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Black tea - Classification |  | Black tea - Classification: Encyclopedia II - Black tea - Classification |  | Indian and Ceylon tea is usually named after the region of origin: Darjeeling, Assam, Ceylon, etc. and further by estates and grades for quality leaf: e.g., "Darjeeling Lingia FTGFOP1".
In Ceylon tea from Sri Lanka the grade names are an indication of the size and/or appearance of the tea but not the quality. There can be a lack of uniformity in the market grades which makes it difficult to describe them with accuracy. Ceylon teas can be divided into two groups:
The leaf grades originally made by the Ceylon tea pioneers.
The smalle ...
See also:Black tea, Black tea - Varieties of black tea, Black tea - Chinese black teas, Black tea - Indian and Sri Lanka black teas, Black tea - Other black teas, Black tea - Blends of black tea, Black tea - Processing of black tea, Black tea - Classification, Black tea - External link |  | | Black tea, Black tea - Blends of black tea, Black tea - Chinese black teas, Black tea - Classification, Black tea - External link, Black tea - Indian and Sri Lanka black teas, Black tea - Other black teas, Black tea - Processing of black tea, Black tea - Varieties of black tea |  | |
|  |  | Black tea: Encyclopedia II - Black tea - Classification
Black tea - Classification
Indian and Ceylon tea is usually named after the region of origin: Darjeeling, Assam, Ceylon, etc. and further by estates and grades for quality leaf: e.g., "Darjeeling Lingia FTGFOP1".
In Ceylon tea from Sri Lanka the grade names are an indication of the size and/or appearance of the tea but not the quality. There can be a lack of uniformity in the market grades which makes it difficult to describe them with accuracy. Ceylon teas can be divided into two groups:
- The leaf grades originally made by the Ceylon tea pioneers.
- The smaller broken grades which are used today.
List of Ceylon tea leaf grades:
- Orange Pekoe (O.P.) - Long, thin, wiry leaves which sometimes contain the tip. The liquors are light or pale in colour.
- Pekoe (Pek.) - The leaves are shorter and not so wiry as O.P., but the liquors generally have more colour.
- Souchong (Sou.) - A bold and round leaf, with pale liquors.
- Broken Orange Pekoe (B.O.P. or BOP) - This grade is one of the most sought after. It is much smaller than any of the other leaf grades and contains the tip. The liquors have good colour and strength.
- Broken Pekoe (B.P.) - Slightly larger than B.O.P., with rather less colour in the cup; useful primarily as a filler in blends.
- Broken Pekoe Souchong (B.P.S) - A little larger that B.P. and in consequence lighter in the cup, but also used as a filler in blends.
- Broken Orange Pekoe Fannings (B.O.P.F.) - This grade is much sought after, especially in the UK. It is much smaller than B.O.P. and its main virtues are quick brewing, with good colour in the cup.
A small quantity of Tippy or Flowery grades (including Flowery Orange Pekoe (F.O.P) and Flowery Broken Orange Pekoe (F.B.O.P) are made. They are much more expensive to produce than run-of-the-mill grades, as this involves sorting out the tip by hand.
In Assam, the main leafy tea grades produced are flowery pekoe (FP), orange pekoe (OP), pekoe (P), pekoe souchong (PS), and souchong (S), with broken tea grades BOP = Broken Orange pekoe; FOP = Flowery Orange Pekoe; TGFOP = Tippy Golden Flowery Orange Pekoe; FTGFOP = Finest Tippy Golden Flowery Orange Pekoe.
All types are sold as either "single" teas, meaning just one variety, or as blends. Blend names are usually more general e.g. "Assam Tea".
Adulteration and falsification are serious problems in the global tea trade; the amount of tea sold worldwide as Darjeeling every year greatly exceeds the annual tea production of Darjeeling, which is estimated at 11,000 tonnes.
Other related archives19th century, Adulteration, Anhui Province, Assam, Black Sea, Camellia sinensis, Ceylon, China, Chinese, Chinese Famous Tea, Crush, Tear, Curl, Darjeeling, Dian Hong, Earl Grey, Fujian Province, Guangdong Province, India, Japanese, Keemun, Korean, Lapsang souchong, Mandarin, Mongolia, Mount Wuyi, Nepal, Nepalese, Nilgiri, Rize Province, Rize Tea, Siberia, South African, Sri Lanka, Tamil Nadu, Tea, Tibet, Tippy, Turkey, UK, Vietnam, Vietnamese, West Bengal, Ying De Hong, Yunnan, Yunnan Province, bergamot, blends, brewing, caffeine, coffee, fermentation, filler, green, humidity, leaf, leaves, liquors, oolong, oxidized, pioneers, rooibos, samovar, tea, tea bags, temperature, tonnes, western culture, white
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Classification", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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