JING Tea is served in luxury establishments all over the world – and its exclusive blends can be found on Cathay Pacific flights, too. The artisanal tea company has crafted three new drinks for First class flyers, all created specifically to be enjoyed at 35,000 feet. While you’re sitting back with a glass of sparkling tea or steaming brew, consider the story behind those leaves.
Armed with an empty backpack and a hunger to learn, JING founder Ed Eisler set out across China in pursuit of the perfect cup of tea more than 20 years ago. After discovering loose-leaf teas in an Asian teahouse at 16 years old, he wanted something more than supermarket teabags and was willing to travel to get it.
(Left) Edward Eisler
Catherine Archer, JING Tea CEO
When he returned to London, the twenty-something’s backpack was stuffed with Chinese teas, crafted by skilled teamakers – with some sourced from family-run tea gardens dating back generations. From there, JING Tea was born.
The British company, in operation since 2004, has come a long way since that pivotal trip. With between 70 and 80 different strains of single-garden tea in its current range, JING’s worldview encompasses Sri Lanka, Japan and India as well as China, where Eisler’s love affair began and where many of his company’s teas are still produced today in partnerships that promote sustainability and a fair deal for growers.
“Our real focus is creating unforgettable tea experiences, while supporting the people and places behind them to thrive,” says Catherine Archer, JING Tea CEO.
JING’s commitment to quality, sustainable practices and the founder’s love of travel made the partnership, forged in 2016, a natural fit for Cathay. “Both Cathay and JING are premium brands that evoke a sense of understated elegance and share common values,” says Vassilios Georgakopoulos, Head of Customer Experience, F&B and Service Design.
“In JING, we see a commitment to quality, authenticity, provenance and well-being, an ethos that resonates with our own brand,” he continues.
Archer adds, “Connection is absolutely at the heart of both brands - connecting customers to new people and places. Cathay do that through physical journeys, and JING through the taste journeys that we take people on.”
While considerations like soil type, growing years and treatment methods are all familiar to the team at JING, brewing the perfect cup of tea on a plane was a new challenge. Although JING teas are readily available on the ground at Cathay’s lounges at Hong Kong, Singapore Changi, Shanghai Pudong and London Heathrow airports, taking it to the skies brought its own set of complications.
“Altitude impacts everything from the water's boiling point to the palate's response to flavours, with the exception of umami flavoured products,” says Archer. “So, when we began to work with Cathay, we invested a lot of time creating the perfect in-flight experience.”
What resulted was a range of blends that taste great at altitude, including umami-rich Japanese green teas and cups of Sri Lankan Ceylon breakfast tea that work well with the soft water on aeroplanes “to create a very smooth, rich taste”.
The JING team, who serve as tea consultants to high-profile chefs such as Heston Blumenthal and Thomas Keller, also meticulously developed a failsafe process for creating the perfect inflight cuppa on every journey. Archer says that the lower boiling point of water on planes meant that the team had to experiment with different quantities of tea and brewing times before arriving at the right formula.
Once perfected, Cathay Pacific cabin crew were given “comprehensive training” on the method, says Georgakopoulos. “Workshops were held to drive product understanding and enhance service delivery, along with staff training and tea field processing trips.”
Both Cathay and JING also saw an opportunity to enhance the First class wellness menu by offering non-caffeinated teas and non-alcoholic alternatives.