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Coffee 5Tea 5
Coffee
Signature Blends
11.01 - 55.68
Dark chocolate, cherry, citrus, caramel, cream. There is no single espresso coffee bean, only blends, and this one is a tribute to the classic espressos of Italy. We’ve peak roasted this blend to focus on sweetness, developing a thick rich crema with bright berry flavors and a touch of chocolate. Salute!
Venice Blend
11.01 - 55.68
Silky, toasted-marshmallow, dark chocolate this coffee is an ode to our Venice beach roots, our melting pot of artists, surfers, office toilers and beachcombers who need a cup of coffee that has a little something for everyone. It’s not too light or too dark. It has body but isn’t heavy. It’s like the Southern California weather; just one beautiful damn day after another.
Bitches Brew
11.01 - 55.68
Mooth and creamy texture, smoky, with notes of dark chocolate, and fleur de sel caramel. Our darkest roast. Named after the legendary miles davis jazz album, this blend is dark and electric, a noir classic for the ages. If you like your coffee like your jazz, incredibly dark, smoky and fascinating, bitches brew is for you.
Decaf Angel City
11.01 - 59.29
Red apple, raisins, brown sugar. Just because it’s decaf doesn’t mean it has to be bland. This organic water-processed blend has plenty of crisp acidity and aromatics throughout the cup. Guaranteed 99.7% caffeine free, this coffee says, “go ahead and grab the big cup”.
Big Easy Blend
12.74 - 59.49
Tamarind, syrupy, licorice, full bodied, molasses, Smokey chicory is the roasted root of the endive plant. During the civil war, coffee shortages forced southerners to add fillers like chicory to their coffee. Today, more than 150 years later, you’d have another fight on your hands if you tried to take it away. Our big easy blend is an organic version of the louisiana classic; a balanced and bold French roast blended with the sweet and slightly nutty organic chicory.
Black Gold
11.01 - 55.68
Velvety, dark chocolate, smoked almonds, red fruit we set out to develop a blend that was complex, bold and fully developed. Yet, sweet fruitiness and nuttiness is lacking in many dark roasts. When we finally found the perfect formula, all we could say was, “that tastes like black gold.” note the buttery, almost syrup like body. Our most popular blend.
Angel City
11.01 - 55.68
Dates, cola, citrus, milk chocolate. angel city is our lightest roast and boasts big and bright flavors. This house blend is quintessential Los Angeles with wonderful floral notes, a bright fruity acidity and sun soaked sweetness from the coffees’ natural sugars. Like Los Angeles, there is a depth to this blend that defies definition.
Lucky Jack
11.01 - 55.68
Burnt caramel, hints of dried citrus and molasses our founder's favorite inspired by the great literary sea captain captain jack Aubrey, the coffee drinking protagonist in a series of books by Patrick O’brian which included master and commander. He loved coffee and once saw a mermaid, but it was a manatee. All around even body and acidity with notes of caramel, dried citrus and molasses.
Decaf Bitches Brew
11.86 - 59.29
Creamy texture, Smokey, cocoa nib our darkest roast. Named after the legendary miles Davis jazz album, this blend is dark and electric, a noir classic for the ages. If you like your coffee like your jazz, incredibly dark, smoky and fascinating, bitches brew is for you.
Single Origins
Rwanda - Coopac - Limited Reserve
16.95
In the cup: light roast with sparkling acidity and a syrupy mouthfeel with notes brown sugar, black tea and bourbon vanilla this is a special limited reserve coffee from coopac (cooperative pour la promotion des activities cafe) , a Rwandan coffee cooperative operating around lake Kivu. in 2001, after years of ethnic strife, coopac started with 110 coffee growers; within several years that number was up to 2200 encompassing the six areas of Ack, Ubuzima, Tuzamurane, Kopabm, Abakundakurima and Abanyamurava. In 2003, coopac constructed the Nyamwenda washing station and achieved Flo certification. Coopac was the first cooperative in the Giseny and Rutsiro regions of lake kivu to build a collective washing station. Today, some 50 washing stations dot the northern lake landscape. Since 2010 coopac has been financially supported by the TDC (trade for development centre) to obtain organic certification, which is a three year process. At long last, we can offer a Fto Rwanda coffee from coopac. This coffee offers a very complex cup, typical of great coffees from Rwanda. Coffee in Rwanda coffee supposedly came to Rwanda around 1904 via German missionaries, but it wasn't until the 1930's that considerable attention was given to coffee as a commodity crop for poor farmers. For awhile, Rwanda was the 9th largest producer of Arabica beans in Africa. This was, however usually low grade commodity coffee produced very crudely in large volumes as encouraged by the Rwandan government at the time. Production waned as the world market price of coffee dropped and production slowed.then the genocide of the 1990'a occurred and a state of general upheaval prevailed for a while.When it came time for the country to rebuild, coffee was one of the industries to receive aid from organizations like pearl and spread to provide some technical assistance and training and helped to set up new washing stations using traditional techniques employed by other African nations. Variety selection was put in place and several bourbon types are grown there. the coffee is processed using the washed method, going through the floating, Depulping and fermentation steps and are then laid out on raised beds to dry; where the parchment is continually being sorted through to remove defects. This process usually takes around 15-20 days for the coffee to reach around 11-12% moisture content.
