Source:
Not citing the source of photos/articles, or using copyrighted photos, is plagiarism.
"Until this point in its history all tea was green; the natural pigmentation within the leaves preserved by the careful steaming process that still takes place today. It was the European export market that first saw rise to the innovative introduction of new processes that resulted in black tea. Allowing the leaves to oxidise naturally before drying resulted in the dark colour and produced a tea which stood up better to foreign export. Whilst the Chinese continued to drink green tea, it was black tea that really took Europe by storm."
Source: https://tregothnan.co.uk/about/tea-plantation/a-brief-history-of-tea/
Superb post @ethbull!
The photos and their beautifull colors and the dovumentary about tea production, just wonderfull!
Source:
Not citing the source of photos/articles, or using copyrighted photos, is plagiarism.
"Until this point in its history all tea was green; the natural pigmentation within the leaves preserved by the careful steaming process that still takes place today. It was the European export market that first saw rise to the innovative introduction of new processes that resulted in black tea. Allowing the leaves to oxidise naturally before drying resulted in the dark colour and produced a tea which stood up better to foreign export. Whilst the Chinese continued to drink green tea, it was black tea that really took Europe by storm."
Source: https://tregothnan.co.uk/about/tea-plantation/a-brief-history-of-tea/