A Food and drink forum. FoodBanter.com

Welcome to FoodBanter.com forums which provide access to the finest food and drink related newsgroups.

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most newsgroup discussions and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics to the food related newsgroups, communicate privately with other FoodBanter.com members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact support.

Go Back   Home » FoodBanter.com forum » Drinking » Tea
Site Map Home Register Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

Tea (rec.drink.tea) Discussion relating to tea, the world's second most consumed beverage (after water), made by infusing or boiling the leaves of the tea plant (C. sinensis or close relatives) in water.

Buying Fresh/Quality Darjeeling Tea



 
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Search this Thread Display Modes
  #1 (permalink)  
Old 21-03-2008, 02:27 AM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Omkar
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5
Default Buying Fresh/Quality Darjeeling Tea

Hi all,

Before I start, I'd like to say that I'm new to this community, so I
apologize if I breach any rules of etiquette here. I've been searching
for this information using Google Groups and it looks like people can
get touchy when discussion turns commercial. I'm only looking for
information. Also, this post may be a little long winded, but I'm not
sure what information is or isn't important, so I'm erring on the side
of inclusion. Thanks for your patience with a tea novice.

I started drinking good tea a couple of years ago, and late last June,
started ordering from Upton. In particular, I ordered a Risheehat
First Flush that I liked very much. The aroma was very strong at this
point, and probably for the next month or two. I stored the tea in
Upton's tin, put in a cool dark place. By October, however, the aroma
of the tea became less pronounced, and the flavor less complex.

Now, in early February, I ordered a bunch of first and second flush
samples from Upton. I'm pretty happy with some of the second flushes,
but the first flushes seem to have lost potency just as my Risheehat
did. I thought this might be the quality of the tea; luckily, I'd
ordered the Risheehat again as a check. Sure enough, it tasted and
smelled like it did after a few months with me last time. I'm not sure
what to make of this, since the tea itself is around a year old at
this point.

So here are my questions:

1. Is this shelf life the best I can expect, or is there something I
can do to improve my storage? A few months seems a bit short to me.
2. Is this level of freshness what I can expect from all vendors, or
does Upton have a freshness issue?

I really loved the tea when it was fresh (or at least fresher), so I
was thinking of buying all my Darjeeling tea this year direct from
India.

3. Would this get me fresher and/or better tea than careful selection
from Upton or another (please recommend) US vendor?
4. If so, can anyone recommend and talk about their experience with a
particular site or distributor? I've seen Thunderbolt Tea, Tea
Emporium, and Lochan's sites. All of them look nice enough, but I'd
like to get some consumer opinions. I do know that their proprietors
(as well as Upton's) occasionally show up here; their input is very
welcome even if I'll take it with a grain of salt.

I'd also be interested in similar information for Assams or Nilgiris
if anyone has it. I have family in Bangalore so if anyone knows a good
Nilgiri, even if it's only sold locally, I'd appreciate the tip.

Thanks so much for your help!

Omkar



  #2 (permalink)  
Old 21-03-2008, 02:28 AM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Omkar
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5
Default Buying Fresh/Quality Darjeeling Tea

Forgot to add - I standardized my brewing procedure so the multiple
Risheehat tastings should be comparable.

Omkar

On Mar 20, 7:27 pm, Omkar wrote:
Hi all,

Before I start, I'd like to say that I'm new to this community, so I
apologize if I breach any rules of etiquette here. I've been searching
for this information using Google Groups and it looks like people can
get touchy when discussion turns commercial. I'm only looking for
information. Also, this post may be a little long winded, but I'm not
sure what information is or isn't important, so I'm erring on the side
of inclusion. Thanks for your patience with a tea novice.

I started drinking good tea a couple of years ago, and late last June,
started ordering from Upton. In particular, I ordered a Risheehat
First Flush that I liked very much. The aroma was very strong at this
point, and probably for the next month or two. I stored the tea in
Upton's tin, put in a cool dark place. By October, however, the aroma
of the tea became less pronounced, and the flavor less complex.

Now, in early February, I ordered a bunch of first and second flush
samples from Upton. I'm pretty happy with some of the second flushes,
but the first flushes seem to have lost potency just as my Risheehat
did. I thought this might be the quality of the tea; luckily, I'd
ordered the Risheehat again as a check. Sure enough, it tasted and
smelled like it did after a few months with me last time. I'm not sure
what to make of this, since the tea itself is around a year old at
this point.

So here are my questions:

1. Is this shelf life the best I can expect, or is there something I
can do to improve my storage? A few months seems a bit short to me.
2. Is this level of freshness what I can expect from all vendors, or
does Upton have a freshness issue?

I really loved the tea when it was fresh (or at least fresher), so I
was thinking of buying all my Darjeeling tea this year direct from
India.

