The Great British Tea Heist
Botanist Robert Fortune traveled to China and stole
trade secrets of the tea industry, discovering a
fraud in the process
By Sarah Rose
Smithsonian.com
March 09, 2010
http://www.smithsonianmag.com/history-archaeology/The-Great-British-Tea-Heist.html

[This is an excerpt from For All the Tea in China:
How England Stole the World's Favorite Drink and
Changed History by Sarah Rose.]

In 1848, the British East India Company sent Robert
Fortune on a trip to China's interior, an area forbidden
to foreigners. Fortune's mission was to steal the
secrets of tea horticulture and manufacturing. The
Scotsman donned a disguise and headed into the Wu Si
Shan hills in a bold act of corporate espionage.

With [his servant] Wang walking five paces ahead to
announce his arrival, Robert Fortune, dressed in his
mandarin garb, entered the gates of a green tea factory.
Wang began to supplicate frantically. Would the master
of the factory allow an inspection from a visitor, an
honored and wise official who had traveled from a far
province to see how such glorious tea was made?

The factory superintendent nodded politely and led them
into a large building with peeling gray stucco walls.
Beyond it lay courtyards, open work spaces, and
storerooms. It was warm and dry, full of workers
manufacturing the last of the season's crop, and the
woody smell of green tea hung in the air. This factory
was a place of established ceremony, where tea was
prepared for export through the large tea distributors
in Canton and the burgeoning tea trade in Shanghai.

Although the concept of tea is simple-dry leaf infused
in hot water-the manufacture of it is not intuitive at
all. Tea is a highly processed product. At the time of
Fortune's visit the recipe for tea had remained
unchanged for two thousand years, and Europe had been
addicted to it for at least two hundred of them. But few
in Britain's dominions had any firsthand or even
secondhand information about the production of tea
before it went into the pot. Fortune's horticultural
contemporaries in London and the directors of the East
India Company all believed that tea would yield its
secrets if it were held up to the clear light and
scrutiny of Western science.

Among Fortune's tasks in China, and certainly as
critical as providing Indian tea gardens with quality
nursery stock, was to learn the procedure for
manufacturing tea. From the picking to the brewing there
was a great deal of factory work involved: drying,
firing, rolling, and, for black tea, fermenting. Fortune
had explicit instructions from the East India Company to
discover everything he could: "Besides the collection of
tea plants and seeds from the best localities for
transmission to India, it will be your duty to avail
yourself of every opportunity of acquiring information
as to the cultivation of the tea plant and the
manufacture of tea as practised by the Chinese and on
all other points with which it may be desirable that
those entrusted with the superintendence of the tea
nurseries in India should be made acquainted."

But the recipe for the tea was a closely guarded state
secret.

In the entry to the tea factory, hanging on the wall,
were inspiring calligraphic words of praise, a selection
from Lu Yu's great work on tea, the classic Cha Ching.

The best quality tea must have
The creases like the leather boots of Tartar horsemen,
Curl like the dewlap of a mighty bullock,
Unfold like a mist rising out of a ravine,
Gleam like a lake touched by a zephyr,
And be wet and soft like Earth newly swept by rain.

Proceeding into the otherwise empty courtyard, Fortune
found fresh tea set to dry on large woven rattan plates,
each the size of a kitchen table. The sun beat down on
the containers, "cooking" the tea. No one walked past;
no one touched or moved the delicate tea leaves as they
dried. Fortune learned that for green tea the leaves
were left exposed to the sun for one to two hours.

The sun-baked leaves were then taken to a furnace room
and tossed into an enormous pan-what amounted to a very
large iron wok. Men stood working before a row of coal
furnaces, tossing the contents of their pans in an open
hearth. The crisp leaves were vigorously stirred, kept
constantly in motion, and became moist as the fierce
heat drew their sap toward the surface. Stir-frying the
leaves in this way breaks down their cell walls, just as
vegetables soften over high heat.

