This article is about black tea from Sri Lanka. For the food service teas, see Ceylon tea (disambiguation).
Ceylon black tea is black tea that is grown in Sri Lanka (which was known as Ceylon before 1972). It has a citrus-like crisp aroma, and is used both unmixed and in blends. It is grown on numerous estates which vary in altitude and taste.
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The tea that James Taylor made was delicious and sold for a very good price in the London Auction. The tea craze hit Ceylon. By 1890 tea production was at 22,900 tons up from just a mere 23 pounds between 1873 and 1880.
Until 1971, most of the tea companies in Sri Lanka were British-owned but this soon changed after the Land Reform Act was introduced to reacquire land in foreign hands. Since 1990, a new plan has been devised to share the industry between state-owned companies and privately-owned companies.
There are six main tea-producing areas:
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It uses material from the
"Ceylon tea (black)".
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