Tea cultivation in Darjeeling began under British colonial administration in 1841 when Superintendent A. Campbell planted Chinese tea seeds in Darjeeling's experimental gardens. Commercial plantation development followed rapidly, with over 87 tea gardens established by 1866. The muscatel character unique to Darjeeling was observed and named in the late 19th century. The First Flush as a distinct, premium harvest category was recognised and priced separately by the Kolkata tea auctions by the early 20th century. The 'Champagne of teas' designation entered common usage in the late 20th century.
Darjeeling First Flush is the world's most prestigious black tea — the initial spring harvest (March–April) of the Darjeeling tea gardens in the Himalayan foothills of West Bengal, India, at elevations of 600–2,100 metres, producing teas of extraordinary delicacy, floral complexity, and the distinctive muscatel (grape-like, apricot-honey) character that earned Darjeeling its designation as 'the Champagne of teas.' First Flush leaves are young, lightly processed, and only partially oxidised compared to later flushes — producing a pale golden or greenish liquor with floral, muscatel, and vegetal notes quite unlike any other black tea. The harvest window lasts only 3–4 weeks; the world's finest First Flush lots (from Margaret's Hope, Castleton, Thurbo, Makaibari estates) are auctioned in Kolkata and command prices of USD 100–400 per kilogram. Second Flush (May–June) produces the more robust, amber, classic Darjeeling character; Autumn Flush is the third harvest. The Tea Board of India's Darjeeling certification logo protects against fraud in an industry where counterfeit Darjeeling is estimated at 40% of globally marketed supply.
FOOD PAIRING: Darjeeling First Flush pairs with the most delicate foods: cucumber finger sandwiches, smoked salmon with crème fraîche, fresh strawberries with shortbread, and single-origin white chocolate. From the Provenance 1000, pair with strawberry and cream cake, white peach tart, or almond and apricot financier. The muscatel character specifically bridges to stone fruit desserts. As an afternoon tea centrepiece, serve First Flush as the premium option alongside sandwiches — it is the beverage equivalent of a premier cru wine flight.
{"Water temperature 85–90°C — Darjeeling First Flush's delicate, partially oxidised leaves burn at boiling temperature; lower temperature extracts the floral muscatel character without the harsh tannins","Steep 2.5–3 minutes maximum — First Flush's delicate structure over-extracts rapidly; timing is more critical than for robust Assam or Ceylon","Drink without milk — First Flush's pale, delicate character disappears under dairy; drink it like a fine white wine to appreciate its full aromatic complexity","Use white porcelain or glass for appreciation — the pale golden-green liquor requires visual evaluation; coloured cups obscure the First Flush's defining visual characteristic","Buy only from certified sources with Tea Board of India Darjeeling logo — up to 40% of 'Darjeeling' globally marketed is fraudulent; authentication matters for First Flush at premium prices","Consume within 6 months of harvest — First Flush's delicate, partially oxidised character degrades significantly with age; unlike later flushes, it does not improve with storage"}
The finest First Flush experience: Margaret's Hope estate, harvested in late March, brewed in a pre-warmed white porcelain teapot at 87°C for 2.5 minutes, served in a translucent white cup. Observe the pale green-gold colour, inhale the muscatel aroma (grape, apricot, spring flowers), then taste the complete transformation of 'black tea' expectation. Makaibari estate's biodynamic First Flush (the world's first biodynamic Darjeeling) is grown under a forest canopy and produces the most complex, wine-like First Flush available.
{"Brewing First Flush at 100°C because it is 'black tea' — this destroys the very attributes that make it exceptional and worth the premium price","Adding milk — First Flush with milk produces an ordinary cup that wastes the tea's most expensive and irreplaceable quality","Purchasing 'First Flush Darjeeling' without certification documentation — the high price creates massive counterfeit incentive; unauthenticated First Flush is almost certainly a fraud"}