From Ceylon to the Nilgiris
Dimbula · Nuwara Eliya · Uva · Munnar · Nilgiris · Assam
Where the garden's name carries the tea. Each estate, its own soil, its own season, its own character in the cup.
Terroir
Assamica dominates. The big-leafed varietal, native to Assam's river valleys, was bred into clones for each region: TRI 2025 for Ceylon's highlands, BSS1 for the Nilgiris, proprietary clonals for Assam's estates. A bigger leaf than sinensis, built for body and strength.
From Assam's flat Brahmaputra floodplains to Nuwara Eliya at 2,000 metres. Laterite soil in Assam. Volcanic earth in the Nilgiris. Red clay in Ceylon's highlands. Elevation defines the district: high-grown teas are delicate and floral, low-grown are full-bodied and strong.
Monsoon-driven. Two monsoons define Ceylon's calendar: the south-west gives Dimbula its quality season, the north-east gives Uva its rare August window. Assam's flood-season rains drive vigorous second flush growth. January frost in the Nilgiris creates a brief, concentrated picking.
Factory processing within hours of picking. Withering troughs, rolling machines, fermentation rooms. The defining split: orthodox whole-leaf production for single-origin appreciation, or CTC (Cut-Tear-Curl) for fast-infusing strength. The grading system (TGFOP, BOP, Fannings) is its own language of leaf size and quality.
ASSAM HYBRID · TRI 2025
Sri Lanka's three major highland districts each have a distinct character defined by elevation, aspect, and seasonal winds. Dimbula in the west catches the south-west monsoon. Uva in the east catches the north-east. Nuwara Eliya at 2,000 metres is the island's highest and most delicate.
Nuwara Eliya Ceylon
Nuwara Eliya, Sri Lanka, Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka's highest-grown tea, from plantations above 1,800m. The cool altitude ...
Uva Highland Ceylon
Uva, Sri Lanka, Sri Lanka
From Sri Lanka's eastern highlands, where dry seasonal winds create a distinctiv...
Dimbula Estate BOP
Dimbula, Sri Lanka, Sri Lanka
BOP stands for Broken Orange Pekoe — a leaf grade, not a flavour. The leaves are...
Ceylon's districts are defined by which monsoon reaches them. Dimbula's quality season is January to March, when the south-west monsoon retreats and dry winds concentrate the leaf. Uva's is July to September, when the north-east monsoon does the same from the other side of the island. Same cultivar, opposite winds, completely different teas.
BSS1 · DONATED HYBRID
The Nilgiris and Kerala's Munnar highlands produce teas unlike anything else in India. Cool air off the Western Ghats, distinctive flora including eucalyptus and cardamom, and a tradition of hand-rolled orthodox leaves that deserve more attention than they receive.
The Nilgiris Frost Tea, picked in January when temperatures drop, is a brief seasonal rarity. The cold stresses the bushes, concentrating compounds into an intensity that surprises. Most Nilgiris tea never sees international specialty markets.
ASSAMICA · CLONAL
Flat river plains, monsoon rains, and a cultivar evolved for power. Assam's teas were the commercial foundation of the British tea trade. The best estate teas still carry a muscular sweetness that no other region matches.
Assam Second Flush (Mangalam)
Dibrugarh, Assam, India
Second flush means the summer harvest, picked May–June when the leaves are riche...
Kangra Valley Tea
Kangra Valley, Himachal Pradesh, India
From a small tea-growing region in Himachal Pradesh, tucked between the Himalaya...
CTC (Cut-Tear-Curl) was invented in 1930 to speed production and create a granular leaf that infuses quickly into milk-tea. It built the mass market. Assam's estate TGFOP orthodox leaves are the opposite: slow, whole-leaf, made for single-origin appreciation.