Tea as a
Beverage
This series of articles trying to explain
about the product specific food safety concerns and preventive actions. The
idea is to help readers understand product specific and process specific
hazards as well as their impact on food safety. Thus entire series will not
come at once but it will take some time to complete most of the widely spread
categories of products in the market.
As usual, the beverage industry can be
considered as one of the largest in terms of quantity of sales, where tea
(Camellia sinensis) was initially considered as a medicine and later grew into
a beverage which is the second most favourite drink after water and it is the most
consumed manufactured drink in the world.
According to the Chinese legends, tea was
first discovered in the time Second Emperor and herbalist, Shennong in 2737
B.C.E, accidently; when a dried tea leaf was fallen into the boiling water
which is intended for emperor’s thirst while he was travelling to another
region (Chow & Kramer, 1990), who drank boil water as a habit. In the time
of Han Dynasty (206 BCE – 220 CE), tea was used as a medicine and much later
tea became popular as a beverage and people started drinking it in social
events at Tang Dynasty around 618 – 2907 CE (Berggreen, 2014) and it is one of
the oldest beverages in the world today.
In seventeenth centaury, tea was introduced
to the west where it became quickly popular due to the flavour and simulative
properties extracted to boiling water (Wright, 2005) because of the cold
climatic conditions hot water drinking was a habit in those societies and due
to the poor hygiene of water during this era, boiling of water was common place.
In fact, first tea consignments were reached in London in 1652, where there
were hygiene threats due to the lots of water born diseases as a result of
industrialization and pollution of urban water courses. Thus people used to
drink boiled water which has no fresh taste where addition of tea gave it both
flavour and taste due to the presence of caffeine (UK Tea and Infusions
Association, 2015). Even though coffee and chocolate also introduced in to the
Europe in same era, both of them were unaffordable for the general public until
after second world war and other alternative was alcohol which also kill the
pathogens, but it was not practical solution where tea became more popular than
other beverages (Wright, 2005). Tea even became a seed for wars, such as the
opium war in China (1840 – 1842) which irreversibly changed the entire cultures
with positive and negative effects.
Today, it is a multimillion dollar industry with over USD 4 billion
revenue and growing while employing more than 15 million people globally and
providing over four billion tea cups a day all over the world (A Fairtrade
Foundation, 2010). In addition, current research findings on the health aspects
of tea drinking also prove that the first assumptions of drinking tea as a
medicine is true all along the history as it assumed by Chinese people without
proper evaluations (Wright, 2005).
Modern commercial tea plantations are being
cultivated longitudes between 42° N (Russia) and 27° S (Argentina), while
altitudes starting from the mean sea level zero from up to 2200 m. tea plant
has wide adaptability which grows in a range of different climates and soils in
several parts of the world. Tea also can adapt different rain shower patterns
at different annul precipitation levels with the minimum annual rainfall
considered necessary for the successful cultivation of tea is 1,200 mm, while
the optimum ranges between 2,500 and 3,000 mm. Rainfall must have to be evenly
distributed year-round to get an optimum yield with an annual average
temperature around 18-20°C which is usually ideal for the tea bush. In
addition, the soil type must be deep, well drained and exhaustively aerated,
nutritious red-yellow soil with a low pH (4.5-6.5) where extended drought
periods, water logging conditions and temperatures below 12°C and above 30°C
are not favourable for the growth of tea (Williges 2004). The slope must not be
too steep and the maximum tolerable gradient is 25 degrees.
Tea as a beverage spread throughout Asia
from China which soon became the national beverage of China and Japan, but
until the 1600s the Europeans didn’t became familiar with the beverage. In the
early 1900s, tea was just introduced to the North America where Thomas
Sullivan, a New York wholesaler, decided to package tea in small silk bags rather
than in tins. Thus people started brewing the tea in the silk bag rather than
removing its contents where the tea bag was born and first introduced. Today it
is available for consumption in six main varieties, based on the oxidization
and fermentation technique applied.
Today, there are wide variety of tea
products exist in the market such as instant tea, iced tea mixes, specialty and
flavoured teas, herbal teas, ready-to-drink teas decaffeinated teas and tea
bags. The packaging of tea products has changed significantly where most of the
small shops that once dispensed tea from wooden crates into individual tins
have given way to sophisticated high-speed production lines which process,
package, and/or bottle thousands of pounds of tea and ready-to-drink mixes per
hour.
Processing
There are different types of processing
methods, but four major types in the market according to the processing type
which are white, green, olong and black teas. However, these four types have
many different sub categories due to the way of manufacturing, i.e. orthodox
back tea, CTC (cut; tear; curled) tea, rotavane orthodox black tea etc. Tea is
usually received in wooden crates or large bags, which is blended and packed in
packaging machines, where it is packaged either as individual tea bags or in
bulk packages. Instant powdered tea requires blended tea in fine particle form
to be brewed using hot water, which is concentrated and then spray dried into a
fine powder and aseptically packed to avoid moisture absorption. The powder may be packaged into canisters or
jars, or blended with other ingredients such as sugar or sugar substitutes,
where flavours may also be added during the blending stage prior to packaging.
Potential
Food Safety Hazards
Tea is a beverage prepared by infusing the
dry tea leaf in water in most cases, boiling water is used but cold water can
be used particularly when preparing ‘iced tea’. Thus manufacturing process is
one of the most important areas to be considered when considering the food
safety hazards where it is important to consider each and every step in the
manufacturing process for hazard assessment. Following potential food safety
hazards were identified from primary production and processing of tea up to the
packaging.