The cooked leaves were then emptied onto a table where
four or five workers moved piles of them back and forth
over bamboo rollers. They were rolled continuously to
bring their essential oils to the surface and then wrung
out, their green juice pooling on the tables. "I cannot
give a better idea of this operation than comparing it
to a baker working and rolling his dough," Fortune
recalled.

Tightly curled by this stage, the tea leaves were not
even a quarter the size they had been when picked. A tea
picker plucks perhaps a pound a day, and the leaves are
constantly reduced through processing so that the fruits
of a day's labor, which filled a basket carried on a tea
picker's back, becomes a mere handful of leaves-the
makings of a few ounces or a few cups of brewed tea.
After rolling, the tea was sent back to the drying pans
for a second round of firing, losing even more volume at
every contact with the hot sides of the iron wok.

With leaves plucked, dried, cooked, rolled, and cooked
again, all that was left to do was sort through the
processed tea. Workers sat at a long table separating
the choicest, most tightly wound leaves-which would be
used in the teas of the highest quality, the flowery
pekoes-from the lesser-quality congou and from the dust,
the lowest quality of all.

The quality of tea is partly determined by how much of
the stem and rougher lower leaves are included in the
blend. The highest-quality teas, which in China might
have names like Dragon Well, or in India FTGFOP1 (Finest
Tippy Golden Flowery Orange Pekoe First Grade), are made
from the topmost two leaves and the bud at the end of
each tea branch. The top shoots taste delicate and mild,
and are only slightly astringent; therefore the most
pleasant and refreshing.

The distinctive quality of tea comes from essential oils
that leach flavor and caffeine into a cup of hot water.
These chemical compounds are not necessary for the
primary survival of the tea plant's cells; they are what
is known as secondary compounds. Secondary chemicals
help plants in many different respects, such as
defending them against pests, infections, and fungus,
and aiding them in their fight for survival and
reproduction. Tea, like other green plants, has several
defense systems against predators: Caffeine, for
instance, is a natural insecticide. Almost all of tea's
thick waxy leaves, apart from the topmost shoots, are
bitter and leathery and difficult to bite through. Tea
also has hard, fibrous stalks to discourage animal
incursion. Clumsy pickers can compromise the quality of
tea by including a leaf farther down the stem and even
some of the stem itself; this will make for a harsher,
more tannic brew, and in China it will be qualified by
names suggesting crudeness, such as dust.

The workers sat at long low tables to pick through the
leaves and sort out any pieces of stem. They also looked
for any insects that might have tainted the batch, as
well as small stones and pieces of grit from the factory
floor. Even with a measure of quality control, tea was
not a clean product in any sense, which is one of the
reasons that Chinese tea drinkers traditionally discard
the first cup from any pot. "The first cup is for your
enemies," the saying goes among connoisseurs.

Culinary historians know nothing about who first put
leaf to water. But where human knowledge has failed,
human imagination has inserted itself. Many Chinese
believe that tea was discovered by the mythical emperor
Shennong, inventor of Chinese medicine and of farming.
The story goes that one day the emperor was reclining in
the leafy shade of a camellia bush when a shiny leaf
dropped into his cup of boiled water. Ripples of light
green liquor soon began to emerge from the thin,
feathery leaf. Shennong was familiar with the healing
properties of plants and could identify as many as
seventy poisonous plants in a daylong hike. Convinced
that the camellia tisane was not dangerous, he took a
sip of it and found that it tasted refreshing: aromatic,
slightly bitter, stimulating, and restorative.

Ascribing the discovery of tea to a revered former
leader is a characteristically Confucian gesture-it puts
power in the hands of the ancestors and links the
present day to the mythic past. But Buddhists in China
have their own creation story for tea, featuring
Siddhartha Gautama (Gautama Buddha). As a traveling
ascetic, legend tells us, the young monk Siddhartha was
wandering on a mountain, perfecting his practice, and
praying without ceasing. The weary supplicant sat down
by a tree to meditate, to contemplate the One and the
many faces of redemption, and promptly fell asleep. When
he awoke, he was furious at his own physical weakness;
his body had betrayed him, his eyes were leaden, and
drowsiness had interfered with his quest for Nirvana.

