The year was 2000. I recall the day Director, Central Bureau of Investigation or DCBI walked into my office in Salt Lake, Calcutta. Like most police chiefs, he was quirky. He always wore a cap woven out of bamboo , a fad picked up from his early days when Mizoram was still a part of Assam. It was shaped like Sherlock Holmes's.
" Sir, Vivek would like to offer a cup of tea if it is okay with you," the accompanying Joint Director asked him politely.
The DCBI turned right to look at him with an air of indifference, imperiousness and uninterestedness. He fanged a mock smile and replied, " Thank you, Dr. Biswas, but you see, I'm very fussy when it comes to tea."
"When I was Director General of Police, Sikkim someone presented me with tea from Temi Tea Garden of Sikkim. Its taste has completely spoilt me. I can't take tea from here and there," he proceeded to add, probably as an explanation for this refusal. I felt there was no reason to do so except to show off.
" 'Here and there', my foot!" I said to myself.
One may be a DCBI but this does not entitle him to be so arrogant. If access to supply of tea from a solitary tea garden could make him snobbish, then I, till the other day Superintendent of Police of Darjeeling with its 86 gardens which produced the champagne of teas, could very justifiably be insufferably sniffy - and also extremely miffed at this slight.
" Even I am fussy, " I announced aloud, without batting an eyelid, and thus crossed the Rubicon in the Battle of Teas to await the Empire strike back.
There was a pin drop silence. The Joint Director put a hand to his left ear, feigning he had not heard me. The Deputy Inspector General of Police looked like a terror stricken kitten, and turned towards the DCBI with a "Sir, I am not responsible for this young officer's impudence" look. The Chief, momentarily stunned, craned his neck towards me, his eyes seeming to race down his nasal ridge to deliver a punch , and just when it appeared that he was going to blow his top, he sank back to his original posture.
"Okay, let us have tea, Vivek", he said and smiled.
The air had become lighter. The DCBI drank two cups of the finest autumn flush from Ging Tea Estate, graciously conceded that he could not compete with the tea sensibilities of a Darjeeling man, thanked me , handsomely tipped my canteen boy and went away. The terror stricken DIG was relieved that his job was still intact. Phew!!

of tea. For some strange reason, my father did not allow me and my two younger brothers to have the potion when we were small. I do not know whether it was due to a belief that tea makes the complexion darker. If it was so, then he had failed because what he and his wife could not give us genetically, abstinence from tea also yielded no better result. I remember that when I entered Class Xth, my parents saw the futility of this prohibition and allowed me to drink tea- the same year they also presented me a wrist watch, Favre Leuba.
My father drank a brand called Lopchu which was retailed by a tea garden in Darjeeling bearing that name. He was very particular how it was brewed. It had a typical burnt taste and I developed a liking for it. Later on, I went to Patna and Delhi for further studies, and drank lots of tea in ribbed glasses, but rarely the Darjeeling variety.
My link with Darjeeling tea was re- established when I joined service in West Bengal. Bengalis drank a lot of Darjeeling tea, they also knew how to brew it. But my love story with tea really started when I was posted to Darjeeling in 1998 and went on to occupy Campbell's Cottage. It was named after a Superintendent of the Darjeeling sanitarium who is credited to have introduced tea plantation in Darjeeling by growing tea around his residence- from Chinese tea seeds smuggled in 1841 from Kumaon region.
I do not know the reason but garden fresh tea tastes better when brewed in the water of Darjeeling hills. The taste as well as the aroma which swirls up are absolutely captivating.Sipping tea in the lawns of our house on a crisp, sunny morning, overlooking an unsheathed Kanchenjunga was an orgasmic delight. One evening, when we were about to open the bottle, a batch mate who was visiting and was fond of spirits, asked whether we could wait and have a cup of tea instead to start with. I was stunned. In the circle of my friends those days, if someone offered , or even asked for, a cup tea after sun down , it would have been kufr. But now, the prospect of drinking Darjeeling tea, in the drawing room of Campbell Cottage, next to a roaring fireplace, had made it kosher!

"How is the market for Darjeeling tea in India?" I asked.
" Not very big. Indians usually drink CTC tea. Except the Bengalis and a few people here and there, not many prefer Darjeeling tea," he rued. I sighed and topped his mug in sympathy.
" You know, the bad luck is that the two most affluent communities in India don't drink Darjeeling tea?" he continued.
" Who?" I asked, put down my glass, and lit a Gold Flake to inhale some smoke and gyaan.
" Arrey, the Gujjus and the Punjs, yaar."
" Why, what tea do the Gujjus drink?"
"Oh, they drink the worst and lowest priced tea. These loaded, Daandiya playing Gujjus have Cachar tea," his tone hinted a sense of betrayal.
" Cachar tea? Why, that is shameful.I have never heard anything good about Cachar. I don't even like the name Cachar," I joined in to make this betrayal appear disgustful also.
"And the Punjs? These Chabras and Chabrias ? Why, what do they drink?" I asked with a curiosity that could have put the friskiest of the cats to shame.
