When Catherine of Braganza stepped onto English soil in 1662, she brought more than a dowry; she introduced a leaf that would reshape British society. The Portuguese princess, barely twenty‑three,...
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The Dutch pirates, often operating under letters of marque, played a surprising role in bringing the first tea leaves to European shores. In the early 1600s, daring privateers intercepted Asian...
High in the mist‑clad peaks of Jirisan, ancient monasteries guard living tea bushes that have survived centuries of war, famine, and modernization. These wild gardens are not merely botanical...
The Meiji Restoration shift redefined Japan’s place in the world, turning a domestic tea tradition into a lucrative Western export almost overnight. When the Tokugawa shogunate fell in 1868,...
The Iemoto System: How Historic Tea Schools Passed Secrets through Generations: Legacy of Mastery
The Iemoto system represents a unique lineage‑based authority that has guarded Japanese tea knowledge for centuries. Within this structure, each school’s head, or iemoto, inherits not only a...
Deep within the mist‑clad highlands of Southeast Asia, tribal communities guarded a secret that shaped tea’s earliest flavors: the bamboo tube. This simple vessel, woven from living stalks,...