Learn About Tea

Mike in Fuding

September 17, 2008


A warm day in the hills outside Fuding.

These plants are the the Da Bei (Big White ) that produce the big buds that turn white when dried. They turn white because the chlorophyll that makes the leave look green when fresh is not mature and can not “fixed” green. The bud has little hairs (correctly known as tricomes) that serves as additional protection of the young bud. This bud would unfurl into leaves if not plucked. Thus it is the teaplants future. So the plant spoils its young by giving them more energy (glucose) and more protection against bugs (anti-oxidants & caffeine). And it is these extras that makes the buds into the highly desirable white tea.

Mike Harney

Michael Harney has been the tea buyer and blender of Harney & Sons for twenty years. He travels to Asia and meets with tea producers from all the major tea countries, looking for the season's best teas. A graduate of Cornell University's School of Hotel Administration, he lives with his wife and their three sons in Salisbury, Connecticut.

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