"Oye, we tea tasters joke about the Punjs and say that if the buffalo could give brown milk, these buggers wouldn't have had tea either ', " he guffawed, took a huge swig of beer, put down his mug to reveal a white, frothy smile on his moustache - and made no attempt to wipe it with his sleeve.
Vivek, one line struck a chord in me. Carleton tea is my favorite. What I cannot figure out is why it tasted better in Darjeeling and not in Kolkata..guess it's the water. Brewing tea is an art, thankfully have mastered it. To appreciate my tea I sometimes partakeof substandard fare..only to feel a sense of bliss of my Darjeeling again. Give me Castleton any time...I am game.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the blog...had been waiting for your take on tea. Wah!!
Couldn't have been a better or more vivid conjuring up and balancing the tempo! Fascinating observation from the "ribbed glasses" to the swirling aroma of the tea brewed in Darjeeling waters....and of course the sheer DCBI drama!!! Our childhood tea-bar being exactly same, might I add that the favourite tea cup is no less a major star in the hit story!!
ReplyDeleteRibbed glasses.........yes how i remember that!!
DeleteNothing to beat kulhad chai :)
I changed the water filter to RO only to have a better taste of morning tea. But more than tea and its brewing, the description of your DCBI is more lively and true for many, who are confused about themselves and conduct expected out of them.
ReplyDeleteEach of these blogs are such good description of human mind! Enjoyed tea and recalled one you had sent from Darjeeling, which I enjoyed only later, when I tasted it without milk.
Vivek's first place of posting was Tamluk. Since I did not take tea, I was offered Horlicks, Bournvita or sometimes even milk. I felt I was becoming a difficult guest for the Bengalis. I realized that it was easier for the host to offer tea than any other drink. People in small towns did not keep soft drinks. So slowly I started having tea on such occasions.
ReplyDeleteBut I developed the habit of drinking tea only when we were posted in Darjeeling. In fact, my romance with tea began there in Campbell Cottage. The weather...the water and also the quality of tea enhanced the taste of the tea there. The same tea made outside Darjeeling somehow did not have that taste.
I am now appalled to see so many additives being mixed to make tea sell. For me tea is just tea - not even sugar or milk.
Of course I remember this story of DCBI- Vivek has told it so many times! So many stories in this, but I like it most because it made me nostalgic about Darjeeling- a place and whose people I remember very fondly. Of course, written beautifully. :)
Let's go to Darjeeling and have some tea :)
ReplyDeletePapa, this is a fantastic piece of writing.
The details of the senior officer visiting you are so intricate here that it can easily be taken as a screenplay for a good 70's film - like Sanjeev Kumar the tea lover visiting Big B the junior officer :-). Thanks for the information on how tea was smuggled first from China. But after reading your wonderful piece what got me thinking was how did people first discover that some leaves from these plants, or rather two leaves and a bud, could be dried and processed and brewed into some beverage that would be pleasurable in the romantic warmth of a fire lit in a colonial bungalow! Tea connoisseurs are India's reply to aristocratic French (or I dare say, the classy Californian) wine. This was a very elegant one - even a Matcha green tea drinker like me felt for a few minutes that I was in front of a cup of Darjeeling Tea - that Happy Valley Tea Estate where Aradhana was filmed.
ReplyDeleteSpeaking about the storm on a cup of tea, now I want to hear your views on the other end of the spectrum - the roadside clay cup tea and world's problems getting solved over that.
Indranil,
DeleteThe Chinese guarded their flora with a maniacal secrecy and were very paranoid about the Europeans smuggling them out. I am now forgetting the names of some Europeans who managed to smuggle in some of the plants- and even some who secretly drew pictures of some spme plants and flowers. You could find mention of these in Amitav Ghosh's well researched fiction River of Smoke.
Well, it doesn't seem that tea was straightaway discovered as a potion of pleasure- probably it started its innings as a herbal medicine only.
In Bengal, they did try to solve the world's economic problems by progressively reducing the size of of the bhaad or roadside clay cup so that for the same money, some quantity or other of tea could be drunk- one didn't have to pay more.
My office in Darjeeling overlooked the Happy Valley. There was some trouble always plaguing the operations there. The garden was bang in the centre of the town. I always wondered, though with a lot of heart wrenching pain, if this garden could be derequisitioned and its land use reconverted for realty- that was, to me at least, the only way to save Darjeeling town which in the absence of space, was becoming precariously concretised with rampant construction. I still feel that even a minor earthquake can bring this town down. Recently, the Happy Valley has been notified for conversion for house building.
You conjure up a vivid picture of events like a clever magician....ensnaring the reader to read on. Brilliant piece.I will have to invite myself for that special cuppa...
