How Tea Came to India (From China via the British)

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  • čas přidán 27. 08. 2024

Komentáře • 35

  • @westcoastseattleboy784
    @westcoastseattleboy784 Před rokem +14

    Fantastic production quality! how does this only have 77 views?
    This story is such an amazing microcosm of how messed up the British empire was. They got an entire country addicted to opium to solve a balance sheet problem and, as a bonus, found a conviennent place to grow stolen tea plants with near slave labor

    • @marcelo8405
      @marcelo8405 Před rokem

      And the very same companies are still selling the offspring of those stolen plants

    • @test-201
      @test-201 Před 9 měsíci

      'how messed up the british empire was'
      coming from a people that specifically drove another people across a country and massacred them, thats pretty funny
      but yeah we were selling heroin to slaves, it is what it is

  • @lucasvbx
    @lucasvbx Před rokem +11

    Got recommended your video about pilsner 🍻, but I loved this one as well🍵

  • @kaarlows
    @kaarlows Před rokem +6

    I’m another one who learned about your channel through the Pilsner beer video. Got it recommended by CZcams algorithm and couldn’t be happier.
    Great channel and production you have here. Subscribed and will patiently wait for more videos.
    Best regards from Brazil.

  • @jamestamu83
    @jamestamu83 Před rokem +6

    Great history lesson and a wonderfully produced video. Looking forward to the next video!

    • @BevGeek
      @BevGeek  Před rokem +3

      Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @mrnortzul
    @mrnortzul Před rokem +4

    My god how are you still at 2.2k sub? After I watched i thought you are at 227k :D
    Keep up the good work your videos are great!

    • @BevGeek
      @BevGeek  Před rokem +2

      Ha ha...I was below 700 subs a week ago! 😅 Thanks for the support.

  • @kyosefgofa
    @kyosefgofa Před rokem +3

    🤔 Nice video. I absolutely love it.

  • @NishithThakkar
    @NishithThakkar Před rokem +2

    Minor note: it is not Marsala Chai.
    It's Masala. Meaning Spice/Spice Blend.

  • @omarw3314
    @omarw3314 Před 16 dny +1

    Unbelievable quality! subscribed

  • @petersavrides4664
    @petersavrides4664 Před rokem +2

    please make more videos! just watched your whole channel and i love your style. so professional and informative but also fun!

    • @BevGeek
      @BevGeek  Před rokem +1

      Thanks! 😊 Next video should be released within the next month. Stayy tuned...

    • @petersavrides4664
      @petersavrides4664 Před rokem

      @@BevGeek awesome!!! notifications are on!

  • @stockicide
    @stockicide Před 8 měsíci +1

    Very interesting!

  • @EdeYOlorDSZs
    @EdeYOlorDSZs Před rokem +1

    Impressive research I must say

  • @Edward135i
    @Edward135i Před 10 měsíci +1

    You should do a video on Coffee drinking countries vs tea drinking countries. My wifes best friend is Indian her husband even runs a coffee farm outside of bangalore and she's always trying to get me to drink tea because I have really bad acid reflux and its good for my digestive system. I tell her "I'm not in the habit of dirking tea because we just don't have a tea drinking culture in American" and she's like " I know and I don't understand it" I told her it was because the King of England tried to charge a 3% tax on tea and it kind of ruined it for us.

    • @BevGeek
      @BevGeek  Před 10 měsíci +1

      This is on my topic list. The Tea Act and the Boston Tea Party played a major role in America's affinity for coffee over tea, but spread of the cultivation of the two was also a factor. Coffee cultivation started in the Americas in the early 18th Century (before the American Revolution), but as you saw in the video, tea cultivation did not spread outside far east Asia until the mid 19th Century, and it's trade was tightly controlled by the British East India Company. If the Boston Tea Party never happened, it's still likely that coffee would eventually be more popular in the US due to the relative ease of access.

  • @petter5721
    @petter5721 Před rokem +1

    Sweden now have over 500 commercial beer breweries 👍🏻

  • @kirbyculp3449
    @kirbyculp3449 Před rokem

    For black tea I prefer Ceylon. For most green teas I prefer Formosa. From the PRC, Pu Erh, Lapsang Souchang, and Lung Ching. However I am really wary of products from the PRC.

  • @yoingen
    @yoingen Před 3 měsíci +1

    Does the beginning of the video show Shanghai in the 1990s? Where did you find these videos?

    • @BevGeek
      @BevGeek  Před 2 měsíci

      It is indeed Shanghai (Nanjing Road to be precise), but I believe it is more recent than the 90s. This was from Storyblocks, where I get most of my stock footage from.

  • @Hungaricus
    @Hungaricus Před rokem +1

    My friend said I have to subscribe or we wont be friends anymore. So here I am I guess.

  • @charlieyang2613
    @charlieyang2613 Před rokem

    Sad that you didn't try any Sri Lankan teas.

  • @jrs0123
    @jrs0123 Před rokem

    500k years ago?

  • @BigboiiTone
    @BigboiiTone Před rokem +2

    I know the US has done a LOT of bad things but as someone who has had peoples' drug addictions impact me on a personal level, I've always found the whole opium war thing particularly disgusting

    • @test-201
      @test-201 Před 9 měsíci

      dont feel that bad where do you think fentanyl comes from? its CHiyna

    • @BigboiiTone
      @BigboiiTone Před 9 měsíci

      @@test-201 thanks

    • @test-201
      @test-201 Před 9 měsíci

      @@BigboiiTone yeah while you're crying your eyes out over english men giving chinese slaves opium a few hundred years ago, your country is being absolutely flooded with fentanyl from china

  • @theU880
    @theU880 Před rokem +2

    Phenomenal vid, keep up the good work! I think others might like to see a one on maté too 🤔 🧉