor (where it is called kafé-laku). Weasel coffee is a loose English translation of
its Vietnamese name cà phê Chồn, where popular, chemically simulated versions are also produced.
Contents
[hide]
1 History
2 Taste
3 Production
4 Imitation
5 Animal welfare
6 Price and availability
7 Variations
8 In popular culture
9 See also
10 References
11 External links
History[edit]
The origin of kopi luwak is closely connected with the history of coffee production in Indonesia. In the
early 18th century the Dutch established the cash-crop coffee plantations in their colony in the Dutch
East Indies islands of Java and Sumatra, including Arabica coffee introduced from Yemen. During
the era of Cultuurstelsel (1830—1870), the Dutch prohibited the native farmers and plantation
workers from picking coffee fruits for their own use. Still, the native farmers wanted to have a taste of
the famed coffee beverage. Soon, the natives learned that certain species
of musang or luwak (Asian Palm Civet) consumed the coffee fruits, yet they left the coffee seeds
undigested in their droppings. The natives collected these luwaks' coffee seed droppings, then
cleaned, roasted and ground them to make their own coffee beverage.[10]
The fame of aromatic civet
coffee spread from locals to Dutch plantation owners and soon became their favourite, yet because
of its rarity and unusual process, the civet coffee was expensive even during the colonial era.[citation
needed]
Taste[edit]
Few objective assessments of taste are available. Kopi luwak is a name for any beans collected
from the excrement of civets, hence the taste may vary with the type and origin of beans ingested,
processing subsequent to collection, roasting, ageing and brewing. The ability of the civet to select
its berries, and other aspects of the civet's diet and health (e.g. stress levels) may also influence the
processing and hence taste.[1]
In the coffee industry, kopi luwak is widely regarded as a gimmick or novelty item.[11]
The Specialty
Coffee Association of America (SCAA) states that there is a "general consensus within the industry
... it just tastes bad". A coffee professional cited in the SCAA article was able to compare the same
beans with and without the kopi luwak process using a rigorous coffee cupping evaluation. He
38. concluded: "it was apparent that Luwak coffee sold for the story, not superior quality...Using the
SCAA cupping scale, the Luwak scored two points below the lowest of the other three coffees. It
would appear that the Luwak processing diminishes good acidity and flavor and adds smoothness to
the body, which is what many people seem to note as a positive to the coffee.”
Tim Carman, food writer for the Washington Post reviewed kopi luwak available to US consumers
and concluded "It tasted just like...Folgers. Stale. Lifeless. Petrified dinosaur droppings steeped in
bathtub water. I couldn't finish it."[12]
Some critics claim more generally that kopi luwak is simply bad coffee, purchased for novelty rather
than taste.[11][12][13][14]
Massimo Marcone, who performed extensive chemical tests on the beans, was
unable to conclude if anything about their properties made them superior for purposes of making
coffee. He employed several professional coffee tasters (called "cuppers") in a blind taste test. While
the cuppers were able to distinguish the kopi luwak as distinct from the other samples, they had
nothing remarkable to appraise about it other than it was less acidic and had less body, tasting
"thin". Marcone remarked "It's not that people are after that distinct flavor. They are after the rarity of
the coffee".[15]
Production[edit]
An Asian Palm Civet
A Luwak (Asian Palm Civet) feeding on coffee berries
The luak, that's a small catlike animal, gorges after dark on the most ripe, the best of our crop. It
digests the fruit and expels the beans, which our farm people collect, wash, and roast, a real
delicacy. Something about the natural fermentation that occurs in the luak's stomach seems to make
the difference. For Javanese, this is the best of all coffees—our Kopi luak.
—Doyo Soeyono Kertosastro, Indonesian Coffee Farmer, March 1981 National Geographic[16]
Kopi is the Indonesian word for coffee. Luwak is a local name of the Asian Palm Civet in
Sumatra.[1][17]
Palm civets are primarilyfrugivorous, feeding on berries and pulpy fruits such
as figs and palms. Civets also eat small vertebrates, insects, ripe fruits and seeds.[18]
39. Early production began when beans were gathered in the wild from where a civet would defecate as
a means to mark its territory. On farms, civets are either caged or allowed to roam within defined
boundaries.[1]
Coffee berries are eaten by a civet for their fruit pulp. After spending about a day and a half in the
civet's digestive tract the beans are then defecated in clumps, having kept their shape and still
covered with some of the fleshy berry's inner layers.
Despite being in contact with faeces and pathogenic organisms, the beans contain negligible
amounts of the enteric (pathogenic) organisms associated with feces. Moreover, the "cherry" or
endocarp surrounding the bean is not completely digested by the luwak, and after being collected,
the farmer performs thorough washing and removes the endocarp.[19]
The final roasting of the beans
would, additionally, eliminate any remaining bacteria.
Sumatra is the world's largest regional producer of kopi luwak. Sumatran civet coffee beans are
mostly an early arabica variety cultivated in the Indonesian archipelago since the 17th century. The
major Sumatran kopi luwak production area is in Lampung, Bengkulu and Acehespecially the Gayo
region, Takengon. Tagalog kape alamid comes from civets fed on a mixture of coffee beans and is
sold in theBatangas region along with gift shops near airports in the Philippines.
Vietnam has two farms with 300 wild civets in Dak Lak, while in Mindanao island of the Philippines,
has two farms with 200 (in Davao City) and 100 (in Cagayan de Oro City) wild civets. But the
archipelago of Indonesia where the famous kopi luwak was first discovered and produced is leading
in supplying the world market for almost three centuries, where many small-scale civet farms are
proliferating in the countryside.