3. Would this get me fresher and/or better tea than careful selection
from Upton or another (please recommend) US vendor?
4. If so, can anyone recommend and talk about their experience with a
particular site or distributor? I've seen Thunderbolt Tea, Tea
Emporium, and Lochan's sites. All of them look nice enough, but I'd
like to get some consumer opinions. I do know that their proprietors
(as well as Upton's) occasionally show up here; their input is very
welcome even if I'll take it with a grain of salt.

I'd also be interested in similar information for Assams or Nilgiris
if anyone has it. I have family in Bangalore so if anyone knows a good
Nilgiri, even if it's only sold locally, I'd appreciate the tip.

Thanks so much for your help!

Omkar


  #3 (permalink)  
Old 21-03-2008, 01:57 PM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Lewis Perin
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 653
Default Buying Fresh/Quality Darjeeling Tea

Omkar writes:

[...]
Now, in early February, I ordered a bunch of first and second flush
samples from Upton. I'm pretty happy with some of the second flushes,
but the first flushes seem to have lost potency just as my Risheehat
did. I thought this might be the quality of the tea; luckily, I'd
ordered the Risheehat again as a check. Sure enough, it tasted and
smelled like it did after a few months with me last time. I'm not sure
what to make of this, since the tea itself is around a year old at
this point.


A lot of people believe that second flushes, like many black teas,
need several months storage before they reach their peak. I've never
heard anyone say this about first flushes.

So here are my questions:

1. Is this shelf life the best I can expect, or is there something I
can do to improve my storage? A few months seems a bit short to me.


How about storing the tea in an airtight container with a desiccant?

[...]
I'd also be interested in similar information for Assams or Nilgiris
if anyone has it. I have family in Bangalore so if anyone knows a good
Nilgiri, even if it's only sold locally, I'd appreciate the tip.


I've never been to Bangalore, but I was in various cities in Tamil
Nadu a month or so ago. I was amazed by how hard it was to find
Nilgiri tea for sale, even generic blends, let alone single estate
teas.

/Lew
---
Lew Perin /
http://www.panix.com/~perin/babelcarp.html
  #4 (permalink)  
Old 21-03-2008, 03:00 PM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
toci
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 227
Default Buying Fresh/Quality Darjeeling Tea

On Mar 20, 9:27*pm, Omkar wrote:
Hi all,

Before I start, I'd like to say that I'm new to this community, so I
apologize if I breach any rules of etiquette here. I've been searching
for this information using Google Groups and it looks like people can
get touchy when discussion turns commercial. I'm only looking for
information. Also, this post may be a little long winded, but I'm not
sure what information is or isn't important, so I'm erring on the side
of inclusion. Thanks for your patience with a tea novice.

I started drinking good tea a couple of years ago, and late last June,
started ordering from Upton. In particular, I ordered a Risheehat
First Flush that I liked very much. The aroma was very strong at this
point, and probably for the next month or two. I stored the tea in
Upton's tin, put in a cool dark place. By October, however, the aroma
of the tea became less pronounced, and the flavor less complex.

Now, in early February, I ordered a bunch of first and second flush
samples from Upton. I'm pretty happy with some of the second flushes,
but the first flushes seem to have lost potency just as my Risheehat
did. I thought this might be the quality of the tea; luckily, I'd
ordered the Risheehat again as a check. Sure enough, it tasted and
smelled like it did after a few months with me last time. I'm not sure
what to make of this, since the tea itself is around a year old at
this point.

So here are my questions:

1. Is this shelf life the best I can expect, or is there something I
can do to improve my storage? A few months seems a bit short to me.
2. Is this level of freshness what I can expect from all vendors, or
does Upton have a freshness issue?

I really loved the tea when it was fresh (or at least fresher), so I
was thinking of buying all my Darjeeling tea this year direct from
India.

3. Would this get me fresher and/or better tea than careful selection
from Upton or another (please recommend) US vendor?
4. If so, can anyone recommend and talk about their experience with a
particular site or distributor? I've seen Thunderbolt Tea, Tea
Emporium, and Lochan's sites. All of them look nice enough, but I'd
like to get some consumer opinions. I do know that their proprietors
(as well as Upton's) occasionally show up here; their input is very
welcome even if I'll take it with a grain of salt.

I'd also be interested in similar information for Assams or Nilgiris
if anyone has it. I have family in Bangalore so if anyone knows a good
Nilgiri, even if it's only sold locally, I'd appreciate the tip.

Thanks so much for your help!