Papua New Guinea - Wau
12.95 - 77.00
In the cup: a fine balance of heavy body and medium acidity attributed to nitrogen rich soil and quality heritage of this coffee. Wau, a small, isolated community in the morobe province, was home to papua new guinea’s first coffee farms in the late 1800’s. Commercial coffee production began in the 1920’s when jamaican blue mountain coffee trees were introduced in the western highlands. Like all great coffees from this region, our png wau is grown in rich volcanic soils above 3,000 feet where the air is cool and the sun stays low in the sky. Not only organic, but this coop belongs to monpi sustainable services, an organization that advocates the responsible production and trade of coffee with respect for people and the environment.
Sumatra - Permata Gayo Cooperative
13.95 - 15.50
In the cup: notes of grapefruit and cedar throughout with hints of leather, dark chocolate, tobacco and a piquant citrusy acidity.
Dominican Republic - Aprocafe
13.95
In the cup: this is a unique coffee from the Dominican republic, an origin not usually featured by most. This coffee is juicy and syrupy and has a nice bottom end sweetness with notes of fudge brownies, hazelnuts and plums. The silky texture and smooth acidity is a strong point of this coffee and can be accentuated by direct infusion brew methods like the Sowden and the Aeropress. Though mainly known for its sugar production, in Dominican, at higher altitudes, coffee is commonly grown as a production crop. with climate conditions similar to Jamaica and other caribbean nations, the Dominican republic has great potential as a specialty coffee producer. This lot of coffee from Aprocafe in the Jarabacoa region of the la Vega province is primarily made up of Typica and Caturra varieties, and is a good example of a clean sweet coffee out of the caribbean without having to pay the premium for Jamaica Blue mountain. The Asociacion de Productores de cafe del Macizo central (Aprocafe) was created in 1988 by rural producers in Jarabacoa, the second largest municipality in the Dominican republic's la vega province. Aprocafe now represents more than 100 coffee-growing families, providing them with additional income and socio-cultural activities. In turn, the families protect local natural resources by reforesting the mountain areas of Jarabacoa and conserving nearby tributaries of the Yaque del Norte river, the country's longest river.
Mexico - Unecafe
12.95
In the cup: the cup is very well balanced and has a long, sweet finish with notes of cocoa, tangerine, dry spice, toasted almonds, and a syrupy texture reminiscent of hard candy. Unecafe (unidad ecológica para el sectore café oaxaqueño) is an association of small coffee producers founded in 2011. this fair trade organic certified co-operative is located in the state of oaxaca and is run by a group of 30 indigenous communities in the coffee regions of; costa, sierra sur, mixteca, cañada, and papaloapan. Unecafe has nearly 2200 members, of which about 40% are women producers. Unecafwe participates in many projects to help its members focus on sustainability and development for an improved lifestyle. Some of the projects that they participate in are; agroforestry and carbon sequestration, the chatino center for ecological agriculture, the community learning center and the coffee and sustainable development fund. Coffee in mexico: coffee did not arrive in mexico until the late 18th century, when the spanish brought plants from cuba and the dominican republic. Its commercial cultivation began later when german and italian immigrants relocated from guatemala and other central american nations in the 1790s, when the first coffee plantations began to appear in the southeast state of vera cruz. For a long while, coffee cultivation took a back seat to harvesting the mineral rich soils of mexico and production was not very high. Only after the mexican revolution did small farmers begin to invest in coffee cultivation in a serious way. Agrarian reforms in the post-revolutionary period granted thousands of small plots of land to indigenous groups and laborers. The rise of the pri (institutional revolutionary party) in the early 20th century also saw the development of inmecafe in 1973 - the national coffee institute of mexico. The 1970's and 80's saw huge growth in coffee production, but unfortunately with decline of mexico's economy and infrastructure inmecafe lost government support and collapsed in 1989. cooperatives were formed to replace the transportation, processing and marketing arms of inmecafe. They began to share information on organic certification, and decreasing dependence on capital-intensive inputs like fertilizer. Today, mexico is one of the largest producers of certified organic arabica coffee. These co-ops have survived not only to replace inmecafe and become powerful players in the organic coffee industry, but also to extend their purview to economic diversification, environmental initiatives, and to provide and lobby for social services like school and hospitals. They have come to represent islands of self-determination within a political spectrum that barely recognizes their existence. The model and success of mexican co-operatives and civic organization has laid the groundwork for some of the most compelling social movements in the world.
