Free-Reprint Article Written by: Marcus Stout 
See Terms of Reprint Below.


*****************************************************************
*
* This email is being delivered directly to members of the group:
* 
*    [email protected]
* 
*****************************************************************


We have moved our TERMS OF REPRINT to the end of the article.
Be certain to read our TERMS OF REPRINT and honor our TERMS 
OF REPRINT when you use this article. Thank you.

This article has been distributed by:
http://Article-Distribution.com

Helpful Link: 
  The Digital Millennium Copyright Act - Overview
  http://www.gseis.ucla.edu/iclp/dmca1.htm

---------------------------------------------------------------------

Article Title:
==============

Loose Leaf Tea In The United States – A Short History

Article Description:
====================

The market for loose leaf tea in the United States is growing
strongly as tea drinkers from all walks of life rediscover the
taste, health benefits and value of loose leaf tea. But one must
ask the question: why is loose leaf tea less popular in the
United States than in the rest of the world? The answer lies in
the combination of the political and economic history of our
country and the presence of the low quality tea bag.


Additional Article Information:
===============================

1373 Words; formatted to 65 Characters per Line
Distribution Date and Time: 2007-04-16 10:36:00

Written By:     Marcus Stout
Copyright:      2007
Contact Email:  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



For more free-reprint articles by Marcus Stout, please visit:
http://www.thePhantomWriters.com/recent/author/marcus-stout.html


=============================================
Special Notice For Publishers and Webmasters:
=============================================

If you use this article on your website or in your ezine,
We Want To Know About It. Use the following URL to let
us know where you have used this article, and we will
include a link to your website on thePhantomWriters.com: 

http://thephantomwriters.com/notify.php?id=4690&p=load


HTML Copy-and-Paste and TEXT Copy-and-Paste 
Versions Of Article Are Available at:
http://thePhantomWriters.com/free_content/db/s/loose-leaf-tea-history.shtml#get_code

---------------------------------------------------------------------

Loose Leaf Tea In The United States – A Short History
Copyright (c) 2007 Marcus Stout
Golden Moon Tea
http://www.GoldenMoonTea.com



The market for loose leaf tea in the United States is growing
strongly as tea drinkers from all walks of life rediscover the
taste, health benefits and value of loose leaf tea.

But one must ask the question: why is loose leaf tea less popular
in the United States than in the rest of the world? The answer
lies in the combination of the political and economic history of
our country and the presence of the low quality tea bag.

The Colonies Reject Loose Leaf Tea

Although tea drinking originated in China, consumption of tea
based on good taste, health benefits and the sense of well being
one achieved by tea drinking spread to the western world. The
American colonies embraced the habit of tea drinking after tea
was introduced by Dutch traders in the 17th and 18th centuries
and became one of the largest tea drinking regions in the world
on a per capita basis. Colony consumption of tea dwarfed that of
the parent country England.

The French and Indian War, or Seven Years War, after which the
British ruled supreme in most of North America, represented the
decisive turning point in British-colonial relations however. The
Treaty of Paris in 1763 ratified Britain's undisputed control of
the seas and shipping trade, as well as its sovereignty over much
of the North American continent east of the Mississippi River
(including French Canada).

But the British expected the Colonies to pay for the war (the
British borrowed heavily from European Bankers to finance the
war) and this fact planted the seeds of rebellion.

During the years leading up to the American Revolution, Britain,
through a policy of salutary neglect, had allowed the colonies by
default the right to manage their own affairs. The subsequent
efforts on the part of royal officials to rectify this deficiency
and collect unprecedented amounts of revenue violated what many
American colonists understood as the clear precedent of more than
a century of colonial-imperial relations.

New world institutions of self-government and trade, having
matured in an age of salutary neglect, would resist and
ultimately rebel against perceived British encroachment. Taxation
policy became a central point of contention, because it tended to
threaten both the prosperity and autonomy of colonial society.

Between the Seven Years War and the Revolution the British
enacted a series of heavy handed taxation and other policies that
attempted to raise revenue and regain control over the wayward
colonies. Many of the acts focused on tea and the result was
revolution.

