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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. |
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"Yunnan Imperial known ... as Dianhong... from Fengqing county,
Yunnan ... is made from the same variety of tea plant as found in Darjeeling" ? i haven't tried to go beyond Indian teas are var. assamica, Chinese teas are var. sinensis. ... |
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First the contradictions:
1. Some argue Assamica and Sinensis are two different varieties. Some argue they are the same. Some argue Sinensis is the original. Some argue Assamica is the original. Could be true: 1. British smuggled Chinese tea varieties and planted in Darjeeling. They failed. They successfully used Assamica var in Darjeeling. Jim On Mar 12, 12:13 am, SN > wrote: > "Yunnan Imperial known ... as Dianhong... from Fengqing county, > Yunnan ... is made from the same variety of tea plant as found in > Darjeeling" > > ? > > i haven't tried to go beyond Indian teas are var. assamica, Chinese > teas are var. sinensis. ... |
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SN > writes:
> "Yunnan Imperial known ... as Dianhong... from Fengqing county, > Yunnan ... is made from the same variety of tea plant as found in > Darjeeling" > > ? "Variety" is an extremely slippery word. I'm not sure what the author means by this without more context. Also, it occurs to me that this may be a reference to the story that the tea bushes of Darjeeling descend from the Chinese seeds "stolen" in the 19th century. That's only a partial truth: lots of good DJ tea is grown from descendants of Assam plants. /Lew --- Lew Perin / http://www.panix.com/~perin/babelcarp.html |
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Let me share what I know.
The Britishers first tried to established Tea Plantations in Assam using seeds and plants imported from China, inspite of having knowledge of the indegenous Assamica variety growing in the area. The experiments were a failiure. Finally better sense prevailed and Assamica variety was propagated in Assam, Dooars and Terai, sucessfully. The rest is history. However, ever in search of new areas for starting Tea Plantations, when the Britishers tried planting in higher altitudes of Darjeeling hills, Assamica variety failed to establish. They then experimented with the chinary variety, mostly brought in from the Yunnan province. It not only established very well in the hills, but gave Teas of astounding aroma and taste. Even better than the quality originally obtained from these plants in China. The rest is once again, history. Tea Cheers! Jayesh S Pandya. On Mar 12, 8:08*pm, Lewis Perin > wrote: > SN > writes: > > "Yunnan Imperial known ... as Dianhong... from Fengqing county, > > Yunnan ... is made from the same variety of tea plant as found in > > Darjeeling" > > > ? > > "Variety" is an extremely slippery word. *I'm not sure what the author > means by this without more context. > > Also, it occurs to me that this may be a reference to the story that > the tea bushes of Darjeeling descend from the Chinese seeds "stolen" > in the 19th century. *That's only a partial truth: lots of good DJ tea > is grown from descendants of Assam plants. > > /Lew > --- > Lew Perin / |
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teapandya > writes:
> Let me share what I know. > [...] > However, ever in search of new areas for starting Tea Plantations, > when the Britishers tried planting in higher altitudes of Darjeeling > hills, Assamica variety failed to establish. They then experimented > with the chinary variety, mostly brought in from the Yunnan province. > It not only established very well in the hills, but gave Teas of > astounding aroma and taste. Even better than the quality originally > obtained from these plants in China. Are you saying that Darjeeling-grown tea is better than any tea grown in Yunnan? Are you saying that all Darjeeling-grown tea is descended from the China seeds? /Lew --- Lew Perin / http://www.panix.com/~perin/babelcarp.html |
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On Mar 13, 2:58*pm, Lewis Perin > wrote:
> > Are you saying that Darjeeling-grown tea is better than any tea grown > in Yunnan? Yes, to a Darjeeling tea devotee this is so. Vice versa for a Yunnan devotee. Likewise a Bangladeshi tea is better if that's what you prefer. > > Are you saying that all Darjeeling-grown tea is descended from the > China seeds? Yes, for all high elevation Darjeeling (and that's most of it) this is so, or at least was until the 1970s when some import of external tea germ plasm began for breeding purposes and clonal selection. However the vast majority of Darjeeling planting is derived from the original source - China seed - and some of those bushes are 100 years plus. Nigel at Teacraft |
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Nigel > writes:
