Earl Green
Earl Green
Availability: In Stock
Earl Green
Flavor Profile: A lively Earl Grey blended from a smokey Ceylon gunpowder, sweet bergamot oil, and beautiful cornflower.
Ingredients: Green tea, cornflower petals, natural flavours.
Brewing instructions: Bring water to 80ºC/176ºF. Use 1tsp of loose
tea per cup. Rinse the tea briefly with hot water, discard water, then Steep 2-3
minutes in fresh hot water.
While Earl Grey black tea is the namesake of Charles, the 2nd Earl of
Grey, it is a little known fact that Earl Grey green tea is named after
Sir Albert Henry George, the 4th Earl of Grey who lived between 1851 and
1917. Sir Albert Henry George, (we’ll call him Sir Al for short) served
as Canada’s Governor General, (the Queen of England’s Canadian
representative) from 1904 – 1911. It was during his tenure in this
position that the tea that bears his name was first brewed.
The
incident occurred when Sir Al made a visit to Newfoundland, which was
then still part of England. The people of Newfoundland, as everyone
knows, are great drinkers of tea, consuming more cups per capita than
any other province or state in North America. Upon the arrival of the
noble Sir Al, a magnificent tea party was planned on the front lawn of
the Newfoundland parliament. The food was ordered a month in advance.
The tables were set up days in advance. Everything was going off without
a hitch until 2 days before the party when the government’s storage
shed was struck by lightning. The fire started by the strike burnt their
entire stock of Earl Grey tea. Here’s where it got interesting. A
scrappy young lad named Angus Mcafee recalled that he had seen a few
fresh barrels of bergamot down on his grandfather’s dock in the harbor
just in from the West Indies. He also knew that his other grandfather,
who dabbled in the tea trade, had just received a shipment of green
gunpowder tea from Ceylon. He put two and two together and spent the
next 48 hours blending the tea and the bergamot together in an old
barrel.
The result was served at the garden party to great
fanfare. Sir Al was delighted with the innovation and recommended that
young Angus ship over to England to be knighted by the Queen herself.
(No one is sure if Angus ever became Sir Angus – the records have been
lost.) And what did Sir Al like so much about the tea? The answer is in
the way the sweet bergamot blends with the slightly smoky profile of
this green gunpowder tea. Raise a cup today and give a toast to Sir Al
and young Angus. Cheers!
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