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ReplyDeleteWonderfully written Vivek. Even though I am a coffee drinker at office, at home I drink at least two cups of tea everyday. And I like it without milk and sugar. I do shop around for teas when in India and was also - during my days in Mumbai - a regular at a place called the Tea House- I am told it is owned by Prahlad Kakkar now but at that time it was owned by some sarkari tea corporation - at Churchgate. A quaint old place it was with waiters in white uniforms with red pagdis. But the tea they served was excellent. They also sold a variety of teas from Assam, Darjelling and Munnar. Your blog brings back happy memories of hours and hours spent drinking tea at this place. Excellent reading my friend. I look forward to reading many more such musings from you. Do keep writing.
ReplyDeleteWonderfully written Vivek.
ReplyDeleteI was slightly surprised. Very few who tastes the Dhanbad station’s Ganesh’s tea or Buffalo milk’s Delhi Chai in ribbed red dot bottomed glasses, relish Darjeeling tea. May be the sipping in front of early morning Golden Kanchenjunga, with chirps of birds around have changed your taste.
By the way Kumaon teas which the planter’s claim to be of the same Darjelling variety. but could not relish the aroma
Only a tea connoisseur can truly get the flavor of this writing. Being born a Bengali and my dad's obsession with the finest brew ( he was once caught red-handed emptying the non Darjeeling tea Cup in the sink by the hostess to which he managed with a big guffaw) gave a good chance for me to develop that taste from very early on. I am the kind to not opt for tea at all, sometimes going to the extent of claiming to be a non tea drinker if not sure of what the host would offer.
ReplyDeleteI smiled and thoroughly enjoyed your take on the Gujju!s and Punju's taste for tea. They would announce very authoritatively not to prepare that pheeka bangali chai when they are at my place, so have to stock the yellow label for their drinking pleasure.
Extremely well written abd very enjoyable writing and could not help the long comment it extracted out of me :)
I will also like to show some knowledge on tea
ReplyDeleteCTC stands for Curl Torn n Crushed, BOP - Broken Orange Peeko
Cachar tea is cheapest tea available in the market and grown in Cachar or Silchar area of Assam (I may be wrong)
We too learned tea drinking in Assam posting and refined it further during visit to Darjeeling. But in Darjeeling, we enjoyed drinking single malt than the Darjeeling tea . . .
Loved the narration
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ReplyDeleteyour writing is absolutely fluid Vivek, i can just feel every bits and pieces of it flowing through my eyes to my heart. And yeah..." Even I am fussy, " extracted the entire aroma of the description of the Darjeeling tea brewed perfectly in your "Bits and pieces"
ReplyDeleteVery interesting to read this while I am visiting London where the queues outside the restaurants serving afternoon tea is serpentine. One has to book at least a week in advance at The Savoy or The Ritz where the tea service is performed with much enthusiasm. The tiered trays with hot scones, clotted cream and jam followed by paper thin sandwiches and tiny pastries, et al. The tea itself is selected from the tea menu and presented in delicate bone china cups with hot milk on the side. The English have an easy relationship with this brew and every calamity can be solved with a spot of tea.
ReplyDeleteThe Chinese and the Japanese have elaborate tea ceremonies also and in proper tea rooms too.
In India the shout of 'chai garam chaaai' bring forth a flood of memories of train journeys and mudpot flavoured tea. In the chai bagaans of Assam even the time is one hour ahead of the IST.
Wonderful writeup this one Vivek and it has caused a storm in a teacup already, as rightly predicted.
Taking on the Director CBI over tea, will always know you as a man with guts now :)
ReplyDeleteI believe the tea auctions are doing well now, and what darjeeling tea needs is a more focused branding effort to showcase it to the world.
I love second flush darjeeling, though must say that have not got to the connoisseur-ship level of understanding the gardens.
This could go well for advertising the brand "Darjeeling Tea" Vivek. Wonderfully woven memories. Thanks a lot.
ReplyDeleteRanajit, it was not a take on DoCBI, it was more of an ex SP Darjeeling versus an ex DG Sikkim:) On focussed branding, read last Sunday's Brunch of Hindustan Times.
ReplyDeleteExcellent. I had the opportunity of being offered an Orange tea (pekoe ? )at the Tea Board Chairman's office. Frankly I thought it tasted more like bottled orange... Vivek, your writing is visual, makes good copy for a film. Tea Board should consider.
ReplyDeleteThank you Vivek Papa. Not just for this blog but all the previous ones too. Not only is the narration fluid, its so vivid. So many memories, just like a movie, plays out in my mind and thoughts. I eagerly wait for the next and the next and the next one. Keep the treat going.
ReplyDeleteWell described Vivek!
ReplyDeleteTea is second only to water as the most consumed beverage on Earth.
And legend says that it was accidentally discovered by a Chinese Emperor when a few leaves floated into his early morning cup of hot water whilst out in the royal gardens! ( Though I wonder how unprocessed leaves must have tasted )
From the FTGFOP1s to the BOPs, Darjeeling tea is what it is because of a combination of the mist, the altitude, the rains and most of all the hilly slopes of the region. The muscatel flavour of a Darj is impossible to either mask or fake!!
Tasting tea is akin to tasting a good single malt or a fine wine.
Thank you Vivek, for sharing your stories :-)