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English Afternoon

Black tea

About this tea

English Afternoon is the lighter, more elegant counterpart to English Breakfast — a black tea blend specifically designed for the British 'low tea' or 'afternoon tea' tradition that emerged in the 1840s. Typically built around Ceylon and Darjeeling (and sometimes Kenyan or Assam in smaller proportion), it produces a brighter, less astringent cup with a more aromatic, slightly floral profile. Where Breakfast is built to stand up to bacon and eggs, Afternoon is built to complement scones, cucumber sandwiches and Victoria sponge.

How to brew: 95°C, 3.5 min, 2.5 g per cup.

Caffeine

Medium

How to brew

95°C
3.5 min
2.5 g per cup

Flavor notes

floral, fruity, smooth

Often associated with

Moderate energy, Clarity

Best time to enjoy

Early afternoon, Mid-afternoon

Tags

SocialFocusRefreshing

Origin & Production

Blended — primarily Ceylon (Sri Lanka) and Darjeeling (India); sometimes Kenyan or Assam in smaller proportions

English Afternoon is a master blend rather than a single-origin tea. The classic recipe leans on bright, citrus-edged Ceylon (often from the Dimbula or Nuwara Eliya high-grown districts) and aromatic, muscatel-tinged Darjeeling. Some blends add a small portion of Kenyan or Assam to round out the body without overwhelming the lighter character. Each tea house guards its proprietary ratio, but the design intent is consistent: a clean, aromatic, less-tannic cup tuned for mid-afternoon enjoyment.

Production process

1

Component selection

Blenders prioritize bright Ceylon high-grown teas and aromatic Darjeeling — selecting lots whose lighter profiles complement rather than compete with each other.

2

Cupping & recipe tuning

Professional tasters cup each lot, adjusting proportions seasonally — Darjeeling first-flush versus second-flush characteristics, Ceylon dry-season versus wet-season briskness — to keep the house style consistent.

3

Blending

Component teas are combined in rotating drums until uniformly distributed, then sampled again to verify the final balance.

4

Loose-leaf or bag packing

Premium versions are packed as loose leaf for orthodox brewing; mass-market versions are packed in tea bags. Foil-lined packaging protects the aromatic Darjeeling notes from oxygen.

Ceylon & Darjeeling-ledLighter than breakfastLow-tea traditionAromatic blend

History & Tradition

English Afternoon is intertwined with the 19th-century invention of afternoon tea — one of the great social rituals of Victorian Britain.

1
1840s

Anna, Duchess of Bedford invents afternoon tea

Anna Russell, 7th Duchess of Bedford, popularized 'afternoon tea' as a small light meal taken between lunch and the late-evening dinner — sandwiches, cakes and tea served at around 4 pm.

2
1860s

Ceylon tea begins large-scale production

After coffee blight devastated Sri Lankan plantations, Scottish planter James Taylor pioneered commercial tea cultivation at Loolecondera Estate (1867), giving English blenders a bright, fresh new component.

3
1880s–1900s

Tea rooms & hotel afternoon tea

Hotels (notably The Ritz and The Savoy in London) and tea rooms standardized afternoon tea service. Lighter, more aromatic blends became the norm for these settings, distinguishing them from morning breakfast tea.

4
1900s–present

Twinings popularizes the named blend

Major British tea houses, including Twinings, codified and marketed 'English Afternoon' as a distinct blend — designed for low tea and afternoon visits — to sit alongside English Breakfast on supermarket shelves and in cafes.

Health Benefits

Gentle alertness

Lighter blends like English Afternoon typically deliver 30–50 mg of caffeine per cup — enough to sustain the afternoon without disturbing evening sleep when finished before 4–5 pm.

Aromatic polyphenols

Darjeeling and Ceylon teas contribute distinctive flavonoid profiles in addition to standard theaflavins and thearubigins — combining antioxidant activity with the aromatic compounds responsible for the muscatel character.

Cardiovascular support

Like other regular black-tea drinking, daily consumption is linked in epidemiological studies with healthier blood pressure and cholesterol profiles, attributed to its flavonoid polyphenols.

Digestive companion

A lighter brew between lunch and dinner is gentle on digestion — the tannins encourage mild digestive movement without the heaviness of a strong breakfast blend.

Social uplift

The combination of moderate caffeine, L-theanine, and the social ritual of afternoon tea itself — sitting down with someone over a cup — supports mood, focus and connection through a familiar low-stakes pause.

Grades & Varieties

Ceylon-led classic

A traditional bright, brisk Ceylon-dominant English Afternoon — high-grown Dimbula or Nuwara Eliya lots forming the bulk of the blend, with a touch of Darjeeling or Kenyan for complexity.

Best for

  • Afternoon tea service
  • Drinking with or without milk
  • Pairing with scones and clotted cream

Ceylon–Darjeeling aromatic blend

A more aromatic style with a higher proportion of Darjeeling, contributing muscatel, stone-fruit and floral notes alongside Ceylon's brightness. Best enjoyed neat to appreciate the Darjeeling aromatics.

Best for

  • Tea connoisseurs
  • Drinking without milk
  • Light afternoon refreshment

Modern multi-origin blend

A contemporary supermarket-style English Afternoon adding Kenyan or Assam in modest proportion for extra body and color, while keeping the overall character lighter than English Breakfast.

Best for

  • Everyday afternoon cup
  • Tea bags
  • With a splash of milk

Did you know?

Afternoon tea was invented in the 1840s by Anna Russell, 7th Duchess of Bedford, who felt a 'sinking feeling' between lunch and the late Victorian dinner. The lighter, brighter English Afternoon blend — typically Ceylon-led with Darjeeling — was designed precisely for that 4 pm pause.

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Drinks with this tea