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Turkish Black

Black tea

About this tea

Turkish Black tea, known locally as çay, is a strong, deep-mahogany black tea grown on the rainy Black Sea slopes around Rize and brewed in a distinctive stacked double teapot called a çaydanlık. The lower pot boils water while the upper pot steeps a concentrated tea, allowing each drinker to dilute the strong brew to taste before it is served in small, waisted tulip glasses. Robust, full-bodied, and traditionally taken without milk, Turkish tea is the beating heart of Turkish hospitality — offered constantly throughout the day in homes, shops, and gatherings. More tea is consumed per person in Turkey than almost anywhere on earth, making çay an inseparable part of daily life.

How to brew: 100°C, 10 min, 4 g per cup.

Caffeine

High

How to brew

100°C
10 min
4 g per cup

Flavor notes

robust, intense, full-bodied, slightly bitter

Often associated with

Strong wake-up, Energy

Best time to enjoy

Morning, Mid-morning, Mid-afternoon

Tags

SocialWarmFocus

Origin & Production

Turkey — the eastern Black Sea coast, centered on Rize Province

Nearly all Turkish tea is grown in a narrow strip along the eastern Black Sea coast, with Rize Province at its heart and neighboring Artvin and Trabzon contributing as well. The region's steep, terraced hillsides, high humidity, and abundant rainfall create ideal conditions for a hardy black tea bush adapted to the cool, wet climate. Tea is hand-plucked in several harvests from spring through autumn and processed locally into a robust black tea. Turkey produces a very large volume of tea almost entirely for domestic consumption, a remarkable feat given that commercial cultivation only began in the twentieth century.

Production process

1

Hand-plucking

Young leaves and buds are hand-plucked from the terraced bushes across several harvests between May and autumn, when the Black Sea rains keep the plants lush.

2

Withering & rolling

The plucked leaves are withered to reduce moisture, then rolled to break the cell walls and begin releasing the juices that drive oxidation.

3

Full oxidation

The rolled leaves are fully oxidized, developing the deep color and brisk, robust flavor that defines Turkish black tea.

4

Drying & sorting

The tea is dried to halt oxidation and lock in flavor, then sorted into grades — finer broken grades brew the strong, dark cup Turks favor.

5

Double-pot brewing

At home, tea is brewed in a çaydanlık: water boils in the lower pot while a strong concentrate steeps in the upper pot, then each glass is diluted to taste with hot water.

Black Sea grownStrong & robustServed in tulip glassesHospitality staple

History & Tradition

Turkey's tea culture is surprisingly young — large-scale cultivation began less than a century ago — yet çay has become so central to national life that it now defines Turkish hospitality and daily ritual.

1
Late 1800s

First tea ambitions

Ottoman officials began exploring domestic tea cultivation as coffee supplies grew costly and unreliable, looking to the humid Black Sea coast as a possible growing region.

2
1920s

Tea moves to Rize

After the loss of coffee-growing territories, the new Turkish Republic promoted tea cultivation around Rize, whose climate proved ideal for the crop.

3
1930s–40s

Commercial cultivation

With government support and seed brought from neighboring Georgia, large-scale tea farming took root along the Black Sea coast and the first domestic harvests were processed.

4
1947

First tea factory

Turkey's first modern tea factory opened in Rize, marking the start of organized domestic production that would eventually make the country largely self-sufficient in tea.

5
Today

A national ritual

Çay is now offered everywhere — homes, shops, ferries, and gatherings — and Turkey has one of the highest per-capita tea consumption rates in the world, with the tulip glass an icon of hospitality.

Health Benefits

Lasting energy

Brewed strong and sipped throughout the day, Turkish black tea offers a meaningful, sustained caffeine lift — the everyday fuel that keeps Turkish social and working life flowing.

Calm focus

Like all black tea, çay contains both caffeine and L-theanine, a pairing associated with calm, focused alertness that helps sustain conversation and concentration over a long day.

Rich in antioxidants

Fully oxidized black tea is high in theaflavins and other polyphenols, plant compounds traditionally valued for the antioxidant activity that helps protect cells from everyday oxidative stress.

A ritual of connection

Sharing çay is fundamentally social — offered to guests, friends, and customers as a gesture of welcome — and that ritual of slowing down to connect carries its own sense of wellbeing.

Warming comfort

Served piping hot in small glasses, Turkish tea is deeply warming and comforting, a soothing companion through cool Black Sea mornings and long, conversation-filled evenings alike.

Grades & Varieties

Rize (everyday grade)

The standard, widely loved Turkish tea from Rize — a brisk, robust broken-leaf black tea that brews the deep mahogany cup served in every Turkish home. The everyday workhorse of çay culture.

Best for

  • Daily all-day drinking
  • Brewing in a çaydanlık
  • Serving guests

Çay bahçesi blend (garden grade)

A slightly higher, fuller-flavored grade often served in the tea gardens (çay bahçesi) along the coast. A touch smoother and more aromatic than the everyday grade while keeping the classic robust strength.

Best for

  • Relaxed afternoon sipping
  • Pairing with sweets
  • A fuller, smoother cup

Earl-Grey-style bergamot çay

A popular bergamot-scented version of Turkish tea (sometimes called Earl Grey çay), pairing the robust Rize base with a fragrant citrus top note. A favorite for an aromatic afternoon glass.

Best for

  • Aromatic afternoon glasses
  • Drinkers who like a citrus note
  • Serving with lemon

Did you know?

Turkey has one of the highest per-capita tea consumption rates in the world, yet large-scale cultivation around Rize only began in earnest in the 1930s and 40s.

Foods with this tea

Drinks with this tea