On the night of December 16, 1773 Massachusetts Patriots
disguised as Indians illegally boarded the Dartmouth, a cargo
ship bearing 342 chests of East India Tea valued at about
£10,000. In defiance of Governor Thomas Hutchinson and British
tax authority in general, the intruders dumped the entire
shipment into Boston Harbor, precipitating a crisis that would
lead to revolution.

The Boston Tea Party was an act of uprising in which Boston
residents destroyed crates of British tea in 1773, in protest
against British tea and taxation policy. Prior to the Boston Tea
Party, residents of Britain's North American 13 colonies drank
far more tea than coffee. In Britain, coffee was more popular.
After the protests against the various taxes, British Colonists
stopped drinking tea as an act of patriotism. Drinking of loose
leaf tea in the United States is only now recovering.

Replaced by coffee and the convenient tea bag, consumption of
loose leaf tea would remain dormant until the start of the 21st
Century.

Enter the Tea Bag

During World War II, tea was rationed. In 1953 (after rationing
in the UK ended), Tetley launched the tea bag to the UK and it
was an immediate success. The convenience of the tea bag
revolutionized how Britons drank their tea and the traditional
tea pot gave way to making tea in a cup using a tea bag. The
success of the tea bag accelerated in the United States as well
and soon came to dominate the tea drinking market.

In a tea bag, tea leaves are packed into a small (usually paper)
tea bag. It is easy and convenient, making tea bags popular for
many people today. However, the tea used in tea bags has an
industry name, called "fannings" or "dust" and is the waste
product produced from the sorting of higher quality loose leaf
tea.

What is Good About the Tea Bag?

About the only thing good about the tea bag is the convenience
factor. In the past, many Americans were willing to sacrifice
taste and quality for convenience. This trend is now changing.

It is commonly held among tea drinking experts that the tea bag
provides an inferior taste and tea drinking experience. The paper
used for the bag can also be tasted, which can detract from the
tea's flavor. Because fannings and dust are a lower quality of
the tea to begin with, the tea found in tea bags is more tolerant
when it comes to brewing time and temperature. But the taste
suffers in quality.

The main difference between loose teas and bagged teas is the
size and quality of the leaves . Tea leaves contain chemicals and
essential oils, which are the basis for the wonderful flavor of
tea. When the tea leaves are broken up, those oils can evaporate,
leaving a dull and tasteless tea as well as losing many of the
health benefits of loose leaf tea.

There is also the space factor. Tea leaves need space to swell,
expand and unfurl. Good water circulation around the leaves is
important, which doesn't typically happen in a tea bag.

Loose leaf tea comes in greater variety than bagged tea when one
considers the multitude of blends and flavors that are loose leaf
tea offerings. There is at least one or more tea blends for the
palette of any individual tea drinker.

Additional reasons why bag tea is considered lower quality
include:

 * Dried tea loses its flavor quickly on exposure to air. Most
bag teas contain leaves broken into small pieces; the great
surface area to volume ratio of the leaves in tea bags exposes
them to more air, and results in stale tea.

 * Loose tea leaves are likely to be full formed and larger and
are robust for multiple infusion of the leaves. This results in a
lower cost per cup.

 * Breaking up the leaves for bags disperses flavored oils and
other oils that support health benefits.

 * The small size of the bag does not allow leaves to diffuse and
steep properly.

The Reemerge of Loose Leaf Tea

Every day more tea drinkers are realizing the benefits of loose
leaf tea: high quality, fresh taste, better health and well being
and greater variety offered. As a result the popularity of loose
leaf has grown tremendously among discriminating tea drinkers.

Loose leaf tea is now enjoyed by millions of tea drinkers
throughout the United States who are looking for a beverage that
offers significant health benefits combined with good tasting
varieties and a low cost per cup.

Is Loose Leaf Tea Expensive?

The answer is no because high quality loose leaf tea can support
multiple infusions. Many tea drinkers look at the cost per tin of
loose leaf tea and conclude it is expensive. However when viewed
on a cost per cup, loose leaf tea is as economical as bagged tea
and you receive higher quality tea. Much of the cost for bagged
tea is a result of the bagging process and the packaging of the
bags.

