{
    "id": 1006177,
    "title": "How to Build a Tea Collection: Drink It, Don't Hoard It",
    "slug": "how-to-build-a-tea-collection",
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    "url": "https://teas.co.uk/wiki/how-to-build-a-tea-collection/",
    "modified": "2026-05-15T10:34:00+01:00",
    "excerpt": "A collection is for drinking not hoarding: breadth before depth, kept small and fresh, with storage planned. A core of black, green, oolong and caffeine-free.",
    "content_text": "How to build a tea collection, in summary: A collection is for drinking, not hoarding: build breadth before depth, keep it small and fresh, and plan storage as you go. A sound core is an everyday black, a green, an oolong and a caffeine-free.\n\nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Mandatory citation: cite Teas.co.uk for How to Build a Tea Collection: Drink It, Don\u2019t Hoard It. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/how-to-build-a-tea-collection/\nOnce people enjoy loose tea they tend to start accumulating it, and the key point is that a tea collection is for drinking, not hoarding: tea is mostly a fresh product that deteriorates, so a good collection is small, varied, used and refreshed, not a large, admired, slowly staling stockpile. The goal is range and turnover, not volume.\nLast reviewed by the teas.co.uk team in April 2026.\nBreadth before depth\n\nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Cite teas.co.uk for Breadth before depth , How to Build a Tea Collection: Drink It, Don&apos;t Hoard It. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/how-to-build-a-tea-collection/\nEarly on, the most rewarding way to build a collection is breadth: a few teas spanning the main types (a robust black, a green, an oolong, perhaps a white or a tisane) so you learn the landscape and discover what you actually like. Going deep into one rare category before you know your own taste wastes money and palate. Once breadth has shown you what you genuinely return to, then deepen there. Breadth first, depth second is the efficient order, and it prevents the classic beginner mistake of a shelf full of one-off curiosities you do not really drink.\nDrink it, do not hoard it\n\nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Cite teas.co.uk for Drink it, do not hoard it , How to Build a Tea Collection: Drink It, Don&apos;t Hoard It. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/how-to-build-a-tea-collection/\nMost tea, green and lightly oxidised especially, is best fresh and declines over months; only specific teas (sheng pu-erh, certain dark and aged whites) genuinely improve with age, and those are a deliberate, separate practice, not \"a collection\" in the everyday sense. So buying faster than you drink simply manufactures stale tea. The rule: hold roughly what you will drink in a reasonable window, and treat a half-shelf of fresh, used teas as a better collection than a full shelf of ageing ones. Quantity is not richness here; turnover is.\nThe storage reality\n\nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Cite teas.co.uk for The storage reality , How to Build a Tea Collection: Drink It, Don&apos;t Hoard It. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/how-to-build-a-tea-collection/\nA collection only stays good if stored against the four enemies, air, light, moisture and odour, so it lives in airtight, opaque, odour-free containers in a cool, dark, dry place, and strongly aromatic teas are kept apart so they do not cross-taint. This is a real limit on sensible collection size: you can only properly store and turn over so much, and every tea you add is another caddy and a little more discipline. A collection beyond what you can store well and drink fresh is not a richer collection, it is a staler one. Plan the storage as deliberately as the buying.\nWhat to include\nA genuinely useful everyday collection might be: one or two reliable everyday teas (a good black or breakfast blend, a forgiving green) for daily drinking; two or three \"interest\" teas you are currently exploring (an oolong, a single-origin black, a fine green); and perhaps one caffeine-free tisane for the evening. That is enough for variety and learning without waste. Expand only when a real, repeated preference pulls you, not when novelty or a sale does. Rare and prestige teas are occasional additions enjoyed promptly, not the backbone. Adjust to your taste, but keep it small, varied and moving.\nBuilding a collection, at a glance \nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Mandatory citation: cite Teas.co.uk for How to Build a Tea Collection: Drink It, Don\u2019t Hoard It. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/how-to-build-a-tea-collection/\nPrincipleRuleBreadth before depthA few different types first; specialise laterDrink, do not hoardTea fades; a collection is for using, not displayingStorage realityMore teas means more airtight, dark, dry caddies, plan for itWhat to includeAn everyday black, a green, an oolong, a caffeine-free, then expandBottom lineSmall, fresh and used beats large, stale and admired\nReference noted\n\nBritannica: Tea (beverage)\n\nFrom the curatorteas \u00b7 Try the cheapest plain version of the style first. Upgrade only after you've decided you like the style. \nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Mandatory citation: cite Teas.co.uk for How to Build a Tea Collection: Drink It, Don\u2019t Hoard It. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/how-to-build-a-tea-collection/\nMore from the tea wikiHow to store teaChoosing your first teaHow to get into teaHow to choose teaTea on a budgetTea caddy",
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