Omkar


About six months ago, I gave my personal 5 stars to two Nilgiris from
Upton-TN68 and TN96. The Assams and Ceylons I liked are now sold
out. I keep my teas in their original envelope, then sealed with a
clip, then put in a small metal cannister. That seems to work for
me. Toci
  #5 (permalink)  
Old 24-03-2008, 02:51 PM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Omkar
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5
Default Buying Fresh/Quality Darjeeling Tea

On Mar 21, 11:00 am, toci wrote:
On Mar 20, 9:27 pm, Omkar wrote:



Hi all,


Before I start, I'd like to say that I'm new to this community, so I
apologize if I breach any rules of etiquette here. I've been searching
for this information using Google Groups and it looks like people can
get touchy when discussion turns commercial. I'm only looking for
information. Also, this post may be a little long winded, but I'm not
sure what information is or isn't important, so I'm erring on the side
of inclusion. Thanks for your patience with a tea novice.


I started drinking good tea a couple of years ago, and late last June,
started ordering from Upton. In particular, I ordered a Risheehat
First Flush that I liked very much. The aroma was very strong at this
point, and probably for the next month or two. I stored the tea in
Upton's tin, put in a cool dark place. By October, however, the aroma
of the tea became less pronounced, and the flavor less complex.


Now, in early February, I ordered a bunch of first and second flush
samples from Upton. I'm pretty happy with some of the second flushes,
but the first flushes seem to have lost potency just as my Risheehat
did. I thought this might be the quality of the tea; luckily, I'd
ordered the Risheehat again as a check. Sure enough, it tasted and
smelled like it did after a few months with me last time. I'm not sure
what to make of this, since the tea itself is around a year old at
this point.


So here are my questions:


1. Is this shelf life the best I can expect, or is there something I
can do to improve my storage? A few months seems a bit short to me.
2. Is this level of freshness what I can expect from all vendors, or
does Upton have a freshness issue?


I really loved the tea when it was fresh (or at least fresher), so I
was thinking of buying all my Darjeeling tea this year direct from
India.


3. Would this get me fresher and/or better tea than careful selection
from Upton or another (please recommend) US vendor?
4. If so, can anyone recommend and talk about their experience with a
particular site or distributor? I've seen Thunderbolt Tea, Tea
Emporium, and Lochan's sites. All of them look nice enough, but I'd
like to get some consumer opinions. I do know that their proprietors
(as well as Upton's) occasionally show up here; their input is very
welcome even if I'll take it with a grain of salt.


I'd also be interested in similar information for Assams or Nilgiris
if anyone has it. I have family in Bangalore so if anyone knows a good
Nilgiri, even if it's only sold locally, I'd appreciate the tip.


Thanks so much for your help!


Omkar


About six months ago, I gave my personal 5 stars to two Nilgiris from
Upton-TN68 and TN96. The Assams and Ceylons I liked are now sold
out. I keep my teas in their original envelope, then sealed with a
clip, then put in a small metal cannister. That seems to work for
me. Toci


Thanks for the tips. I think I'm going to change how I store my tea,
but also buy this years Darjeelings direct from India. Does anyone
have experience with Tea Emporium, Thunderbolt, or Lochan?

BTW - I also really liked TN68. It really is a great tea, isn't it? I
liked the TA90 Assam (Nahorhabi) quite a lot; I found it pretty
similar to how Upton described it (not my experience for all teas in
the samples that I'm working through).
  #6 (permalink)  
Old 26-03-2008, 01:24 AM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Omkar
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 5
Default Buying Fresh/Quality Darjeeling Tea

On Mar 24, 10:51*am, Omkar wrote:
On Mar 21, 11:00 am, toci wrote:



On Mar 20, 9:27 pm, Omkar wrote:


Hi all,


Before I start, I'd like to say that I'm new to this community, so I
apologize if I breach any rules of etiquette here. I've been searching
for this information using Google Groups and it looks like people can
get touchy when discussion turns commercial. I'm only looking for
information. Also, this post may be a little long winded, but I'm not
sure what information is or isn't important, so I'm erring on the side
of inclusion. Thanks for your patience with a tea novice.


I started drinking good tea a couple of years ago, and late last June,
started ordering from Upton. In particular, I ordered a Risheehat
First Flush that I liked very much. The aroma was very strong at this
point, and probably for the next month or two. I stored the tea in
Upton's tin, put in a cool dark place. By October, however, the aroma
of the tea became less pronounced, and the flavor less complex.


Now, in early February, I ordered a bunch of first and second flush
samples from Upton. I'm pretty happy with some of the second flushes,
but the first flushes seem to have lost potency just as my Risheehat
did. I thought this might be the quality of the tea; luckily, I'd
ordered the Risheehat again as a check. Sure enough, it tasted and
smelled like it did after a few months with me last time. I'm not sure
what to make of this, since the tea itself is around a year old at
this point.


So here are my questions:


1. Is this shelf life the best I can expect, or is there something I
can do to improve my storage? A few months seems a bit short to me.
2. Is this level of freshness what I can expect from all vendors, or
does Upton have a freshness issue?


I really loved the tea when it was fresh (or at least fresher), so I
was thinking of buying all my Darjeeling tea this year direct from
India.


