UNIT 5: BEVERAGES
Beverage: french word ‘bever’ meaning ‘a drink’
Categories of beverages:
1) Alcoholic beverages and 2) non alcoholic beverage
ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE
Depressants
Lowering the activity of the brain
Classified into three main groups:
1. Fermented alcohol
Formed by fermentation of sugar into alcohol and CO2
5-25% alcohol by volume
Examples:
1. Wine: produced by fermentation of fruit juice mainly grapes,
alcohol content: 7-16%
2. Beer: made by fermenting cereal starch, alcohol content 3-
8%.Nutritive value is due to presence of dextrins, proteins and
phosphate
3. Cider: made from juice of apple, perry, pears, palm etc.
ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE
2.Distilled alcohol
Obtained by successive distillation of fermented liquors from grains, fruits
or vegetables
Upto 75% alcohol by volume
It has higher caloric content and less nutritional value than fermented
alcohol
Examples:
Whiskey: made from cereals
Vodka: made from any starch containing raw material
Rum: made from sugarcane juice or molasses
Brandy: made from juice of various fruits
3.Compound alcohol
These are flavored alcohol
Contain high alcoholic strength
Example:
Gin: prepared by the distillation of fermented malt of barley and rye flavored
with berries of junipers, lemon peel, cardamom seeds etc.
NON ALCOHOLIC BEVERAGE
Does not contain any alcohol or little alcohol
Good for health
Classified into three categories
1. Stimulating
Helps to stimulate the vital organs of our body
Coffee and tea are stimulating beverage, they contain cafeine or related
alkaloids
Cafeine impart mental activity and reduction in fatigue
Stimulatesincreased production of digestive juice, diuretic action, increase
excretion of uric acid
2. Nourishing
Helps to gain the energy
Healthy for body contains lots of nutrients
Examples: juices and milk.
3.Refreshing
Helps refresh our body as well as our mind
Examples: Squash, coke, pepsi etc
TEA
Scientific name: Camellia sinensis (L.) Kuntze
Family : Theaceae
Stimulatory property of tea leaf extract was discovered by
Chinese emperor Shen Nung in 2700B.C.
Origin: India or China or both
Cultivation of tea in India: 1818-1834
Tea producing countries: India, China, Srilanka,
Indonesia, Japan, Iran, Argentina etc
Tea growing states in India: Assam, Darjeeling, Nilgiris
and Anamalai and others like Ranchi, Dehradun, Kumoan
districts etc.
Two distinct varieties of tea:
1) Small leaved sinensis (China)
2) Large leaved –assamica (Assam)
MORPHOLOGY OF TEA
Habit: evergreen or semi evergreen shrub or small woody tree
9-15cm usually pruned back to shrubs 2m
Leaves: alternate, simple, lanceolate toothed margins
Older leaves leathery bright green in color 5-30cm long acute end.
Young leaves is covered with soft hairs (pubescence) underside
but vanished as they aged
Oil glands on leaves gives characteristic aroma
Flowers: hermaphrodite, 1-3 in number, axillary or sub terminal
cymes aromatic, white or yellow centered white of pinkish
Sepals and petals 5-7, pedicellate
Stamens numerous
Carpels 3-5 carpels, 4-6 ovules.
Fruit: capsules, seeds 3 celled woody capsules
Capsule depressed, globose, brownish
Capsules contains a brown seed in each compartment about 1.25cm
in diameter.
Principal varieties of tea
1.Chinese tea
Camellia sinensis var sinensis
2. Assam tea
C. sinensis var assamica Mast
3. Hybrid of sinensis x assamica
ASSAM TEA VERSUS CHINESE TEA
ASSAM TEA CHINESE TEA
It is a tree Shrub
Quick growing, less hardier, single
stemmed tree 6.1-18..3m tall
Slow growing, multi stemmed bush
1.22-2.74m tall
large glossy pale green leaves 15-30
cm long held horizontally or pointing
slightly downward
Small leathery dark green leaves 4-
7cm long flat surface pointing upward
Few robust branches Many branches and whippy
High yield and medium quality Low yield but good quality
Sucesstible to drought and frost Hardy variety capable of withstanding
cold winters.
Flower borne in cluster of 2-4 Flowers are borne singly
Economic life of 40 years Economic life of 100 years
AGROCLIMATIC CONDITION
Grow successfully in subtropical and tropical areas
Rainfall at least 150cm per annum
Average monthly temperature 21-32°C
Cannot withstand dry weather
Required well drained acidic soils,Ph 4-6 rich in humus
Cannot grow in alkaline soil
Shade loving plant
Partial shade provided by leguminous tree Albizia procera, A. chinensis
However heavy nitrogenous manure in full sun has greater yield
Picking leaves starts when the plants is 3-4 years old
Picking stimulates the development of lateral leaves
Fine grade: 1st two leaves (terminal bud) rich in tannin 28% is known as
“golden tips” caffeine content 4-4.5% of dry matter.
TEA DESIGNATION
1) Orange pekoe : Smallest leaf 28% tannin,high quality
black tea of India and Sri lanka
2) Pekoe: Second leaf 21% tannin, high quality black tea of
Sri lanka, India and Java
3) Pekoe-souchong: Third leaf 18% tannin
4) Souchong: Fourth leaf 14%tannin aromatic black tea from
china
5) Congou: Fifth leaf Chinese black tea