Brazil- Fazenda Colina
12.95 - 65.50
Caramel flavor with notes of peanut butter, malt, and milk chocolate with a smooth acidity and a rich creamy mouthfeel. fazenda colina is in patrocinio area of minas gerais. situated at an altitude of 970 meters, the farm is 78 hectares of land, of which about 50 are dedicated to coffee. this is one of the only wholly certified organic farms in the cerrado region of brazil. they have been producing organic coffee since 2007. this lot of certified organic coffee from fazenda colina is a nice alternative to the fruity organic brazil coffees we have had in the past. one might remember the fazenda nossa senhora de fatima and others that had that distinct dried fruit taste. this is one of the nicest, cleanest, most balanced dry-processed brazil's we have had as of late.
Decaf
Decaf Angel City
11.01 - 59.29
Red apple, raisins, brown sugar just because it’s decaf doesn’t mean it has to be bland. This organic water-processed blend has plenty of crisp acidity and aromatics throughout the cup. Guaranteed 99.7% caffeine free, this coffee says, “go ahead and grab the big cup”.
Decaf Black Magic Espresso
13.95 - 69.75
Dark chocolate, cherry, caramel, cream there is no single espresso coffee bean, only blends, and this one is a tribute to the classic espressos of italy. We’ve peak roasted this blend to focus on sweetness, developing a thick rich crema with bright berry flavors and a touch of chocolate. Salute!
Decaf Bitches Brew
11.86 - 59.29
Creamy texture, Smokey, cocoa nib our darkest roast. named after the legendary miles Davis jazz album, this blend is dark and electric, a noir classic for the ages. If you like your coffee like your jazz, incredibly dark, smoky and fascinating, bitches brew is for you.
On Special
Angel City
11.01 - 55.68
Dates, cola, citrus, milk chocolate Angel city is our lightest roast and boasts big and bright flavors. This house blend is quintessential los Angeles with wonderful floral notes, a bright fruity acidity and sun soaked sweetness from the coffees’ natural sugars. like los Angeles, there is a depth to this blend that defies definition.
Bitches Brew
11.01 - 55.68
Mooth and creamy texture, smoky, with notes of dark chocolate, and fleur de sel caramel. Our darkest roast. Named after the legendary miles davis jazz album, this blend is dark and electric, a noir classic for the ages. If you like your coffee like your jazz, incredibly dark, smoky and fascinating, bitches brew is for you.
The Starter Kit: 3-Month Coffee Subscriptions
36.00 - 140.00
After many requests, groundwork coffee is now offering subscriptions. The starter kit is a 3-month subscription with a variety of options for you to choose from. Subscriptions start at 36. not only do you get a discount from what you would pay week-to-week, month-to-month at a grocery or supermarket, but your coffee will arrive, freshly roasted, ground as requested, at your door without fail. How it works: as we are directly reliant on the harvests of the farmers we work with, our inventory of coffee is always changing. The fresh-roasted coffee blends and single origin selections we ship you are based on your roasting preference. You'll also receive two free classic, porcelain, groundwork diner mugs.
The Graduate: 6-Month Coffee Subscriptions
After many requests, groundwork coffee is now offering subscriptions. The graduate is a 6-month subscription with a variety of options for you to choose from. Subscriptions start at $70. Not only do you get a discount from what you would pay week-to-week, month-to-month at a grocery or supermarket, but your coffee will arrive, freshly roasted, ground as requested, at your door without fail. How it works: as we are directly reliant on the harvests of the farmers we work with, our inventory of coffee is always changing. The fresh-roasted coffee blends and single origin selections we ship you are based on your roasting preference. With the graduate, you'll also receive a free groundwork contigo tumbler, totally leak-proof, virtually indestructible and beautifully stylish.
