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Georgian Black

Black tea

About this tea

Georgian Black tea is grown not in the American South but in the Caucasus — in the humid, subtropical Guria and Adjara regions of the country of Georgia, on the eastern shore of the Black Sea. For most of the twentieth century, Georgia was the primary tea-growing republic of the Soviet Union, its vast state plantations supplying the overwhelming majority of tea drunk from Tallinn to Vladivostok. The cup itself is light-to-medium bodied, gently malty, and softly brisk, without the heavy tannic bite of Assam or the smokiness of Lapsang Souchong — closer in character to a mild Ceylon. After the Soviet collapse devastated the industry through the 1990s, a small wave of artisanal growers has spent the last two decades replanting abandoned fields and hand-processing micro-lots, turning Georgian tea from a mass commodity memory into an emerging specialty category.

How to brew: 95°C, 3.5 min, 3 g per cup.

Caffeine

Medium

How to brew

95°C
3.5 min
3 g per cup

Flavor notes

malty, smooth, lightly sweet, full-bodied

Often associated with

Moderate energy, Calm alertness

Best time to enjoy

Mid-morning, Afternoon

Tags

WarmFocusSweet

Origin & Production

Georgia (country) — Guria and Adjara regions, Black Sea coast

Commercial tea cultivation in Georgia is concentrated in the humid subtropical strip along the Black Sea coast, principally the Guria and Adjara regions around the cities of Ozurgeti and Batumi, with smaller pockets in Samegrelo and Imereti. The combination of high rainfall, mild winters, and acidic, well-drained soils on the foothills of the Lesser Caucasus made this corner of the Russian Empire and later the USSR an ideal site for tea bushes brought from China and India in the nineteenth century. At the industry's Soviet-era peak, Georgia accounted for the vast majority of all tea grown in the USSR, with plantations stretching across tens of thousands of hectares and feeding dozens of processing factories. Today the planted area is a fraction of its former size, but the surviving bushes — some now over a century old — are increasingly prized by small producers for their character rather than their volume.

Production process

1

Hand and machine plucking

Leaves are harvested from spring through early autumn; large legacy plantations still use mechanical shears, while the new wave of artisanal growers hand-pluck two leaves and a bud for finer micro-lot grades.

2

Withering

Fresh leaf is spread on troughs or racks for 12–18 hours so it loses moisture and turns pliable, a necessary step before rolling can rupture the leaf cells without shattering them.

3

Rolling and oxidation

Withered leaf is rolled, traditionally by orthodox methods on smaller estates or by CTC (crush-tear-curl) machinery on larger ones, then left to oxidize in cool, humid rooms for one to three hours until it darkens to coppery brown.

4

Firing and sorting

Hot-air firing halts oxidation and locks in the malty aroma; the dried leaf is then sieved and sorted into grades by leaf size and integrity before packing.

Caucasus-grownBlack Sea climateSoviet-era heritageCraft revival

History & Tradition

Georgian tea's story is inseparable from the political history of the region — born under the Russian Empire, industrialized at enormous scale under the Soviet Union, nearly destroyed by the collapse of that system, and now being rebuilt leaf by leaf by independent growers.

1
1880s

First experimental plantings

Tea bushes imported from China were planted experimentally near Ozurgeti by a returning Georgian agronomist; the warm, wet Black Sea climate proved well suited to the crop.

2
1893

Lao Jin Jao and the Chakva estate

Chinese tea master Lao Jin Jao was invited to the Chakva estate near Batumi to oversee planting and processing, laying the technical foundation for what became the Russian Empire's main domestic tea source.

3
1930s–1980s

Soviet industrial expansion

Under Soviet five-year plans, plantations expanded dramatically across Guria and Adjara and dozens of processing factories were built; at its peak Georgia supplied the great majority of all tea consumed across the USSR, much of it as inexpensive, often low-grade, blended black tea.

4
1990s

Post-Soviet collapse

With the dissolution of the USSR, state subsidies and the captive Soviet market disappeared almost overnight; plantations were abandoned en masse, factories closed, and tea-growing communities lost their main livelihood within a few short years.

5
2000s–2010s

Artisanal revival begins

A small number of Georgian entrepreneurs and returning expatriates began reclaiming overgrown plots, hand-processing small batches, and marketing single-estate Georgian tea domestically and to specialty buyers abroad, reviving interest in orthodox-style production.

6
2020s

Specialty recognition grows

Georgian tea has begun appearing in international specialty tea competitions and craft tea shops, with government and NGO programs supporting smallholders in replanting old gardens and improving processing quality.

Health Benefits

Gentle, steady alertness

As a true black tea, Georgian Black contains caffeine alongside L-theanine, traditionally associated with a smoother, more even lift than coffee — useful for a mid-morning cup that doesn't overwhelm.

Polyphenol content

Like other orthodox black teas, Georgian Black retains theaflavins and thearubigins formed during oxidation, plant compounds studied for general antioxidant activity as part of a varied diet.

Everyday comfort cup

Its mild, malty, low-tannin profile makes it gentle enough to drink black or with a splash of milk throughout the day, in the tradition of the simple, no-fuss tea served in Georgian and former-Soviet households.

Lower bitterness, easier on the stomach

Compared to heavier Assam or CTC blends, Georgian Black's lighter tannin load tends to feel gentler on an empty stomach for those sensitive to strong black tea.

Warming, low-fuss ritual

Brewed strong in a small teapot and diluted to taste — much as it has been for generations across the Caucasus — Georgian Black offers a simple, warming daily ritual without elaborate equipment.

Grades & Varieties

Soviet-era CTC blend

The mass-market style that defined Georgian tea for decades — small, uniform CTC granules processed for fast, strong infusion. Brisk and straightforward, with little of the nuance prized by today's specialty drinkers, it remains the cheapest and most widely available format.

Best for

  • Everyday black tea with milk
  • Budget-friendly daily cup
  • Strong, quick brewing

Orthodox whole-leaf

Hand-rolled or lightly machine-rolled whole and broken leaf made by today's small estates, with a more open leaf structure and a softer, more aromatic, malty cup than the old CTC blends.

Best for

  • Slower, more aromatic everyday brewing
  • Tasting Georgian tea's revival firsthand
  • Black tea drinkers who find Assam too heavy

Single-estate micro-lot

Limited harvests from individually named gardens in Guria or Adjara, hand-processed in small batches by craft producers; expect more variation by season and grower, and a noticeably cleaner, sweeter, less astringent cup.

Best for

  • Specialty tea exploration
  • Gifting and tastings
  • Supporting smallholder revival projects

Did you know?

Georgia was once the primary tea-growing republic of the entire Soviet Union, supplying most of the tea drunk from Tallinn to Vladivostok, before the industry collapsed in the 1990s and a small wave of artisanal growers began replanting abandoned fields.

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Drinks with this tea