About Barry's Master Blend
About Barry's Master Blend
Frequently asked questions about Barry's Master Blend
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Packaging Accuracy. We keep product information as accurate and up to date as possible. Manufacturers sometimes change packaging, ingredients, nutritional information, allergen advice, pack sizes or branding without notice, so the product you receive may look slightly different from the images shown. If you have a question about ingredients or allergens before ordering, please get in touch and we will gladly check for you.
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The story of Barry's Master Blend
A Master Blend for people who know their tea
Barry’s Master Blend - 80 Tea Bags sits in that very serious part of the cupboard where the proper tea lives. Not the herbal experiments. Not the box someone bought because the packaging looked calm. This is Irish black tea, built for milk, mornings, visitors, second cups and the sort of conversation that begins with a sigh before anyone has even sat down.
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The Cork story behind the Barry’s name
Barry’s Tea was founded in 1901 by James J. Barry in Cork, Ireland. The Barry family operated a small grocery business on Bridge Street in Cork, specialising in teas and wines, before later moving to Princes Street. James J. Barry himself was a tea and wine merchant originally from Ballyhooly, County Cork, which gives the brand a pleasingly local beginning rather than the usual grand corporate fog. It started with a shop, customers, blends, and a city that knew exactly what it expected from a cup of tea.
From shop counter to recognised Irish tea
For many years, Barry’s tea was sold through the Cork shop on Princes Street, which is the sort of detail that matters because tea loyalties are often formed in ordinary places. A family shop, a known counter, a regular purchase. The firm’s blending reputation was noted beyond Cork too, including an Empire Cup for Tea Blending at the 1934 Grocers Exhibition in London. That sort of award does not need to be inflated into legend, but it does show that Barry’s was being taken seriously as a tea blender well before it became a national household name.
What makes it feel Irish
Irish breakfast tea traditions tend to favour a strong black tea style, often with blends weighted towards Assam. Barry’s is commonly discussed in that world, alongside other Irish names, and the point is not subtlety for subtlety’s sake. The cup is expected to stand up to milk and still have something to say. Master Blend belongs to that broad family of Irish tea drinking: sturdy, familiar, and not especially interested in being fashionable. Quite right too. Fashion has ruined many things, but the kettle has survived.
The modern Barry’s packet
The Barry’s business grew beyond the shop counter in the 1960s, when Peter Barry helped develop wholesale distribution and began sourcing tea from East Africa. By the mid-1980s, Barry’s had become one of Ireland’s best-known tea brands. It also became part of one of those harmless but deeply felt national arguments: Barry’s or Lyons. Every tea-drinking country needs a rivalry, apparently, and Ireland has managed to make this one last with impressive commitment. Master Blend now reaches cupboards far beyond Cork, but the packet still carries that Irish tea identity quite plainly.
Why it matters in Canada
For Irish families, British expats, and anyone in Canada shopping for someone who misses home, a box like Barry’s Master Blend is rarely just tea. It is the thing that appears in parcels, the box a relative insists is the correct one, the brew made when someone says Canadian tea is “fine” in a tone that means it absolutely is not. It belongs with biscuits, weather complaints, kitchen tables and the small comfort of doing things properly. A quiet nod from The Great British Shop, then: keep the kettle close, and do not let the tea shelf get ideas above its station.