| Sonoma County Independent
January 29–February 4, 1998
Garden Variety: Taylor Maid's organic teas
perk up the cup with wild flowers, leaves, and savory herbs
By Paula Harris
THIS COULD USE more lavender," remarks one woman as, like
a professional "nose" creating the latest designer perfume,
she deeply inhales a fragrant liquid and swirls the concoction around
in a pure white bowl.
"I can taste the licorice notes, but the finish is a little
astringent," adds a man, reverently sipping the heady fluid
and rolling it around his palette before deftly spitting it out
like an expert winemaker.
It's late afternoon and the pale winter sun hangs low as three
men and three women stand around a wooden table under the shade
of an old oak tree at the edge of a huge Occidental garden leading
into a deep forest.
The group is wearing gardening attire and heavy boots, and everyone
is grubby and tired after a day of working on the land. They could
use a break, but their attention is now focused on the white bowls
as they swish the liquid around and watch the steam rise into the
chilly afternoon air.
But it's not perfumes or pinots inspiring this particular group
of connoisseurs--they're blending organic loose-leaf tea.
"We analyze the qualities, the different notations, whether
the finish is bitter, sweet, or spicy," explains Michael Presley,
a tall, lanky, athletic man, who is the chief cultivator for Taylor
Maid Farms, which currently produces 15 blends of tea. "We're
looking for a real harmony—it's very sensual."
Taylor Maid, which also roasts organic coffees, opted to begin
farming ingredients for teas five years ago, deeming that the necessary
crops (many of them native to the area) would be a good environmental
fit with west Sonoma County. "We felt that growing wine grapes
would be bad for the land and that herbs were the way to go,"
says Taylor Maid co-owner Mark Inman. "This is the easiest
method to work with to keep the farm in sustainable fashion."
Now some 50 acres overlooking the coast on the hilly west side
of Occidental are devoted to tea farming. The picturesque scene
includes flower fields, bicycle paths, and frog ponds, where the
amphibians are used to naturally control pests.
Taylor Maid cultivates traditional culinary and medicinal herbs
and flowers, including peppermint, lemongrass, sage, hops, nettles,
ginger root, rose hips, hibiscus, sunflowers, and English, French,
and Spanish lavenders to blend with imported organic green and black
teas.
Presley says eventually the company would like to grow its own
tea plantation under the extensive canopy of the conifers and redwood
trees shading the property. "We live in the Banana Belt here
and it's favorable to all kinds of horticulture," he explains.
"But growing tea is a future plan for down the road."
The company's final product is caffeine-free, 100 percent organic,
and void of the man-made chemicals frequently used in tea production.
The blends contain only leaves, flowers, seeds, roots, essential
oils, and fruits.
The specialty teas are available at many local stores and at the
Santa Rosa Farmers Market. Bestsellers include Herbal Gardens, Black
Lavender, and Vital Green (a tasty blend of nettles, lemon balm,
and green tea).
"People really like these teas because what they taste is
the real herb; there's nothing boosting the herb and no artificial
flavors sprayed into it," says Inman. "The natural flavors
are subtle but deeper—it makes tea-drinking a more poignant
experience."
While some of the blends border on being medicinal, the company
makes no specific health claims. However, Inman is quick to point
out that nettle is a reputed blood tonic with antiviral properties;
spearmint, raspberry leaf, and chamomile have proven calming effects;
and lemon balm and rosehips are said to fight colds.
"Our whole thing with tea is that it's a natural food with
healing properties--not just a beverage," says Inman. "Remember,
the natural healing properties in herbs have been used in tea form
for centuries."
Presley agrees, claiming that our "oldest interaction with
plants" has been to brew up a batch of hot, soothing tea. "It's
our common heritage, all of humanity shares it: Europeans, Asians,
Native Americans," he explains. "Now we're realizing that
it's a global art."
"Art" is an apt description. From the planting to the
harvesting, drying, milling, and blending, a common thread of creativeness
runs through the operations at Taylor Maid, elevating the beverage
way beyond the common cuppa.
Indeed, when you pry open a vacuum-sealed tin of, say, the company's
Flower Power blend (an intoxicating mix of hibiscus, rose hips,
orange peel, cinnamon, calendula petals, cornflower petals, lavender,
rose geranium flowers, and essential orange and cinnamon oils) the
sensation is almost overwhelming. The dried blend is alive with
color, like a burgundy and orange-hued potpourri--and it smells
like Christmas cookies. Tempting enough to bury one's face in the
reusable container.
"It's almost like aromatherapy," says Ananda Johnson,
part of the Tea Tasting Team, assistants to blending expert Julie
Morbitz. "When we stand there and taste—sometimes from
silver goblets, sometimes from white china bowls so that we can
see the color—Julie tries to pull responses from each of us
about what we see, smell, taste, what it makes us think of, and
how it makes us feel," Johnson says. " We're really committed
to this. It takes a lot of work and study. I guess you could say
that tea is our destiny." |