Tea vs. Coffee: How It’s Made
So how does tea or coffee actually get to your cup? Where does it come from? How long does it take?
While both processes are pretty lengthy, we’ll give you the crib notes so you can get all the fascinating info before you grab another cup of coffee or tea!
Coffee: How It’s Made
The next time your sip your coffee in the morning, consider the lengthy journey each bean takes to grace your cup.
Step One: Harvest the Cherries
There are two ways to harvest coffee:
- Strip Picked: All cherries are taken off the branch at one time by machine or hand.
- Selectively Picked: Pickers only choose the ripe cherries by hand.
Step Two: Process the Cherries
There are two ways to process the cherries:
- Dry Method: The fresh cherries are dried in the sun, turned throughout the day, and covered at night or during rain. This process can last for weeks until the moisture content of the cherries drops to 11%.
- Wet Method: The fresh cherries have their skin and pulp removed from the bean via a pulping machine.
After the beans are separated by weight and size, the beans are sent to fermentation tanks full of water. Here, they stay in these tanks until the slick layer that surrounds the bean — called the parenchyma — breaks down.
Step Three: Milling the Beans
If the coffee is wet, machines remove the parchment layer from the bean. If the coffee is dry, machines remove the entire husk of the cherries.
During this step, beans are also sorted, graded, and reviewed — any unsatisfactory beans are removed by hand and/or machinery.
Step Four: Tasting the Coffee
Once the coffee is exported, it gets analyzed for quality and taste in a process called “cupping” — an expert cupper has a palate than can taste the tiniest differences in flavor between the numerous samples each day. This step is where they create the unique roasts and blends we enjoy every morning.
Step Five: Roasting the Coffee
Roasting machines cycle beans at a temperature of over 500 degrees. When the inside of a bean reaches about 400 degrees, it turns brown and releases its fragrant oil — this is what produces the delicious taste and smell of the coffee we love.
Step Six: Grinding Coffee
Then, the roasted coffee beans are ground to deliver the most flavor possible into your drink.
Tea: How It’s Made
As you watch the tea leaves dance in water, think about the incredible steps each leaf takes to unleash its full flavor and aroma.
Step One: Plucking
The leaves are harvested by hand with pickers grabbing the unopened bud to the top three leaves and the bud, depending on the tea. After plucking, the leaves are sorted and unsatisfactory parts get removed.
Step Two: Withering
After picking, the leaves are laid out to dry to prepare them for further processing and get gently rotated to ensure even exposure to the air. Tea leaves can be stiff and, without this step, they can shatter and crumble when rolled and shaped. This also process reduces the water content in the leaves.
Green teas, however, are steamed, pan-fired, or baked without withering (or with a very brief withering process) to stop oxidation of the leaves so they stay green.
Step Three: Rolling
These softer tea leaves are pressed, rolled, or twisted to break down the cell walls of the leaves, releasing its juices and oils, exposing its enzymes and oils to the oxygen to start oxidation, and contributing to its unique flavor notes.
Step Four: Oxidation
After rolling, the leaves are laid out to rest to allow oxidation to take place.
Here, the oxygen in the air blends with the leaf’s enzymes, which changes the chemical composition and adds a reddish-brown color. This works to unleash the complex and tasty flavor notes in your beverage. The length of oxidation, however, depends on the tea and the environment.
Step Five: Drying or Firing
During this last step, the tea is dried evenly — without being burned — in large ovens or drying machines to lock in the flavor and stop the oxidation. This also ensures the tea will keep well.
Step Six: Art of Tea Process
Once the fresh tea arrives at Art of Tea from the top botanicals in the world, we store all our leaves in the “blending room” — a sacred room that keeps every single leaf under 78 degrees Fahrenheit with the perfect humidity level (because too much humidity hurts tea) and respects that each tea comes from mist, clouds, sun, and earth.
Then, we hand blend almost all of our teas so we protect the leaf and its flavor.
It’s like making a mouth-watering, delicious meal: Everything is fresh to order — everything is blended fresh, made fresh, and delivered fresh.
Check out what goes on behind the scenes at Art of Tea:
Finally, we give every product at Art of Tea a lot number — that way, we can trace each tea, each leaf, each berry, and each ingredient so we can check everything. If there’s ever any discrepancy or issues with flavor, we can look up each ingredient from the source.