In a fit of rage and determined that nothing would again
impede his path to Truth and Enlightenment, he ripped
out his eyelashes and cast them to the wind, and in all
the places they fell sprang forth a fragrant and
flowering bush: the tea plant. Indeed, the fine, silvery
down on the undersides of the highest-quality tea leaves
resembles delicate eyelashes. Buddha, all great and
compassionate, bequeathed to his followers a draft that
would keep them aware and awake, invigorated and
focused, an intoxicant in the service of devotion.

Before Fortune, botanists had failed in their attempts
to decode the formula for tea. His first collecting trip
to China in 1843, for the Royal Horticultural Society,
had taken him to the fringes of tea territory as part of
his general collecting mandate. At that time he had made
an important discovery: Green tea and black tea came
from the same plant.

The Linnaean Society had hitherto declared unequivocally
that green and black tea were siblings or cousins,
closely related but under no circumstances twins. The
great [Carolus] Linnaeus, a century before, working from
dried samples brought back from China by earlier
explorers, concluded that the two were distinct taxa:
Thea viridis and Thea bohea. Thea viridis, or green tea,
was said to have alternating brown branches and
alternating leaves: bright green ovals that were short-
stalked, convex, serrated, shiny on both sides, and
downy beneath, and with a corolla, or flower, of five to
nine unequally sized white petals. Thea bohea, black
tea, was described as looking nearly the same-only
smaller and somewhat darker.

On his first trip Fortune expected to find identifiable
black tea plants in gardens known to produce black tea.
Yet he discovered that the tea plants there looked just
like the green tea plants in the green tea gardens. Over
the course of that first three-year visit, when
procuring several tea samples and thoroughly
investigating them, he had concluded that any difference
between green tea and black was the result of processing
alone. His botanical colleagues were slow to agree,
requiring more proof.

Black tea is fermented; green tea is not. To make black
tea, the leaves are allowed to sit in the sun for an
entire day to oxidize and wilt-essentially to spoil a
little. After the first twelve hours of stewing, black
tea is turned, the liquor is stirred around, and the
mixture is left to cure for another twelve hours. This
longer curing process develops black tea's tannins, its
strong bitter flavor, and its dark color. Although it is
called fermenting, the process of making black tea is
technically misnamed. Nothing ferments in a chemical
sense; there are no microorganisms breaking down sugars
into alcohol and gas. Black tea is, rather, cured or
ripened. But the language of wine colors the language of
all beverages, and so the label of "fermentation" has
stuck to black tea. (Indeed, if tea does ferment and
fungus grows, a carcinogenic substance is produced.)

Given that to that point no European botanist had seen
tea growing or evaluated it in its living state, the
Linnaean Society's confusion on the subject is
understandable. Fortune's documentary evidence
ultimately changed tea's Linnaean classification. It
would soon be known categorically as Thea sinensis,
literally tea from China. (Later still it would be
reclassified as part of the Camellia family, Camellia
sinensis.)

As he made his way through the green tea factory,
Fortune took note of something both peculiar and more
than a little alarming on the hands of the tea
manufacturers. It was the kind of observation that, once
reported, would be an invaluable boon to the burgeoning
Indian tea experiment, with the power to boost the sales
of Indian tea over Chinese. While staring at the workers
busy in the final stages of processing, he noticed that
their fingers were "quite blue."

Among the blenders and tasters of the London auction it
was generally assumed that the Chinese engaged in all
manner of duplicity, inserting twigs and sawdust into
their teas to bulk up the loose leaves. It was said that
the Chinese were brewing their own breakfast tea, saving
the soggy leaves to dry in the sun, and then reselling
the recycled product as fresh tea for the gullible
"white devils."

