According to the Tea Association of the USA, from 1990 to 2007, tea
sales grew from $1.84 billion to $6.85 billion; and SPINS, a market
research and consulting firm for the natural products industry,
forecasts that U.S. tea sales will exceed $10 billion in 2010 in
beverage and nonbeverage categories, The Clarion-Ledger
reports. SPINS predicts that ready-to-drink tea sales will grow 20
percent.
Traditional black tea is still available, but there are many other
types on the market, including herbal teas that technically aren't
teas by tea connoisseur standards because they don't come from the
Camellia sinensis bush like your four standard teas: black, green,
white and oolong.
Herbal teas are a combination of boiling water and dried fruit,
flowers or herbs, but many have health benefits.
Some tea and herbal tea flavors include apple pie, blueberry pie,
candy bar, chocolate cream pie, gingerbread, mint chocolate chip,
mint julep, orange sherbet and pina colada.
Dean Smith is co-owner of Simply TeaVine, a Victorian-style
Hattiesburg tearoom that opened a year ago, offering 40 authentic
teas. Pomegranate and chocolate flavors are recent additions.
Simply TeaVine is one of the few tearooms in the state, but Smith
predicts more will materialize.
"We are definitely seeing a trend of people coming back to tea,"
she said. "I think maybe the coffee market has become saturated, so
people are looking for something else, and tea is very healthy for
you."
Smith said many Americans are discovering loose-leaf teas, and
branching out to sample more flavors.
She's held tea-tasting events comparable to wine-tastings in her
tearoom, and she said white teas and blooming teas with flowering
blossoms are an emerging trend.
"Within a year, the flowering teas have been a new thing," she
said. "You can use them as a centerpiece and drink them
afterward."
Pickens resident Laura Leathers is founder of Tea Time Treasures.
Known as "The Tea Lady," she's been in the tea business for 12
years.
She edits a Tea Cups & Friends newsletter that's distributed
throughout the U.S. She's taught tea classes at Hinds Community
College in Ridgeland, and she founded the Royal Ladies' Tea
Society.
Her work is a ministry, and she uses the organization to unite
women through biblical hospitality, encouraging them to take time
to slow down and have tea.
About five years ago, Leathers opened the My Cup Overflows tearoom
in Pickens, but closed it three years later. With interest in tea
on the rise, she may reopen this summer.
"I've seen (the industry) grow phenomenally," she said. "I would
have to say the introduction of The (annual) World Tea Expo has
been one of the biggest trends that has taken place. It brings in
tea vendors, people who have tearooms and tea educators."
This year, the expo will be held May 30 through June 1 in Las
Vegas, where a variety of new tea products will be introduced. You
can visit TeaTimeTreasures.com to sample one of Leather's
own.
She has her own tea brand called Lady Laura's Afternoon Tradition,
a black tea with a touch of caramel blended by Harney & Sons
Fine Teas.
Laurel native Rebecca Hatten-Carr is a tea drinker.
"I love (Celestial Seasonings) Goji Berry Pomegranate Green Tea
with a spoonful of sugar," she said.
Hatten-Carr said she drinks it because it's calming. "It seems to
help settle my tummy and keep me awake and alert throughout the
day."
Introduced to hot tea by a co-worker, Hatten-Carr said she has
experienced tea's health benefits.
"I used to drink the cold tea in the bottle, but one of my
co-workers started drinking hot tea, and she was more productive
and alert," she said. "Now, I am, too."
Ridgeland resident Janet Hendrick Clark became a tea drinker while
living abroad.
"I lived in England during my junior year of college," she said.
"They didn't drink much coffee, so I took up with tea, and I guess
I just continued."
Clark prefers Assam tea, a sweet, black, breakfast tea from Assam,
India, with a distinct molasses and caramel flavor.
Many fast-food restaurants have added iced tea to their menus in
recent years, including Sonic, Dunkin' Donuts and McDonald's, while
coffee shops like Starbucks and Cups, with locations in Jackson,
also provide tea.
New York native Sherman Bloom, a retired chairman of the University
of Mississippi Medical Center's Department of Pathology, has a
unique taste when it comes to tea. His favorite is called lapsang
souchong, a black tea from the Fujian province of China.
"It has a very strong, smoky quality," said Bloom. "It's not easy
to get in Jackson, so I get it on the Internet."
Another tea he drinks can be found growing wild in Mississippi.
Sometimes, while driving, he stops to pull berries from sumac
trees.
While some sumacs are poisonous, Bloom, a self-described
"outdoorsman," said nonpoisonous sumacs that bloom in fall make
good tea. It's imperative to research and know the
difference.
"There are about four or five varieties of sumacs," he said, adding
that his tea suppliers produce clumped red berries in the
fall.
"You take one cluster and put it in a cup of boiling water, and you
have sumac tea, which was a drink used by the Native Americans and
early pioneers," Bloom said. "It has a very woodsy flavor, and it's
very distinctive.
"I suspect it's not everyone's cup of tea," he laughed.






