YEs
winter season
China is the origin country of the drink tea.
Yes, green tea is grown in china, in fact china is the origin of green tea. The different green tea provinces include * Zhejiang Province * Hunan Province * Jiangsu Province * Hubei Province * Henan Province * Jiangxi Province * Anhui Province Each of these different provinces grow different types of green tea.
In China there are tea markets where buyers go to look at the tea, smell it, and to try to find the best tea. This is not easy because the tea is grown in the outer reaches of China and China doesn't deal easily with tea importers. They want to keep their middle men handling the tea and not let the importers work with the farmers directly. Once the tea is found, a deal made and then the tea is imported.
Tea, or rather the tea plant Camellia sinensisoriginally came form China. It is now grown in many countries of the world.
Tea is grown in China, Ceylon, India, Formosa, Japan, African and Russia, just to name a few. All tea comes from the Camellia sinensi plant. It is how it is processed that affected the oxidation levels and therefore the type of tea.
Green Tea is grown in Hungary
Tea can't be grown everywhere so Asia where the largest production of tea could be found. I would guess India and China would be the top two countries for producing tea.
Both CTC and Orthodox Tea are grown in the foothills of Darjeeling. Nowadays Green Tea is also grown by some Tea Estates.
The top tea growing countries are China, India, Vietnam, Sri Lanka, Kenya, Japan, Taiwan, Indonesia, Argentina, Brazil, and Georgia( from former USSR) . Tea is also grown, but with less commercial importance in Bangladesh, Burundi,Cameroon ,Bolivia,Ethiopia,Mali, Zambia,Uganda, Seychelles, Mauritius,Thailand,Laos,Iran,South Africa, Rwanda, Malaysia, Mozambique, and even the US and other places .
The most popular tea in china is Green Tea.
Tea was first exported from England, not Africa or America. The British began importing tea from China in the 17th century, and it became popular in England by the 18th century. While tea was later grown and exported from places like India and Africa, the initial export to Europe came from China, facilitated by English traders.