Chemical
contamination
Physical
contamination - foreign matter
Microbiological
contamination
The hazard analysis needs to be applied
according to the food safety system specific to customer requirements which is based
on HACCP principles by tea manufacturer to each specific processing operation
separately in order to conduct a hazard analysis and to consider any measures
to control identified hazards.
Chemical
Contamination
The critical limits for chemical
contamination are those given in EU and national legislation 3, 4, 5 and 10
which is the most common guideline applicable, but manufacturer can adapt to national
legislation of the exporting country or manufacturing country. Because national
guidelines sometimes differ from EU legislation but EU specified limits are
more stringent, which should take precedence regardless of whether these
legislative limits apply to the producing country or the country of sale. Further
to that, absence of a legal limit does not preclude individual packers setting
limits for additional contaminants in line with their company policies.
As a general norm, no naturally occurring
constituents of tea have been identified which are likely to present a safety
risk requiring control measures, but chemical contamination can happen because
of environmental pollution, inappropriate use of agrochemicals, sabotage,
adulteration, lubricants from tea processing machinery, fumigant residues from
the fumigation of containers and contamination during transport or storage. Additionally, environmental pollution may
result in enhanced levels of heavy metals from a variety of sources, e.g.
nearby industry, traffic on nearby roads.
However, the available literature and
in-house monitoring by European tea packers clearly demonstrates that the
incidence of high levels of heavy metal contamination is low with the levels
found rarely exceeding the limit values and hence heavy metals present a
minimal food safety risk.
Agrochemicals may be present because of the
use of non-approved chemicals or their use without adherence to Good
Agricultural Practice (GAP) where the monitoring of ‘pesticide’ residues by the
trade shows that for most origins, values exceeding the current legal maximum
residue levels (MRLs) are infrequent and at levels which do not compromise food
safety. In some origins, residues exceeding the MRLs values are detected and in
these instances the teas are not purchased as to do so would be illegal. As a
result, the food safety risk from agrochemicals is considered to be low.
The polycyclic aromatic hydrocarbon (PAH)
content of most teas when brewed is below the limit of detection of current
analytical methodology, but some analysis has occasionally shown low levels in
tea leaves as evidenced by trade summaries of in-house generated data. Some
teas, notably Lapsang Souchong, are ‘smoked’ as part of their processing and
contain measurable levels of PAHs; given that most of the PAHs present are
relatively insoluble in water and as a consequence their levels in the infusion
as consumed are much reduced it is considered that they present a minimal food
safety risk.
Toxic substances can be present as a result
of accidental or deliberate contamination where there were few warnings that some
teas have been deliberately contaminated in the country of origin. There were
two such instances in last ten years and despite intensive checks both at
source and by the packers on receipt, no contamination has been found. Given
that warnings have been issued when deliberate contamination has been
threatened and the fact no contamination has been found it is considered that
the risk of chemical contamination by deliberate contamination is low.
Chemical contamination resulting from
lubricants, fumigation of containers, transport and storage are known but occur
infrequently and thus presents a low risk in food safety terms. Chemical
contamination could also result from inappropriate personal behaviour which
might contaminate food, for example smoking when handling harvested tea leafs
and tea (packaged or unpackaged).
Instances of adulteration are rare and
traditionally tea quality is assessed by tea tasters who base their judgements
on subjective assessments of the leaf before and after infusion and the appearance,
odour and taste of the liquor, rather than by reference to its chemical
composition. The chemical testing is done only if the taster is not satisfied
on his subjective testing and requested for a test. However certain chemical
characteristics have been defined and given in ISO 2037 International Standard,
which is helpful if the tea exhibits abnormal characteristics or adulteration
is suspected.
But if you want to find most stringent food
safety and quality standards, which is go beyond private standard usually does
is Product Certification Scheme for Tea (PCST). The PCST was born because, there
were lots of rejects and consumer complaints on Ceylon Tea, where SLTB took
control the situation with its dictatorship over the industry due to government
interests on the product. The SLTB and SLS jointly introduce a product
certification scheme to certify the manufacturing process and the final
product, i.e. Black Tea where the scheme was based on applicable standards
of SLSI; Sri Lanka Standard SLS
135:2009; Specifications for black tea and ISO 3720:1986; Black tea- Definition
and basic requirement as well as applicable SLTB regulations. The scheme called
SLSI – SLTB: Product Certification Scheme for Tea (PCST) which was designed to
meet the specific requirements of the tea plantation sector while providing internationally
recognized third party compliance to consumers. SLSI - SLTB Product Certification for Tea
(PCST) is therefore comprehensive and it includes the following;
- Applicable Tea Board Regulations & Sri Lanka Tea Board Standards/ Guidelines for Sri Lankan Origin Tea.
- Sri Lanka Standard SLS 135:2009; Specifications for black tea and ISO 3720:1986; Black tea- Definition
- Industry related code of Practices: SLS 1315: 2007; Code of practice for Tea Industry - Part 1& Part 2.
The given scheme was essentially voluntary
in nature where it is largely based on ISO/ IEC Guide 65: 1996; General
requirements for bodies operating product certification systems. The ISO/ IEC
Guide 65: 1996 provides general rules for third party certification of
determining with standards through initial testing and assessment of a factory
quality management system and its acceptance followed by surveillance that
takes into account the factory quality management system (QMS) and the testing
of sample from the factory and the open market (slsi.lk).
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