What About Storage?

Tea in bags has a shorter shelf life than loose leaf tea because
the fannings in bagged tea tend to dry out faster.

Loose leaf tea has a longer shelf-life that varies with storage
conditions and type of tea. Black tea for example has a longer
shelf-life than green tea but all loose leaf tea, properly
stored, will maintain freshness for a long time. Tea stays
freshest when stored in a dry, cool, dark place in an air-tight
container. Black tea stored in a bag inside a sealed opaque
canister may keep for two years.

So, join the loose leaf tea drinking revolution for good taste,
health and well being. It is something that even the British
Empire can not stop!




---------------------------------------------------------------------
Marcus Stout is President of the Golden Moon 
Tea Company. For more information about tea, 
(http://www.goldenmoontea.com/greentea) 
green tea (http://www.goldenmoontea.com/blacktea) 
and black tea go to http://www.goldenmoontea.com


--- END ARTICLE ---

Get HTML or TEXT Copy-and-Paste Versions Of This Article at:
http://thePhantomWriters.com/free_content/db/s/loose-leaf-tea-history.shtml#get_code



.....................................

TERMS OF REPRINT - Publication Rules 
(Last Updated:  May 11, 2006)

Our TERMS OF REPRINT are fully enforcable under the terms of:

  The Digital Millennium Copyright Act
  http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/z?c105:H.R.2281.ENR:

.....................................

*** Digital Reprint Rights ***

* If you publish this article in a website/forum/blog, 
  You Must Set All URL's or Mailto Addresses in the body 
  of the article AND in the Author's Resource Box as
  Hyperlinks (clickable links).

* Links must remain in the form that we published them.
  Clean links should point to the Author's links without
  redirects having been inserted into the copy.

* You are not allowed to Change or Delete any Words or 
  Links in the Article or Resource Box. Paragraph breaks 
  must be retained with articles. You can change where
  the paragraph breaks fall, but you cannot eliminate all
  paragraph breaks as some have chosen to do.

* Email Distribution of this article Must be done through
  Opt-in Email Only. No Unsolicited Commercial Email.


* You Are Allowed to format the layout of the article for 
  proper display of the article in your website or in your 
  ezine, so long as you can maintain the author's interests 
  within the article.

* You may not use sentences from this article as an input
  for any software that steals sentences from others in 
  order to build an article with software. The copyright on
  this article applies to the "WHOLE" article.


*** Author Notification ***

  We ask that you notify the author of publication of his
  or her work. Marcus Stout can be reached at:
  [EMAIL PROTECTED]


*** Print Publication Reprint Rights ***

  If you desire to publish this article in a PRINT 
  publication, you must contact the author directly 
  for Print Permission at:  
  mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]



.....................................

If you need help converting this text article for proper 
hyperlinked placement in your webpage, please use this 
free tool:  http://thephantomwriters.com/link-builder.pl



=====================================================================

ABOUT THIS ARTICLE SUBMISSION

http://thePhantomWriters.com is a paid article distribution 
service. thePhantomWriters.com and Article-Distribution.com 
are owned and operated by Bill Platt of Stillwater, Oklahoma USA.

The content of this article is solely the property 
and opinion of its author, Marcus Stout
http://www.GoldenMoonTea.com



---------------------------------------------------------------------
XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX
---------------------------------------------------------------------







*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*-*

To have your article appear in this distribution list,
you must absolutely be a client of thePhantomWriters.

We offer a paid article distribution service, and this
is one of the more than 60 groups where we submit our
client articles. To learn more about our program, visit:

http://thePhantomWriters.com/x.pl/tpw/index.htm 
Yahoo! Groups Links

<*> To visit your group on the web, go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/thePhantomWriters/

<*> Your email settings:
    Individual Email | Traditional

<*> To change settings online go to:
    http://groups.yahoo.com/group/thePhantomWriters/join
    (Yahoo! ID required)

<*> To change settings via email:
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
    mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to:
    [EMAIL PROTECTED]

<*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to:
    http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
 

Reply via email to