Tea that helps our head and heart. Tea medicates most every part. Tea rejuvenates the very old. Tea warms the hands of those who're cold. J. Jonker, Amsterdam, circa 1670
Friday, August 28, 2009
Friday, August 21, 2009
Afternoon Tea or High Tea
Thursday, August 20, 2009
Tea in Northumberland 1850
Christy
Thursday, August 6, 2009
Tea Making Tips, 6 Golden Rules
- Always buy a good quality tea (it goes further)
- Fresh water for boiling every time (the water is then oxygenated)
- Bring water to the boil, but do not over boil
- Warm the teapot first, bring the teapot to the kettle
- Put in enough tea for size of pot or quantity of water
- Steep for 3 to 5 minutes (this video says up to 10 minutes, but that would have to be a very large pot, or they must have liked their tea a lot stronger back then)
Tuesday, August 4, 2009
McLeod Russel is eyeing tea plantations in Africa
KOLKATA - The world’s largest tea producer, McLeod Russel India is eyeing plantations in Africa, a top company official said here Tuesday.
“Logically, I would love to go to Africa because it is god’s country for tea. The first focus will be Kenya. Once we go there, we will start looking for opportunities,” said company managing director Aditya Khaitan.
The acquisitions will add around 5-10 million kg to McLeod Russel’s total production, Khaitan told reporters on the sidelines of the company’s annual general meeting.
Asked how much the company would have to shell out for these acquisitions, he said it would be at least around $10 million. “We want to go wherever we can to add value. We have to grow by acquisition.”
In 2005, McLeod Russel acquired Williamson Tea Assam from the London-based Magor family, which founded a partnership firm, Williamson Magor in India in 1869.
Two years later, it acquired Doomdooma Tea Co from Hindustan Unilever and Britain’s Moran Holdings of Britain in 2007.
The company has also acquired a Vietnamese tea company, Phu Ben, through its wholly-owned unit in Britain, Borelli Tea Holdings.
“Our strategy, going forward, is that between 20-30 percent of our total production should come from outside India in the next five years,” Khaitan said.
At present, the company produces around 80 million kg of tea annually, and exports around 30 million kg.
Talking about his outlook on the industry, Khaitan said: “Considering the drought that hit India in the first two-three months of the current fiscal, the overall tea production in the country will be down by 20-25 million kilograms this year, and 70-75 million kilograms in 2010-11.”
India’s total production last fiscal was 980 million kg.
Saturday, August 1, 2009
Elephant Walk
Elephant Walk the name of the movie, is a tea plantation in Ceylon. These two shots I took off the TV movie while playing. Did some tea plantation houses, look like this? Look at all the Tea pickers in the background. Ceylon, now Sri Lanka must have some spectacular tea plantations.
Elephant walk the plantation and the house, built by the arrogant, now dead father was built right on the path of where the elephants walk. How many years can they hold them back before it is reclaimed. the movie is mediocre, but I liked looking at the tea plantation and the house. It made me think of taking a look at different tea plantations.
In the UK we came to know these as Bungalows, which is an anglicised Indian word. We would say as kids, 'bung a low roof on.' But it came to represent in the UK a one storey residence. It derives from the Hindi and Urdi word, Bagla, which means house in the Bengali style. In India they would very often have a porch and be one and a half stories.