Organic Tanzania Tea
Available Sizes : 100g or 500g
Tanzania is a relatively small producer of tea in world terms. The teas produced are somewhat similar to Kenyan teas in that they have malty tending fruity/flavory characteristics. The production is primarily CTC (cut, torn and curled), which produces a fuller bodied tea but a non traditional (from a specialty tea perspective) visual appearance. Full bodied, Malty flavor notes reminiscent of a fine Kenyan tea. Bright golden cup that takes milk well.  [ View more details ]
Can$7.65 / 100g
$7.26
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  • Tea Information
  • Tea Ingredients
  • How To Brew

Organic Tanzania Tea

  • Country of Origin: Tanzania
  • Region: Usambara
  • Shipping Port: Tanga
  • Grade: BOP (Broken Orange Pekoe)
  • Altitude: Up 4500 feet and 5600 feet above sea level
  • Manufacturer Type: CTC (Cut Torn Curled)
  • Cup Characteristics: Full bodied, Malty flavor notes reminiscent of a fine Kenyan tea.
  • Infusions: Bright, reddish coppery colour.
  • Ingredients: Luxury organic black tea


Organic tea is produced without the input of chemical fertilizers or pesticides and herbicides. Normally the yield per acre is lower that when fertilizers or others inputs are utilized, and the leaf can be slightly more mixed than non-organic teas. Nevertheless with good manufacturing techniques the cup characteristics can be maintained at a high level - such is the case with this tea. Tanzania is a poor country and the use of pesticides and fertilizers is rare even in the Usambara region. In view of this the step to organic husbandry was fairly simple.

Tanzania is a relatively small producer of tea in world terms. The teas produced are somewhat similar to Kenyan teas in that they have malty tending fruity/flavory characteristics. The production is primarily CTC (cut, torn and curled), which produces a fuller bodied tea but a non traditional (from a specialty tea perspective) visual appearance. This tea is produced in northern Tanzania close to the Kenyan border and not far from a wild life area called The Ngorongo Crater. The soil conditions and altitude combine to give the tea the flavor notes. An interesting and flavory tea, which is perfect for afternoon tea or early morning ‘cuppas’.

  Tea Ingredients

Hot Tea Method

Use 2-4 teaspoons of tea per 4-cup teapot (you vary the strength by the amount of tea used); pour in boiling water that has been freshly drawn. (Do not over boil the water as this will de-oxygenate the water and affect the flavour of the tea). Steep the tea for 2-7 minutes depending upon the strength of the tea desired. Stir the tea after 2 minutes (if you used boiling water virtually all the leaves will sink to the bottom of the tea pot), let it stand for another 1 to 5 minutes and then gently pour into your cup. Milk and a dash of sugar will help capture the malty and somewhat fruity character of this tea, but it is perfectly acceptable to consume this tea ‘straight-up’.

Iced Tea Method

(to make 1 liter/quart): Place 6 teaspoons of tea into a teapot or heat resistant pitcher. Pour 1 1/4 cups of freshly boiled water over the tea. Steep for 5 minutes. Quarter fill a serving pitcher with cold water. Pour the tea into your serving pitcher straining the leaves. Add ice and top-up the pitcher with cold water. Garnish and sweeten to taste. [A rule of thumb when preparing fresh brewed iced tea is to double the strength of hot tea since it will be poured over ice and diluted with cold water.]: NB. This tea tends to ‘cloud’ or go ‘milky’ when poured over ice. This commonly happens with high quality teas.

 

 
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