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Black Tea |
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The most popular of the Tea Varieties |
Black tea is a variety of tea that is more
oxidized than the oolong, green, and white
varieties.
All four varieties are made from leaves of Camellia sinensis.
Black tea is generally stronger in flavor and contains more
caffeine than the less oxidized teas. Two principal varieties
of the species are used, the small-leaved Chinese variety plant
(C. sinensis sinensis), also used for green and white teas, and
the large-leaved Assamese plant (C. sinensis assamica), which
was traditionally only used for black tea, although in recent
years some green has been produced.
In Chinese and culturally influenced languages, black tea is
known as "crimson tea" (紅茶, Mandarin Chinese hóngchá; Japanese
kōcha; Korean hongcha), perhaps a more accurate description of
the colour of the liquid. The name black tea, however, could
alternatively refer to the colour of the oxidized leaves. In
Chinese, "black tea" is a commonly used classification for
post-fermented teas, such as Pu-erh tea. However, in the
Western world, "red tea" more commonly refers to rooibos, a
South African tisane.
While green tea usually loses its flavor within a year, black
tea retains its flavour for several years. For this reason, it
has long been an article of trade, and compressed bricks of
black tea even served as a form of de facto currency in
Mongolia, Tibet, and Siberia into the 19th century[1]. It was
known since the Tang Dynasty that black tea steeped in hot
water could also serve as a passable cloth dye for the lower
classes that could not afford the better quality clothing
colours of the time.[citation needed] However, far from being a
mark of shame, the "brown star" mark of the dyeing process was
seen as much better than plain cloth and held some importance
as a mark of the lower merchant classes through the Ming
Dynasty[citation needed]. The tea originally imported to Europe
was either green or semi-oxidized. Only in the 19th century did
black tea surpass green in popularity[citation needed].
Although green tea has recently seen a revival due to its
purported health benefits, black tea still accounts for over
ninety percent of all tea sold in the West.
The expression "black tea" is also used to describe a cup of
tea without milk ("served black"), similar to coffee served
without milk or cream.
Hadley's Tea has been in business since 2003. Please visit our
store at 7600 Jefferson St NE #9 in Albuquerque, NM.
Hope, S-J, et.al.
19 January 2009
For more information visit:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Black_tea
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