- Trade Show Services[320]
- Oscilloscopes[3]
- Contact Person : Mr. James
- Company Name : Suizhou Suifeng Tea Co., Ltd.
- Tel : 86-722-3329472
- Fax : 86-722-3329111
- Address : Hubei,SuiZhou,HongShan Town ,SuiZhou City ,HuBei province
- Country/Region : China
- Zip : 441300
jasmine tea/tea/china tea/chinese tea
Detailed Product Description
jasmine tea is a genus of shrubs and vines in the olive family
(Oleaceae), with about 200 species, native to tropical and warm
temperate regions of the Old World. Most species grow as climbers
on other plants or are trained in gardens on chicken wire, trellis
gates or fences, or made to scramble through shrubs of open
texture. The leaves can be either evergreen (green all year round)
or deciduous (falling in autumn).
Widely cultivated for its flowers, jasmine is enjoyed in the
garden, as a house plant, and as cut flowers. The flowers are worn
by women in their hair in southern and southeast Asia. The delicate
jasmine flower opens only at night and may be plucked in the
morning when the tiny petals are tightly closed, then stored in a
cool place until night. The petals begin to open between six and
eight in the evening, as the temperature lowers.
Jasmine tea is consumed in China, where it is called jasmine-flower
tea . Jasminum sambac flowers are also used to make so-called
jasmine tea, which often has a base of green tea, but sometimes an
Oolong base is used. Flowers and tea are "mated" in machines that
control temperature and humidity. It takes four hours or so for the
tea to absorb the fragrance and flavour of the jasmine blossoms,
and for the highest grades, this process may be repeated as many as
seven times. Because the tea has absorbed moisture from the
flowers, it must be refired to prevent spoilage. The spent flowers
may or may not be removed from the final product, as the flowers
are completely dry and contain no aroma. Giant fans are used to
blow away and remove the petals from the denser tea leaves. If
present, they simply add visual appeal and are no indication of the
quality of the tea.
Jasmine essential oil is in common use. Its flowers are either extracted by the labour-intensive method of enfleurage or through chemical extraction. It is expensive due to the large number of flowers needed to produce a small amount of oil. The flowers have to be gathered at night because the odour of jasmine is more powerful after dark. The flowers are laid out on cotton cloths soaked in olive oil for several days and then extracted leaving the true jasmine essence. Some of the countries producing jasmine essential oil are India, Egypt, China and Morocco.