Decaf Bitches Brew
11.86 - 59.29
Creamy texture, Smokey, cocoa nib our darkest roast. Named after the legendary miles Davis jazz album, this blend is dark and electric, a noir classic for the ages. If you like your coffee like your jazz, incredibly dark, smoky and fascinating, bitches brew is for you.
Lucky Jack
11.01 - 55.68
Burnt caramel, hints of dried citrus and molasses. Our founder's favorite inspired by the great literary sea captain captain jack Aubrey, the coffee drinking protagonist in a series of books by Patrick O’brian which included master and commander. He loved coffee and once saw a mermaid, but it was a manatee. All around even body and acidity with notes of caramel, dried citrus and molasses.
Big Easy Blend
12.74 - 59.49
Tamarind, syrupy, licorice, full bodied, molasses, Smokey chicory is the roasted root of the endive plant. During the civil war, coffee shortages forced southerners to add fillers like chicory to their coffee. Today, more than 150 years later, you’d have another fight on your hands if you tried to take it away. Our big easy blend is an organic version of the louisiana classic; a balanced and bold French roast blended with the sweet and slightly nutty organic chicory.
Black Gold
11.01 - 55.68
Velvety, dark chocolate, smoked almonds, red fruit we set out to develop a blend that was complex, bold and fully developed. Yet, sweet fruitiness and nuttiness is lacking in many dark roasts. When we finally found the perfect formula, all we could say was, “that tastes like black gold.” note the buttery, almost syrup like body. Our most popular blend.
Black Magic Espresso
11.01 - 55.68
Dark chocolate, cherry, citrus, caramel, cream there is no single espresso coffee bean, only blends, and this one is a tribute to the classic espressos of Italy. We’ve peak roasted this blend to focus on sweetness, developing a thick rich crema with bright berry flavors and a touch of chocolate. salute!
Decaf Angel City
11.01 - 59.29
Red apple, raisins, brown sugar. Just because it’s decaf doesn’t mean it has to be bland. This organic water-processed blend has plenty of crisp acidity and aromatics throughout the cup. Guaranteed 99.7% caffeine free, this coffee says, “go ahead and grab the big cup”.
Decaf Black Magic Espresso
13.95 - 69.75
Dark chocolate, cherry, caramel, cream. There is no single espresso coffee bean, only blends, and this one is a tribute to the classic espressos of Italy. We’ve peak roasted this blend to focus on sweetness, developing a thick rich crema with bright berry flavors and a touch of chocolate. salute!
Venice Blend
11.01 - 55.68
Silky, toasted-marshmallow, dark chocolate. this coffee is an ode to our Venice beach roots, our melting pot of artists, surfers, office toilers and beachcombers who need a cup of coffee that has a little something for everyone. It’s not too light or too dark. It has body but isn’t heavy. It’s like the southern california weather; just one beautiful damn day after another.
Tea
Signature Tea Tins
Gen Mai Cha
10.99
Literally “brown rice tea” Genmaicha is a green japanese sencha combined with toasted brown rice. The rice was originally added as a filler so Japanese peasants could afford the aristocratic drink. Thus, it is also known as the “people’s tea.” today, Genmaicha’s nutty taste combined with a mild grassy body make it popular with all segments of japanese society.
Moroccan Mint
9.99
Technically moroccan mint is a simple mix of green tea (gunpowder) and dried mint leaves. However, few other teas are steeped (sorry, pun intended) in as much tradition as this simple brew, which is widely consumed throughout northern africa and southern spain. The leaves are brewed and served three times, each producing a unique flavor, which has inspired a well know proverb; the first glass is as bitter as life, the second glass is as strong as love, the third glass is as gentle as death.
Masala Chai
12.00
Yes, “chai tea” is a redundancy. Now that we’ve gotten that out of the way, we can focus on masala chai, which literally means “mixed-spice tea.” in ayrvedic terms, masala chai is a black tea mixed with “warm” spices such as cinnamon, green cardamom, and ginger. Natural vanilla give this masala chai an added depth that goes well with milk or soy.
