Tuesday, March 11, 2008

Today's Delancey Place

I subscribe to a few daily email services of various types of information. Delancey Place is usually at least mildly interesting and sometimes fascinating. I thought today's entry was good, and want to share it with you. There is a link at the end to the Delancey Place home page, where you can find out more about it and subscribe if you'd like.

In today's excerpt--black and green tea:
"The earliest unambiguous reference to tea is from the first century BCE, some twenty-six centuries after Shen Nung's supposed discovery of tea. Having started out as an obscure medicinal and religious beverage, tea first seems to have become a domestic drink in China around this time. ...
"Tea is first mentioned [as an import from China] in European reports from the region in the 1550s. ... The first tea was green tea, the kind that had always been consumed by the Chinese. Black tea, which is made by allowing the newly picked green leaves to oxidize by leaving them overnight, only appeared during the Ming dynasty; its origins are a mystery. It came to be regarded by the Chinese as suitable only for consumption by foreigners and eventually dominated exports to Europe. Clueless as to the origins of tea, Europeans wrongly assumed green and black tea were two entirely different botanical species. ...
"Tea got its start [in England] when it became fashionable at the English court following the marriage in 1662 of Charles II to Catherine of Braganza, daughter of King John IV of Portugal. Her enormous dowry included the Portuguese trading posts of Tangier and Bombay, ... a fortune in gold, and a chest of tea. Catherine was a devoted tea drinker and brought the custom with her. ...
"It is not too much exaggeration to say that almost nobody in Britain drank tea at the beginning of the eighteenth century, and nearly everybody did at the end of it. Official imports grew from six tons in 1699 to eleven thousand tons a century later, and the price of a pound of tea was one-twentieth of the price at the beginning. ... [Consumption was actually greater than imports would indicate because of] the widespread practice of adulteration, the stretching of tea by mixing it with ash and willow leaves, sawdust, flowers, and more dubious substances--even sheep's dung, according to one account--often colored and disguised using chemical dyes. Tea was adulterated in one way or another at almost every stage along the chain from leaf to cup. ... Black tea became more popular, partly because it was more durable than green tea on long voyages, but also as a side effect of this adulteration. Many of the chemicals used to make fake green tea were poisonous, whereas black tea was safer, even when adulterated. As black tea started to displace the smoother, less bitter green tea, the addition of sugar and milk helped to make it more palatable."
Tom Standage, A History of the World in Six Glasses, Walker, Copyright 2005 by Tom Standage, pp. 178, 185-189.

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5 comments:

Derek said...

Hey you.....this comment has nothing to do with this post...sorry.....I just figured out how to add blogs to my page! yeah! so I have you on there now....this is the last week of this term so it is hectic but I will get back on here and read and comment...I promise...

Ur-spo said...

oooh but i love tea!
i've read this book.
i will have a cup (2nd growth darjeerling) in your honor today.

Patrick said...

Isn't it odd to think of the UK and Ireland without tea? I love things like this. Before the Americas were discovered, what did Europe do without potatoes, tomatoes, coffee or chocolate?

Marc said...

I love Delancey Place! Can't live without it!

warrior scout said...

and i am a big fan of java bear...