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Malawian Black

Black tea

About this tea

Malawian Black comes from the oldest tea-growing nation in Africa apart from South Africa's rooibos tradition — commercial planting in the Mulanje and Thyolo highlands began in 1878, decades before Kenya or Rwanda planted their first bushes. Grown on the red volcanic soils at the foot of Mulanje Mountain, Malawi's tea is mostly CTC-processed into a thick, malty, full-bodied cup with a deep coppery liquor and a brisk finish built for milk and sugar. It is one of the most dependable everyday black teas on the continent — strong, consistent, and unfussy, the kind of cup smallholder and estate families alike have relied on for generations.

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

Caffeine

High

How to brew

95°C
3.5 min
3 g per cup

Flavor notes

malty, full-bodied, intense, robust

Often associated with

Strong wake-up, Energy

Best time to enjoy

Morning, After a meal

Tags

WarmFocusSpiced

Origin & Production

Malawi — Mulanje and Thyolo districts, Shire Highlands, southern Malawi

Almost all of Malawi's tea is grown in the Shire Highlands of the south, concentrated around Mulanje — home to the dramatic, isolated Mulanje Massif — and the neighboring district of Thyolo. Estates sit at modest altitudes of roughly 600–1,200 meters, lower than the cool Kenyan or Sri Lankan highlands, on deep, well-drained reddish soils with reliable rainfall fed by the massif's microclimate. This combination of lower elevation, warmth, and rich volcanic-derived soil pushes the bushes to grow faster and produces a leaf with more body and malt character than the brighter, more floral teas of higher-altitude origins. Malawi remains a smallholder-and-estate hybrid industry: large estates such as those around Mulanje and Thyolo coexist with tens of thousands of smallholder farmers who supply leaf to nearby factories, a structure that has defined the sector since independence.

Production process

1

Year-round plucking

Malawi's warm, humid lowland-highland climate allows near-continuous plucking of two leaves and a bud, with peak flushes during the rainy season from November to April.

2

Brief withering

Fresh leaf is withered for a short period in troughs to reduce moisture just enough to prepare it for CTC processing, shorter than the withering used for orthodox teas.

3

CTC manufacture

The great majority of Malawian tea is crushed, torn and curled into small dense granules, a method that extracts quickly into a strong, dark cup — well suited to the milky, sweetened tea favored across the region and in export blends.

4

Oxidation

The granulated leaf oxidizes for roughly an hour in humid, climate-controlled rooms, developing the deep copper-red liquor and the rounder, less astringent malt note typical of Malawian CTC.

5

Firing and sorting

Tea is dried in hot-air dryers to halt oxidation, then sorted by particle size into export grades — BP1, PF1, PD and Dust — most of which moves through the Limbe Tea Auction or direct export contracts.

6

Export blending

A significant share of Malawian leaf is shipped in bulk to be blended into European and South African breakfast-style tea bags, prized for the body and color it lends to commodity blends.

Africa's oldest black tea industryMulanje highlandsCTC processingSmallholder-estate hybrid

History & Tradition

Malawi's tea story predates almost every other African producer by a full generation, rooted in 19th-century missionary botany and growing into a national export pillar still anchored in the same Mulanje and Thyolo hills where it began.

1
1878

First tea seeds planted

Scottish missionary John Buchanan planted the first tea seeds at Blantyre Mission, brought from the Royal Botanic Gardens at Edinburgh — making this one of the earliest tea plantings anywhere in Africa.

2
1891

Commercial cultivation at Mulanje

Henry Brown established the first commercial tea estate at Thornwood near Mulanje, recognizing the highland microclimate at the foot of the massif as ideal for sustained tea growing.

3
1930s–1950s

Estate expansion under colonial Nyasaland

Under British colonial rule as the Nyasaland Protectorate, tea estates expanded steadily across Thyolo and Mulanje, and Malawi became established as Africa's second tea-producing country.

4
1964

Independence and smallholder growth

After independence, the government promoted smallholder tea growing alongside the existing estates, diversifying an industry that had previously been dominated by colonial-era plantations.

5
2000s

Sustainability certification drive

Major Malawian producers pursued Rainforest Alliance and Fairtrade certification and joined the Malawi Tea 2020 programme, an industry-wide initiative to raise smallholder wages and improve estate sustainability.

6
2020s

Continued export pillar

Tea remains one of Malawi's top agricultural export earners after tobacco, with the Mulanje and Thyolo region still producing the overwhelming majority of the country's crop more than 140 years after the first seeds were planted.

Health Benefits

Reliable strong lift

Malawian CTC delivers a robust, fast-extracting cup with a caffeine content typically in the higher range for black teas — a dependable, no-nonsense morning or midday lift.

Theaflavin and thearubigin content

Full oxidation during CTC manufacture produces theaflavins and thearubigins, the polyphenol pigments responsible for black tea's color and body, and a focus of ongoing antioxidant research.

Everyday cardiovascular wellness

Population studies link regular black tea consumption to healthier blood pressure and cholesterol markers, generally attributed to the flavonoid polyphenols concentrated in full-bodied CTC teas like Malawi's.

Sustained, steady focus

The combination of caffeine and naturally occurring L-theanine in black tea leaf supports a steadier, longer-lasting alertness than coffee's sharper spike — useful for a full morning of focused work.

Pairs well with milk

Malawi's malty, high-body liquor was bred for milk tea — the proteins in milk bind with tannins to soften astringency while the malt character still comes through, a classic everyday breakfast-tea profile.

Grades & Varieties

BP1 (Broken Pekoe 1)

The largest, most full-bodied CTC grade from Malawi — chunky granules that brew a thick, malty, coppery cup with good strength. Often used as the backbone of breakfast-style blends.

Best for

  • Strong everyday cup
  • Milk tea base
  • Loose-leaf brewing

PF1 (Pekoe Fannings 1)

Smaller, faster-extracting granules that produce a very dark, brisk, quick-brewing cup — the workhorse grade behind many commercial tea bags and chai bases.

Best for

  • Tea bags
  • Quick milk tea
  • Spiced chai base

Dust grade

The finest sieved particles, used almost exclusively in fast-brewing single-cup tea bags. Brews dense and dark in under two minutes — convenience-focused rather than nuanced.

Best for

  • Fast single-serve tea bags
  • On-the-go brewing
  • Strong builder's tea

Orthodox Mulanje estate leaf

A smaller specialty segment of whole-leaf orthodox processing from estates around the Mulanje Massif, offering a smoother, more layered cup with cocoa and stone-fruit notes alongside the characteristic malt.

Best for

  • Specialty single-origin tasting
  • Drinking without milk
  • Slow weekend brewing

Did you know?

Malawi is Africa's oldest black tea nation apart from South Africa's rooibos tradition — Scottish missionary John Buchanan planted the first tea seeds at Blantyre Mission in 1878, decades before Kenya or Rwanda grew their first bushes.

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Drinks with this tea