Assam
12.00
This strong organic black tea comes from the clay rich soil of india’s assam flood plain. There, the tropical climate and heavy rainfall give this tea a distinctive malty body and brisk flavor. This assam is produced by the first estate in the region to obtain organic certification and is a favorite breakfast tea because it holds up well to cream and sugar.
English Breakfast
10.00
Ironically it was American colonists who named this traditional blend of Assam, ceylon and Kenya teas and popularized it so much it eventually became a favorite of queen Victoria. Formulated to go well with milk and sugar, English breakfast tea is full-bodied, and robust enough to complement a hearty breakfast on either side of the atlantic.
Jasmine Green
10.99
In early summer in the mountains of china, night blooming jasmine flowers are picked in the morning and kept cool, until nightfall, when they are mixed with fine oolong tea. When evening comes, the blossoms open their scented petals and infuse the tea with their fragrant scent. For more than 800 years this process has been repeated annually. With the highest quality teas, all the spent blossoms are hand-picked out of the tea before it is packaged.
Sencha
16.99
The most popular tea in japan, its grassy notes are rapidly becoming an acquired taste in the U.S. where consumers are learning to appreciate its clear, pale-green liquor. Sencha is processed differently than chinese green tea in that it is first steamed for 15-20 seconds to prevent oxidation before it is pan fried. The steaming imparts a more vegetal and greener color than chinese-style green teas. Sencha is usually taken hot in cold months and chilled in the summer.
Gunpowder
10.00
Look closely at this tea and you should see small shiny balls, each rolled into a round pellets so small they resemble grains of black powder. This chinese green tea is processed by withering the tea leaves, after which they are steamed, rolled and dried. Gunpowder has a honey like softness with a slight smoky flavor. Also called “pearl tea” or “bead tea,” the highest quality gunpowder should have small, tightly rolled pellets and a shine, indicating freshness.
Earl Grey
12.00
The British “e” in Grey as opposed to the American “a” betrays this tea’s English origins. Named after the 2nd earl Grey, British prime minister in the 1830s, it is traditionally a black tea blend infused with oil from the rind of the bergamot orange. legend has it the tea was specially blended by a Chinese mandarin for lord Grey to offset excess lime in the lord’s local water supply. Less sour than lemon, the fragrant bergamot aroma is popular with green tea as well as black.
Signature Teas
Moroccan Mint
9.99
Technically moroccan mint is a simple mix of green tea (gunpowder) and dried mint leaves. However, few other teas are steeped (sorry, pun intended) in as much tradition as this simple brew, which is widely consumed throughout Northern Africa and Southern Spain. The leaves are brewed and served three times, each producing a unique flavor, which has inspired a well know proverb; the first glass is as bitter as life, the second glass is as strong as love, the third glass is as gentle as death.
English Breakfast
10.00
Ironically it was American colonists who named this traditional blend of Assam, ceylon and Kenya teas and popularized it so much it eventually became a favorite of queen Victoria. Formulated to go well with milk and sugar, English breakfast tea is full-bodied, and robust enough to complement a hearty breakfast on either side of the atlantic.
Earl Grey, Green
6.00 - 12.00
From china with the robust flavors of bergamot. Makes a light and refreshing drink that’s popular both hot and iced. If you are new to green tea, this flavored tea may be a good place to start.
Decaf English Breakfast
6.00 - 12.00
Ironically it was American colonists who named this traditional blend of Assam, ceylon and Kenya teas and popularized it so much it eventually became a favorite of queen Victoria. Formulated to go well with milk and sugar, English breakfast tea is full-bodied, and robust enough to complement a hearty breakfast on either side of the atlantic.
Earl Grey
12.00
The British “e” in Grey as opposed to the American “a” betrays this tea’s English origins. Named after the 2nd earl Grey, British prime minister in the 1830s, it is traditionally a black tea blend infused with oil from the rind of the bergamot orange. legend has it the tea was specially blended by a Chinese mandarin for lord Grey to offset excess lime in the lord’s local water supply. Less sour than lemon, the fragrant bergamot aroma is popular with green tea as well as black.
Masala Chai
12.00
Yes, “chai tea” is a redundancy. Now that we’ve gotten that out of the way, we can focus on masala chai, which literally means “mixed-spice tea.” in ayrvedic terms, masala chai is a black tea mixed with “warm” spices such as cinnamon, green cardamom, and ginger. Natural vanilla give this masala chai an added depth that goes well with milk or soy.