> On Mar 13, 2:58Â*pm, Lewis Perin > wrote: > > [...] > > Are you saying that all Darjeeling-grown tea is descended from the > > China seeds? > > Yes, for all high elevation Darjeeling (and that's most of it) this is > so, or at least was until the 1970s when some import of external tea > germ plasm began for breeding purposes and clonal selection. However > the vast majority of Darjeeling planting is derived from the original > source - China seed - and some of those bushes are 100 years plus. I'm afraid I have no idea what the situation was before the '70s. And whether bushes with non-China genes are used more at lower DJ elevations I don't know, either. But I remember hearing quite clearly from the lips of a Darjeeling planter that some of the best DJ teas have an Assam heritage. This was four years ago in Darjeeling. /Lew --- Lew Perin / http://www.panix.com/~perin/babelcarp.html |
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I do not have the full records of Darjeeling tea history,which dates
back from 1841, as per Nigel. The present siuation is that every Darjeeling garden has variety ASSAMICA as well as Sinensis and Hybrid plants and Clonal plants with varying %. Large leaf ASSAM varietal yields more than small leaf China varietal and for this reason even at high elevations, low yielding and aged sections having Chinary bushe,were uprooted and replanted with the Assam tea seeds/ bushes. Which type of plants to have in new areas or in uprooted and replantred areas of Darjeeling gardens was judiciously decided by the concerned persons considering various factors like yield, quality, elevation, soil etc etc. Drive by any road to Darjeeling town and , you can see many variety of tea bushes even on the road side .Further Darjeeling planters are very much hosopitable and they will show you the tea bushes of the type you want to see, if they have in their plantations. Drive to Darjeeling via Mirik and on roadside you will see Assam varierty of tea bushes belonging to Gaybari at low elevation and you will see some of the highest elevation Clonal tea bushe of Gopaldhara. And mind that 60 Hectares of Conal plantations of Gopaldhara though called CLONAL have come from cuttings of different mother bushes called clonal bushes and to find out the full history of the earlier generations is left to the historians of tea or old planters or tea research association etc... Hello Nigel, I requested you to see our Darjeeling gardens last time I met you in a Tea conference and my invitation stands but keep in mind that I will be crossing seventy years soon. From A marwari and Indian and owner/ planter of darjeeling garden and ....... and by name S. M. Changoiwala "On Mar 25, 3:07 pm, Lewis Perin > wrote: .. > So the Yunnan big leaf cultivar > isn't C. sinensis var. assamica, it's C. sinensis var. sinensis > f. macrophylla. > Could you comment on the claim that the original China seeds were in > fact from this cultivar? > The recorded history of Darjeeling tea relates only that the original few seeds planted in 1841 were from China stock - planted at 2,134 metres - 6,829 feet elevation. Yunnan derived Camellia sinensis var sinensis f. macropylla could certainly survive the high mountain conditions - Kunming itself is at 1,900 metres and parts of Yunnan top 4,000 metres. However, in my albeit limited experience of Darjeeling I know of no big leaved bushes there - only small tough bushes bearing small China 'jat' leaf - and typical of the bushes grown in most of China, particularly the colder winter areas. Recognising that "absence of evidence is no evidence of absence" we must seek amplification from Darjeeling planters as to whether in some corner there are any large leaf bearing bushes. Nigel at Teacraft From: Nigel On Mar 25, 3:07 pm, Lewis Perin > wrote: .. > So the Yunnan big leaf cultivar > isn't C. sinensis var. assamica, it's C. sinensis var. sinensis > f. macrophylla. > Could you comment on the claim that the original China seeds were in > fact from this cultivar? > The recorded history of Darjeeling tea relates only that the original few seeds planted in 1841 were from China stock - planted at 2,134 metres - 6,829 feet elevation. Yunnan derived Camellia sinensis var sinensis f. macropylla could certainly survive the high mountain conditions - Kunming itself is at 1,900 metres and parts of Yunnan top 4,000 metres. However, in my albeit limited experience of Darjeeling I know of no big leaved bushes there - only small tough bushes bearing small China 'jat' leaf - and typical of the bushes grown in most of China, particularly the colder winter areas. Recognising that "absence of evidence is no evidence of absence" we must seek amplification from Darjeeling planters as to whether in some corner there are any large leaf bearing bushes. Nigel at Teacraft> > > Are you saying that all Darjeeling-grown tea is descended from the > > China seeds? > > Yes, for all high elevation Darjeeling (and that's most of it) this is > so, or at least was until the 1970s when some import of external tea > germ plasm began for breeding purposes and clonal selection. *However > the vast majority of Darjeeling planting is derived from the original > source - China seed - and some of those bushes are 100 years plus. > > Nigel at Teacraft " |
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