There was no trust in the trade, no faith in the
goodwill of the Chinese manufacturers.

But the blue substance on the fingers of the Chinese
workmen seemed to Fortune a matter of legitimate
concern. What could be the source of this? He and others
had long suspected that the Chinese were chemically
dyeing tea for the benefit of the foreign market. He was
now in a position to prove or disprove the charge.

He watched each step of the processing carefully, saying
nothing, making notes, and occasionally asking Wang to
put a question to a manager or worker. At one end of the
factory the supervisor stood over a white porcelain
mortar. In the bowl was a deep blue powder, made finer
and finer with each grind of the pestle. The
superintendent was in fact preparing iron ferrocyanide,
a substance also known as Prussian blue, a pigment used
in paints.

When cyanide is ingested, it binds to iron inside cells,
interfering with the absorption of certain enzymes and
compromising a cell's ability to produce energy. Cyanide
affects the tissues most needed for aerobic respiration,
the heart and lungs. In high doses cyanide can bring on
seizures, coma, and then cardiac arrest, killing
quickly. At lower doses cyanide leads to weakness,
giddiness, confusion, and light-headedness. Exposure to
even low levels of cyanide over long periods of time can
lead to permanent paralysis. Fortunately for the tea
drinkers of Britain, Prussian blue is a complex
molecule, so it is almost impossible to release the
cyanide ion from it and the poison passes harmlessly
through the body.

Elsewhere in the factory, however, over the charcoal
fires where the tea was roasted, Fortune discovered a
man cooking a bright yellow powder into a paste. The
smell was terrible, like that of rotten eggs. The yellow
substance was gypsum, or calcium sulfate dehydrate, a
common component of plaster. Gypsum produces hydrogen
sulfide gas as it breaks down. While the gas is produced
naturally by the body in low doses, in high doses it
acts as a broad-spectrum poison, affecting many of the
body's systems simultaneously, particularly the nervous
system. At lower concentrations gypsum acts as an
irritant; it reddens the eyes, inflames the throat, and
causes nausea, shortness of breath, and fluid in the
lungs. Consumed over the long term it might produce
fatigue, memory loss, headaches, irritability, and
dizziness. It can even induce miscarriage in women, and
failure to thrive in infants and children.

Fortune estimated that more than half a pound of plaster
and Prussian blue was included in every hundred pounds
of tea being prepared. The average Londoner was believed
to consume as much as one pound of tea per year, which
meant that Chinese tea was effectively poisoning British
consumers. The additives were not included maliciously,
however, for the Chinese simply believed that foreigners
wanted their green tea to look green.

"No wonder the Chinese consider the natives of the West
to be a race of barbarians," Fortune remarked. But why,
he asked, were they making green tea so extremely green,
since it looked so much better without the addition of
poison and since the Chinese themselves would never
dream of drinking it colored?

"Foreigners seemed to prefer having a mixture of
Prussian blue and gypsum with their tea, to make it look
uniform and pretty, and as these ingredients were cheap
enough, the Chinese [have] no objection to [supplying]
them as such teas always fetch . . . a higher price!"

Fortune surreptitiously collected some of the poisonous
dyes from the factory, bundling them up in his wax-
dipped cloth sacks and stowing them away in the generous
folds of his mandarin costume. As a scientist he wanted
samples to analyze, but most of all he wanted to send
additional ones back to England.

These substances would be prominently displayed in
London's Great Exhibition of 1851. In the glittering
Crystal Palace, Britain displayed to the world all its
industrial, scientific, and economic might, including
the green tea dyes. This public exhibition marked the
moment when tea, the national drink of Britain, came out
of the shadows of myth and mystery and into the light of
Western science and understanding. Fortune unmasked
unwitting Chinese criminality and provided an
irrefutable argument for British-manufactured tea.

_____________________________________________

_______________________________________________
Marxism-Thaxis mailing list
Marxism-Thaxis@lists.econ.utah.edu
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxism-thaxis

Reply via email to