Passion Fruit Peach
5.00 - 10.00
A groundwork blend consisting of peach tea, gold rush and natural passion fruit flavor.
Herbal Infusions
Chamomile
11.99
Greek for “ground apple” or “earth apple”, chamomile has a long history of use as both a medicinal herb and a tea. Its golden colored liquor is reported to promote relaxation and restful sleep as well as reduce inflammation. The very best chamomile comes from Egypt’s Nile river valley.
Lavender, Whole Flower
6.00 - 12.00
Soothing and highly aromatic tea with a light and slightly sweet taste.
Peppermint
6.00 - 12.00
This pure peppermint is extremely refreshing. It also makes an excellent after-dinner drink, since it helps to aid digestion and is very helpful against irritable bowel syndrome or curbing acid reflux.
Rose Hips
6.00 - 12.00
One of the richest plant sources of vitamin c, rose hips are the fruit of the rose plant that are produced after the flowers have bloomed. This tea has a mild honey-like sweetness and a floral tanginess reminiscent of cranberries.
Hibiscus
5.00 - 10.00
A deep red infusion similar to grenadine with a taste close to lemonade. Hibiscus is tangy and enriched with vitamin c.
Lemon-Grass
5.00 - 10.00
Native to india and tropical Asia, lemon-grass has a spicy lemony aroma with a flavor that is tart, herbal and refreshingly cooling. This herb is commonly used to relieve fatigue, reduce stress and soothe stomach aches as well as for cold remedies.
Rooibos
6.00 - 12.00
Afrikaans for “red bush.” The needles from this South African plant produce an herbal tea that is rich in vitamins, minerals and antioxidants. Naturally caffeine free, it is low in tannins and reputed to assist with allergies, digestive problems and nervous tension. Excellent mixed with steamed milk or soy.
Blacks & Greens
Assam
12.00
This strong organic black tea comes from the clay rich soil of india’s assam flood plain. There, the tropical climate and heavy rainfall give this tea a distinctive malty body and brisk flavor. This assam is produced by the first estate in the region to obtain organic certification and is a favorite breakfast tea because it holds up well to cream and sugar.
Gunpowder
10.00
Look closely at this tea and you should see small shiny balls, each rolled into a round pellets so small they resemble grains of black powder. This chinese green tea is processed by withering the tea leaves, after which they are steamed, rolled and dried. Gunpowder has a honey like softness with a slight smoky flavor. Also called “pearl tea” or “bead tea,” the highest quality gunpowder should have small, tightly rolled pellets and a shine, indicating freshness.
Sencha
16.99
The most popular tea in japan, its grassy notes are rapidly becoming an acquired taste in the U.S. where consumers are learning to appreciate its clear, pale-green liquor. Sencha is processed differently than chinese green tea in that it is first steamed for 15-20 seconds to prevent oxidation before it is pan fried. The steaming imparts a more vegetal and greener color than chinese-style green teas. Sencha is usually taken hot in cold months and chilled in the summer.
Gen Mai Cha
10.99
Literally “brown rice tea” Genmaicha is a green japanese sencha combined with toasted brown rice. The rice was originally added as a filler so japanese peasants could afford the aristocratic drink. Thus, it is also known as the “people’s tea.” today, Genmaicha’s nutty taste combined with a mild grassy body make it popular with all segments of Japanese society.
Jasmine Green
10.99
In early summer in the mountains of china, night blooming jasmine flowers are picked in the morning and kept cool, until nightfall, when they are mixed with fine oolong tea. When evening comes, the blossoms open their scented petals and infuse the tea with their fragrant scent. For more than 800 years this process has been repeated annually. With the highest quality teas, all the spent blossoms are hand-picked out of the tea before it is packaged.
Darjeeling
6.00 - 12.00
Just like how real champagne comes only from the champagne region of France, real Darjeeling tea is the eponymous product of the Darjeeling region of West Bengal, India. A black tea grown on steep mountain slopes at altitudes of up to 4000 ft, Darjeeling has a distinctive light amber color and muscatel-flavored cup. However, the incomplete oxidation of some of the higher grades technically makes them a form of oolong. Darjeeling teas are graded through an absolute orgy of initials and adjectives. Thus Darjeeling grades run the gamut from the highest designation - Sftgfop for super fine tippy golden flowery orange pekoe, to the lowest – d for dust.
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