Defecated luwak coffee berries, East Java
Several studies have examined the process in which the animal's stomach acids and enzymes
digest the beans' covering and ferment the beans.[19][20][21]
Research by food scientist Massimo
Marcone at the University of Guelph in Ontario, Canada showed that the
civet'sendogenous digestive secretions seep into the beans. These secretions carry proteolytic
enzymes which break down the beans' proteins, yielding shorter peptides and more free amino
acids. The proteins are also involved in non-enzymatic Maillard browning reactions brought about
later by roasting. Moreover, while inside a civet the beans begin to germinate by malting which also
lowers their bitterness.[2][22]
Marcone also conducted an analysis on the volatile compounds which are
40. responsible for the coffee's flavour and aroma, showing that there are significant differences from
regular coffee. He concluded that:[19]
1. Protein structure had been altered, reducing bitterness and potentially impacting flavour.
2. Volatile compounds had significant differences compared to regular coffee, indicating there
are changes in flavour.
According to Dr. Davila Cortes, the altered protein structure degrades the effectivenes of the coffee
as a diuretic.[23]
Imitation[edit]
Several commercial processes attempt to replicate the digestive process of the civets without animal
involvement.
Researchers with the University of Florida have been issued with a patent for one such
process.[21][24]
According to the patent application, sensory tests were conducted and verified a
significant reduction in bitterness. This technology was licensed to Coffee Primero.
Vietnamese companies also claim to have replicated the digestive process with an enzyme soak.[20]
Imitation has several motivations. The high price of kopi luwak drives the search for a way to
produce kopi luwak in large quantities. Kopi luwak production involves a great deal of labour,
whether farmed or wild-gathered. The small production quantity and the labor involved in production
contribute to the coffee's high cost.[25]
Imitation may be a response to the decrease in the civet
population.[26]
Animal welfare[edit]
Civet in a cage
Initially, civet coffee beans were picked from wild civet excrement found around coffee plantations.
This unusual process contributed to its rarity and subsequently, its high price. More recently, growing
numbers of intensive civet "farms" have been established and operated across Southeast Asia,
confining tens of thousands of animals to live in battery cages and be force-fed.[27][28][29]
'"The conditions are awful, much like battery chickens", said Chris Shepherd, deputy regional
director of the conservation NGO, TRAFFICsouth-east Asia. "The civets are taken from the wild and
have to endure horrific conditions. They fight to stay together but they are separated and have to
bear a very poor diet in very small cages. There is a high mortality rate and for some species of
civet, there's a real conservation risk. It's spiralling out of control. But there's not much public
awareness of how it's actually made. People need to be aware that tens of thousands of civets are
being kept in these conditions. It would put people off their coffee if they knew"'.[3]
A 2013 investigation by People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) Asia found wild-caught
civets on farms in Indonesia and the Philippines. The animals were deprived of exercise, a proper
41. diet, and space. Video footage from the investigation shows abnormal behaviours such as repeated
pacing, circling, or biting the bars of their cages. The animals often lose their fur.[9]
Tony Wild, the coffee executive responsible for bringing kopi luwak to the Western world, has stated
he no longer supports using kopi luwak due to animal cruelty and launched a campaign called "Cut
the Crap" to halt the use of kopi luwak.[30]
Farmers using caged civets in Takengon, north Sumatra, confirmed to the BBC that they supplied
kopi luwak beans to exporters whose produce ends up in Europe and Asia.[5]
Price and availability[edit]
A window display in an upscale coffee shop showing Luwak Coffee in forms of defecated clumps (bottom),
unroasted beans (left) and roasted beans (right)
Kopi luwak is one of the most expensive coffees in the world, selling for between US$100 and $600
per pound in 2010.[1]
The specialty Vietnamese weasel coffee, which is made by collecting coffee
beans eaten by wild civets, is sold at US$3,000 per kilogram.[31]
Most customers are Asian,
especially those originating from Japan, Taiwan and South Korea.[32]
Sources vary widely as to
annual worldwide production.
The price paid to collectors in the Philippines is closer to US$20 per kilogram.[1]
Some specialty coffee shops sell cups of brewed kopi luwak for US$35–$80.[33][34]
Some coffee shops
in Jakarta serve kopi luwak for US$6–10.
Variations[edit]
There are reports of a kopi luwak type process occurring naturally with muntjac and birds.[35]
In popular culture[edit]
In 1995, an Ig Nobel Prize was awarded to John Martinez of J. Martinez & Company in Atlanta,
Georgia, for "Luak Coffee, the world's most expensive coffee, which is made from coffee beans
ingested and excreted by the luak (aka, the palm civet), a bobcat-like animal native to Indonesia."[36]
42. Kopi Luwak is also mentioned in The Bucket List (2008) as Carter Chambers (Morgan Freeman)
reveals with great amusement of how the Kopi Luwak — enjoyed by Edward Cole (Jack Nicholson)
— was produced; eaten and defecated by a jungle cat. Cole reacted in surprise "You're shitting me!"
and Carter replied in jest "No, the cats beat me to it!".[37]
Kopi Luwak coffee makes an appearance in History Channel's reality TV series, Pawn Stars (18 July
2013), with several characters refusing to drink it after learning how it is made.
In Franklin and Bash, Season 3 Episode 9, "Shoot to Thrill", associate lawyer/germaphobe Pinder
and his law partner Stanton Infeld each drink Kopi Luwak. After Pinder learns of the coffee's origin
he begins to vomit due to his extreme germaphobia.
In Season 3 of Jerry Seinfeld's web series, Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee, Jerry and his
guest, Jay Leno, both partake in a $75 cup of "cat shit coffee." Leno proceeds to say it is awful. Jerry
drinks his own coffee and later finishes Leno's, at which point it appears Leno has ordered a Coke.[38]