

Assam All Day Long
Many
tea-lovers like Assam because you can do so much with it:
drink it straight, add milk, cream, sugar, lemon and honey,
andbest yetyou can drink it all day long. There's
true "flavor in every cup."
Here
is a little geographical and cultural background taken from
James Norwood Pratt's New Tea Lover's Treasury: Assam
is the single largest tea-growing region on earth, a rainy
tropical plain adjacent to Bangladesh and Burma bordering
the Brahmaputra River. Assam produces only black tea and proves
that great tea does not always need to be high-grown. Like
Keemun or Taiwan oolong, this is low-grown tea and it deserves
its reputation as one of the world's strongest. It is unfailingly
full-bodied and prized for a malty characteristic all its
own. The dry leaf is sometimes full of tawny-colored tip,
like Yunnan. Extremely tippy Assam is always beautifully manufactured
and can taste unusually fruity. As far as one can tell, there
are no poor crops or years, although for some reason Assam
is rarely sold as First Flush or Second Flush. Any Assam will
produce a sturdy, pungent liquor, orange-red to dark red in
color, which takes well to milk and sugar because of its unusual
astringency. This is why the better Assam teas are prized
especially in Germany's Ostfriesland on the coast of the North
Sea and in the U.S. blends for Irish breakfast teas. Both
the Ostfriesian and Irish Tea traditions exalt milk tea, of
which Assam is perfect. Milk turns Assam a bright red-brown,
in contrast to the bright golden color Ceylons turn with the
addition of milk. Darjeeling takes on a grayish cast and is
generally unfriendly to milk anyway.
Reprinted
with permission from New
Tea Lover's TreasuryThe Classic True Story of Tea,
by James Norwood Pratt, Publishing Technology Associate, San
Francisco, California, 1999.
©
2002 All Rights Reserved, In
Pursuit of Tea, Inc.
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