3. Would this get me fresher and/or better tea than careful selection
from Upton or another (please recommend) US vendor?
4. If so, can anyone recommend and talk about their experience with a
particular site or distributor? I've seen Thunderbolt Tea, Tea
Emporium, and Lochan's sites. All of them look nice enough, but I'd
like to get some consumer opinions. I do know that their proprietors
(as well as Upton's) occasionally show up here; their input is very
welcome even if I'll take it with a grain of salt.


I'd also be interested in similar information for Assams or Nilgiris
if anyone has it. I have family in Bangalore so if anyone knows a good
Nilgiri, even if it's only sold locally, I'd appreciate the tip.


Thanks so much for your help!


Omkar


About six months ago, I gave my personal 5 stars to two Nilgiris from
Upton-TN68 and TN96. *The Assams and Ceylons I liked are now sold
out. *I keep my teas in their original envelope, then sealed with a
clip, then put in a small metal cannister. *That seems to work for
me. * * Toci


Thanks for the tips. I think I'm going to change how I store my tea,
but also buy this years Darjeelings direct from India. Does anyone
have experience with Tea Emporium, Thunderbolt, or Lochan?

BTW - I also really liked TN68. It really is a great tea, isn't it? I
liked the TA90 Assam (Nahorhabi) quite a lot; I found it pretty
similar to how Upton described it (not my experience for all teas in
the samples that I'm working through).


Ordered from Tea Emporium. Will let you all know how it turns out in a
week or two.

Omkar
  #7 (permalink)  
Old 26-03-2008, 02:58 AM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
teapandya
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 23
Default Buying Fresh/Quality Darjeeling Tea

On Mar 21, 6:57*pm, Lewis Perin wrote:
Omkar writes:
[...]
Now, in early February, I ordered a bunch of first and second flush
samples from Upton. I'm pretty happy with some of the second flushes,
but the first flushes seem to have lost potency just as my Risheehat
did. I thought this might be the quality of the tea; luckily, I'd
ordered the Risheehat again as a check. Sure enough, it tasted and
smelled like it did after a few months with me last time. I'm not sure
what to make of this, since the tea itself is around a year old at
this point.


A lot of people believe that second flushes, like many black teas,
need several months storage before they reach their peak. *I've never
heard anyone say this about first flushes.

So here are my questions:


1. Is this shelf life the best I can expect, or is there something I
can do to improve my storage? A few months seems a bit short to me.


How about storing the tea in an airtight container with a desiccant?

[...]
I'd also be interested in similar information for Assams or Nilgiris
if anyone has it. I have family in Bangalore so if anyone knows a good
Nilgiri, even if it's only sold locally, I'd appreciate the tip.


I've never been to Bangalore, but I was in various cities in Tamil
Nadu a month or so ago. *I was amazed by how hard it was to find
Nilgiri tea for sale, even generic blends, let alone single estate
teas.

/Lew
---
Lew Perin /


Dear friends,

There is a lot of confusion regarding the expiry date of Tea.

Take this case :- Estates in India mark there bulk package as "best
before one year from the date of manufacture", these packages are then
exported to UK, after being sold in the auction 2 months from date of
mfg. Tea lands in Uk when 3 months Old, and may be offered as early as
when 4 months old to 15 months old (awaiting the next seasons tea of
similar quality before exhausting the stock), with a marking on the
pack "Best before 12 months from the date of packing" !!
Take another case :- Some countries have markings of "Best Before One/
Two and even Three years" available in the market.
And yet another case :- In some countries Tea is included in the "list
of food products exempted from declaring expiry date".
Icing on the cake :- How about Pu'reh? Old is Gold. The older it gets,
the more premium it commands.
My personal experience :- I have some "Golden Tips" from Langharjan
which are nearly 15 years old. Its now gone flat (I suspect its due to
improper storage. We have moved house thrice, and things have not been
very orderly), but I hang on to it now just for its sheer looks. Its
pure gold!

Proffesionaly speaking, over a period of time, Tea becomes weak in the
following order:-
First to go is the "Character", followed by "Flavour", followed by
"Briskness", "Strength" and then "Colour".

For all practical purpose, store in an air tight container,
prefferably Stainless Steel or good quality Tin or Alluminium, away
from moisture and odours. If you need to sun at all, sun with the lid
open.

Nigel? Pl. do give your inputs.

Tea Cheers!
Jayesh S Pandya.

 




Thread Tools Search this Thread
Search this Thread:

Advanced Search
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On


fitness forum |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 04:17 AM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.0.0 RC6
Copyright ©2004-2008 FoodBanter.com, part of the NewsgroupBanter project.
The comments are property of their posters.
Bad Credit Credit Card - Theme - Credit Card - Adverse Credit Remortgage - Salle Blanche