The British have a great heritage in tea, and we love to think we know all about it, but today our knowledge of it is very limited. Ninety per cent of what we drink is now sold in teabags, and its average infusion time is estimated to be less than 50 seconds - a very different situation to 50 years ago, when it was sold in packets and required a five-minute infusion.
Visitors from abroad have always associated Britons with tea. But they are often disappointed to find bags, plastic tubs of milk, sugar in sachets, plastic stirrers and a hot-water urn. If they are in a hotel, their tea may come in a teapot, but what's all that string hanging down the side? And there, floating on the water that passes for tea, are three or four bags. Sometimes its red colour suggests a strong brew, but frequently its taste is harsh, with an almost metallic taste - no suggestion of real flavour. Or it comes out so weak that one is obliged to lift the bag out of the pot and press it with a spoon to extract a drink that resembles tea.
For 200 years all our tea came from China and was of the rolled-leaf variety, which required a five-minute infusion. It was left in the pot for the addition of more water for a second cup. In the 1850s, tea planting began in north-east India, followed by Ceylon, and the tea was so good that it virtually built all the British companies, such as Liptons, Mazawattee, Brooke Bond and Lions. However, while the British provided the investment and the planters, the tea was still rolled on the estates, and we stuck with the five-minute infusion time - it was the heart and soul of English afternoon tea.
During the second world war, the tea auctions were suspended and tea was rationed until 1952. In that year, however, the first English coffee bar with a horizontal espresso machine was opened and helped start the revival in coffee consumption.
At the time, most European countries drank coffee, and the proportion of coffee sales to tea in the UK was only 1%. The coffee producers decided that the best way to present coffee to the British was as a soluble powder, described as instant.
The tea trade responded by putting the leaf through a CTC machine (crush, tear and curl) as opposed to the traditional revolving rollers. The effect was to produce a tea the shape and size of granulated sugar, described as a quick-infusion tea, or fast-brew.
As the size of the leaf was smaller than the traditional leaf, 4oz seemed only to half-fill the 125g packets; it followed that the leaf was so small it might as well be packed in paper bags. So today, 90% of the UK is using teabags. That's not my cup of tea - any more than instant coffee is coffee to a German or Scandinavian.
The guide to the right presumes you use orthodox leaf tea, which you should keep in a caddy. You should use a teapot with a grate at the bottom of the spout and whole milk. This way of making a pot of tea reminds us of time itself. Who wants a quick brew? Not me. There are no better things in life than tea and time.
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