Single Estate Tea Explained: Inside a 170-Year Legacy

Single Estate Tea Explained: Inside a 170-Year Legacy

How We Source: The Okayti Standard

When we source tea for Living Roots, we look for something most suppliers never consider: places where conservation and cultivation are inseparable. Where the people who grow the tea understand that farming is an act of stewardship, not extraction. Where quality is so aligned with place that you cannot separate one from the other.

Very few estates meet that standard. Okayti Tea Estate, in the shadow of Kanchenjunga, is one of them.

Every spring, I return to the Himalayas—to Sikkim, to the misted valleys of North Bengal, to the mountain regions I've come to know over years of hiking. This year, that return included a meeting that clarified exactly what we look for in a source.

I met botanist Subhasis Panda on a trail near Mirik. He was studying Gaultheria akensis, a critically endangered plant found only in these specific hills, at these elevations, in this fragile ecological band. As we spoke, the tea gardens terraced below us and Kanchenjunga rose beyond the clouds. Subhasis explained something essential: the same biodiversity that sustains rare endemic species also shapes the soil, water, and growing conditions that make exceptional tea possible. They cannot be separated.

The ecosystem is tied to the tea in the region. You can't save one without saving the other.

That ecological truth—that a landscape's health and a tea's quality are one system, not two—is exactly what we look for. It's rare. It's worth finding. Okayti is one of the places where it exists.

Kanchenjunga at 28,169 feet, the snow-capped sentinel that dominates the landscape where Okayti Estate grows tea
Kanchenjunga at 28,169 feet, the snow-capped sentinel that dominates the landscape where Okayti Estate grows tea

What We Found at Okayti

Founded in 1856, with production beginning in 1880, Okayti is one of Darjeeling's historic estates. But age alone means nothing. What matters is the continuity of knowledge that still lives there—the understanding that quality cannot be imposed; it must be learned.

When I visited, I met General Manager Pankaj Chaudhary, who has spent 29 years at the estate, and Ekta Thapa, who has been part of the team for more than a decade. Their work reflects what we look for: patience accumulated over time. At Okayti, every decision—when to harvest, how to process, whether to expand—is made in service to the plant and soil, not despite them.

The estate sits across roughly 1,600 acres between 4,000 and 6,200 feet, at the highest reaches of Darjeeling tea country, near the Nepal border and under Kanchenjunga's mountain influence. Tea grows slowly here. Cooler air, shifting mist, filtered monsoon rains, and steep elevation all lengthen development in the leaf. The result is not delicacy alone, but depth.

Tea terraces at Okayti Estate surrounded by pine forest and mountain landscape, showing the elevation and ecosystem that creates depth in the leaf
Tea terraces at Okayti Estate surrounded by pine forest and mountain landscape, showing the elevation and ecosystem that creates depth in the leaf

Pankaj speaks of the farm not as something to be controlled but as something to be understood.

We belong to the tea. The tea doesn't belong to us.

That is exactly the philosophy we look for.

The Moonlight Harvest

Pankaj explained the moonlight tea not as folklore, but as an observed agricultural rhythm. During the spring full moon, he explained, changes in soil moisture and plant behavior are understood to influence the character of the leaf. The harvest is timed carefully and produced only when those conditions align.

Whether approached through biodynamic tradition or long agricultural observation, the result is the same: a tea shaped by timing, restraint, and close attention to the plant. It is grown only in spring, only under a full moon, only when the conditions signal readiness. At Okayti, moonlight tea is not manufactured into rarity. It is harvested into it.

Okayti Orange Pekoe, Silvertips, and Moonlight Tea in white cups during tasting, showing the range of color and expression from the estate
Okayti Orange Pekoe, Silvertips, and Moonlight Tea in white cups during tasting, showing the range of color and expression from the estate

Three Teas, One Philosophy

We source three teas from Okayti, each one expressing the same fundamental commitment: quality that is rooted in place, not extracted from it.

Orange Pekoe is elevation expressed as accessibility. Larger leaves, more forgiving to brew, it demonstrates that Okayti's standard applies across the entire production—not just the limited and precious. It shows what 4,000–6,200 feet can yield when the plant is respected.

Silvertips is delicate precision. Hand-picked unopened buds and first leaves only, each batch small, each leaf handled with care that cannot be recovered later. Ekta and her team approach this harvest with the focus of jewelers. This tea cannot be scaled; it can only be nurtured. This is the tea that validates that commitment to craft.

Moonlight Tea is the philosophy made tangible. It exists because Okayti's team understands their farm as a living system with its own rhythms. They wait for conditions. They do not force the harvest. The result is a tea shaped by timing and attention—captured at the right moment. This is the tea that proves the standard we look for is real.

