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Expert Advice: Sebastian Beckwith on How to Brew a Good Cup of Tea (Again and Again) – Gardenista

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Now that the nights have drawn in and we find ourselves drinking endless cups of tea, it’s worth noting that a good brew represents the essence of the plant, rather than mechanically chopped tea “dust.” As a beverage, it is best enjoyed in bud, leaf, or twig form, when hot water brings new life to a recently plucked plant (Camellia sinensis). Some tea develops over several infusions, once you become aware of the potential of what you are drinking. Curious to know how to sustain tea happiness beyond the first cup, we spent some time up a mountain in Connecticut with Sebastian Beckwith, merchant of the leaf and founder of In Pursuit of Tea.

Above: Tea in the wild is a type of camellia, Camellia sinensis (sinensis meaning “from China”). Although the garden camellias are named for Japan (C. japonica ), they are both native to the whole region. Photograph courtesy of In Pursuit of Tea.

For people who want to drink tea all day, for instance the British (or in the case of ice tea—Americans), there is no need to resort to fruit teas. In his very engaging A Little Tea Book, Sebastian addresses the question of caffeine. Yes, tea plants have more caffeine in their leaves than coffee beans. However, a lot less tea is used than coffee by weight per serving, so a cup of tea has about half the amount of caffeine than coffee. And for experiencing flavor, small cups are preferable.

As Sebastian sets out the tea paraphernalia in his wooden cabin, it quickly becomes clear that the usual way of making tea is not only lazy but ineffective (and we are not even talking about tea bags). “In the European or English way of making tea, you have this huge brown Betty. You make it. It’s really good, and the second steep, that’s—good. But the third steep, that’s like ‘Oh man, this is horrible.’ It’s tannic, and bitter, and the leaves are still in there. And people throw milk or water at it to try to make it better,” he muses. “The Chinese method is to just have hot water, and infuse the leaves quickly and drink it. Use a basket infuser and glass, just pull it out, then put it back in. That works. You just don’t want the leaf sitting in water because then obviously it’s going to extract.” When tea no longer tastes good, dump it, he says. “Tea is much cheaper than latte.”

Above: Left, White Peony (white tea, leaves and stems) harvested when the leaves are young, for a sprightly ice tea. It has less caffeine than darker, more mature tea. Right: Wood Dragon (oolong tea, stem and ball shape), a Sebastian Beckwith original.

And what is the secret to longevity in taste? “With many of the teas you can get several steeps, depending on the tea. There’s a lot of flavor in there. With some of the oolongs you might do 10-15 times on the same leaves, with the flavor changing as you go.”

A quick explainer: An oolong is “between green tea and black tea,” and it is transcending for anyone who has been stuck in the Breakfast Tea rut for too long. Oolong teas are ball-shaped, rolled up, semi-oxidized leaves. Sebastian’s own version of oolong (which he markets as Wood Dragon) includes a good proportion of stems as well, and these are the most noticeable element of the used-up tea: it looks like a pile of small twigs.

Above: The balled-up green tea that is known as Jasmine Pearls (green tea, pearl shape) unfurls into distinguishable leaves, with the appearance of being freshly plucked.

Tea is tea: it all comes from the same plant, harvested at different times of growth (Camellia sinensis is a cut-and-come-again plant), and allowed to oxidize to different degrees. Black tea is completely oxidized, an oolong is semi-oxidized, and with green tea there is no oxidization (white tea is a young green tea, harvested young, with buds and downy leaves). “If you steam the leaves immediately (after plucking), or pan-fire them, they’ll just stay green.”

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