The Living Roots Standard

We look for tea that is rooted in place, shaped by long-held knowledge, and sustained by people who see farming as stewardship rather than extraction. Very few estates meet that standard consistently.

Okayti does. Not only for the beauty of the estate, or the view of Kanchenjunga, or the heritage of the factory—though all of that is real. What convinced us was the sense that this tea is inseparable from the landscape that produces it and the people who have chosen to care for that landscape over time.

Subhasis Panda works to preserve Gaultheria akensis in the same soil where Okayti grows tea. Pankaj carries 29 years of learning about when to listen to the plant. Ekta brings a decade of commitment to work that cannot be mechanized. Together, they are evidence of what we are looking for: a place where humans have chosen to work with the land instead of simply taking from it.

Arun with General Manager Pankaj Chaudhary and team member Ekta Thapa at Okayti Estate's heritage factory, representing the people and continuity behind the sourcing
Arun with General Manager Pankaj Chaudhary and team member Ekta Thapa at Okayti Estate's heritage factory, representing the people and continuity behind the sourcing

When you brew Okayti, you are tasting more than elevation and craft. You are tasting that commitment to stewardship. You are tasting continuity—of ecosystem, of knowledge, of work done carefully across generations.

That is what is in the cup.

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Okayti Estate: Founded 1856 | Production since 1880 | 1,600 acres across 4,000-6,200 feet elevation | In the foothills of Kanchenjunga | USDA Organic & Rainforest Alliance Certified

About Okayti Tea

Why is Darjeeling tea so expensive?
Darjeeling comes from just 86 estates in a single Himalayan district. The terrain is too steep for machines—every leaf is hand-plucked from bushes growing at 2,000–7,000 feet. Annual production across all of Darjeeling is only 8–9 million kg, yet more than four times that is sold globally under the Darjeeling name, most of it blended or counterfeit. Real Darjeeling is genuinely scarce. Okayti produces roughly 140,000 kg per year from 1,600 acres. That's the entire annual output—there's no way to scale it without compromising elevation or hand-picking. When you buy Okayti, you're paying for scarcity, altitude, and the 170 years of knowledge required to grow it.
What does single estate tea mean?
Single estate means every leaf came from one specific garden—not blended with tea from other farms or regions. Most commercial tea is blended for consistency, which erases the character of place. Single estate is the tea equivalent of single-origin wine: you're tasting the terroir of one place. With Okayti, you're tasting what 4,000–6,200 feet of elevation, Kanchenjunga's mountain climate, and 29 years of Pankaj's learning produce in a single season. Batch to batch, you'll notice subtle variation—that's not inconsistency. That's the mountain talking.
How do I brew Darjeeling tea?
Use 2–3 grams of leaf (roughly a teaspoon) per 8 oz of water. For First Flush: 175–185°F water, steep 2–3 minutes. For Second Flush: 190–200°F, steep 3–4 minutes. Use fresh filtered water—reboiled water tastes flat. The most common mistake is water that's too hot or steeping too long, both of which pull tannins and turn the cup bitter. Don't discard the leaves after one steep. Whole-leaf Darjeeling rewards a second and sometimes third infusion, often with subtly different flavor each time. You'll get 50–75 cups from a single pouch.
What does Darjeeling tea taste like?
The signature note is muscatel—a natural grape-like sweetness unique to Darjeeling's terroir. First Flush (spring harvest) gives you floral and stone-fruit notes: apricot, jasmine, brightness. Second Flush (early summer) develops richer honey-and-malt character with that distinctive muscatel. It's lighter-bodied than most black teas and has very little bitterness when brewed correctly. The closest comparison is a delicate, complex wine—there's enough going on that you don't need milk or sweetener to find it interesting.
Does loose leaf tea expire?
Loose leaf tea doesn't spoil the way food does, but it does go stale. Properly stored—airtight, away from light, heat, moisture, and strong odors—most black tea stays good for 18–24 months. First Flush Darjeeling is more delicate and is best enjoyed within 6–8 months while the floral notes are vivid. Once you open a pouch, transfer to a sealed tin or jar. You'll know tea has gone flat when the dry leaves lose their aroma. It won't make you sick, but it won't taste like much either. Store in a cool, dark place—a kitchen cabinet works better than a windowsill.

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Arun

Arun

I'm Arun. My family farmed for generations. Now I build the systems that let you know exactly where your tea and spices come from and who grew them. I code. I hike. I believe the best products come from places where people care enough to do the work right.