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| Tea (rec.drink.tea) Discussion relating to tea, the world's second most consumed beverage (after water), made by infusing or boiling the leaves of the tea plant (C. sinensis or close relatives) in water. |
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Hello,
I am new to this group, but have been reading it for about a year. It's been very helpful and informative to me. I am particularily interested in finding teas at ethnic markets, so on my recent visit to an asian market, I found a round green box of tea with a 100 gram bowl shaped brick of green tea. The marking on the box are "Yunnan Tuo cha Yunnansheng Xiaguan Chachang Chupin". It is wrapped in a tissue with a crane type bird in red among some foliage. A small paper inside the box says it is Grade A prepared from superior large leaf green tea...stout sprout and rich white tips, etc. I asked someone at the store about this tea, and they said it was "tree tea" and not to drink it a night because it was strong and would cause inability to sleep. I have brewed some of this, and it is pretty good. One website said to use 1 gram per ounce of water, but that seems a little strong. Any brewing advice on getting the most out of this tea? It was only 95 cents per 100 grams, and I can get much more; is it worth stockpiling some of this tea? Thanks, Gregory |
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On Jan 19, 6:17*pm, Swede wrote:
I found a round green box of tea with a 100 gram bowl shaped brick of green tea. The marking on the box are "Yunnan Tuo cha Yunnansheng Xiaguan *Chachang Chupin". It is wrapped in a tissue with a crane type bird in red among some foliage. A small paper inside the box says it is Grade A prepared from superior large leaf green tea...stout sprout and rich white tips, etc. I asked someone at the store about this tea, and they said it was "tree tea" and not to drink it a night because it was strong and would cause inability to sleep. I have brewed some of this, and it is pretty good. One website said to use 1 gram per ounce of water, but that seems a little strong. Any brewing advice on getting the most out of this tea? It was only 95 cents per 100 grams, and I can get much more; is it worth stockpiling some of this tea? Hi Gregory, the tea you are describing isn't green tea, but it is pu-erh, exactly to say raw (sheng or green) pu-erh. The difference between green tea and pu-erh is, that while you prepare green pu-erh tea with boiling water, for green tea you have to use much less temperature. You should use 5-8 grams of tea for 1.5 dcl of water, start with shor steep times (10-20 sec) and then gradually prolong them. Good pu-erh can be brewed 10-15 times. More about brewing pu-erh can be found here http://www.pu-erh.net/sections.php?Choice=How_To_Brew About that tea is written here, too http://forums.travel.com/tea-forum/2...ge-tuocha.html have a nice day Tomas tuochatea.blogspot.com |
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On Jan 22, 2:29*am, Balt wrote:
On Jan 19, 6:17*pm, Swede wrote: I found a round green box of tea with a 100 gram bowl shaped brick of green tea. The marking on the box are "Yunnan Tuo cha Yunnansheng Xiaguan *Chachang Chupin". It is wrapped in a tissue with a crane type bird in red among some foliage. A small paper inside the box says it is Grade A prepared from superior large leaf green tea...stout sprout and rich white tips, etc. I asked someone at the store about this tea, and they said it was "tree tea" and not to drink it a night because it was strong and would cause inability to sleep. I have brewed some of this, and it is pretty good. One website said to use 1 gram per ounce of water, but that seems a little strong. Any brewing advice on getting the most out of this tea? It was only 95 cents per 100 grams, and I can get much more; is it worth stockpiling some of this tea? Hi Gregory, the tea you are describing isn't green tea, but it is pu-erh, exactly to say raw (sheng or green) pu-erh. The difference between green tea and pu-erh is, that while you prepare green pu-erh tea with boiling water, for green tea you have to use much less temperature. You should use 5-8 grams of tea for 1.5 dcl of water, start with shor steep times (10-20 sec) and then gradually prolong them. Good pu-erh can be brewed 10-15 times. More about brewing pu-erh can be found herehttp://www.pu-erh.net/sections.php?Choice=How_To_Brew About that tea is written here, toohttp://forums.travel.com/tea-forum/261525-strage-tuocha.html have a nice day Tomas tuochatea.blogspot.com Tomas, Thank you, this is very helpful. I am drinking a cup now. About two days ago, I brewed some using about 2 teaspoons (I don't have a gram scale) per 10-12 ounces water, and by the fourth infusion the tea was much clearer-a beautiful color. At the first infusions there was some astringency, but the last two cups (3 and 4 infusion) the tea was very nice with a sweetness, especially the aftertaste. And the leaves in the pot were almost whole and up to two inches long. Very interesting to see this mass of compressed leaves resurrect into whole leaves! BTW, I like your blog Thanks, Gregory |
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On Jan 22, 7:55 pm, Swede wrote:
On Jan 22, 2:29 am, Balt wrote: On Jan 19, 6:17 pm, Swede wrote: I found a round green box of tea with a 100 gram bowl shaped brick of green tea. The marking on the box are "Yunnan Tuo cha Yunnansheng Xiaguan Chachang Chupin". It is wrapped in a tissue with a crane type bird in red among some foliage. A small paper inside the box says it is Grade A prepared from superior large leaf green tea...stout sprout and rich white tips, etc. I asked someone at the store about this tea, and they said it was "tree tea" and not to drink it a night because it was strong and would cause inability to sleep. I have brewed some of this, and it is pretty good. One website said to use 1 gram per ounce of water, but that seems a little strong. Any brewing advice on getting the most out of this tea? It was only 95 cents per 100 grams, and I can get much more; is it worth stockpiling some of this tea? Hi Gregory, the tea you are describing isn't green tea, but it is pu-erh, exactly to say raw (sheng or green) pu-erh. The difference between green tea and pu-erh is, that while you prepare green pu-erh tea with boiling water, for green tea you have to use much less temperature. You should use 5-8 grams of tea for 1.5 dcl of water, start with shor steep times (10-20 sec) and then gradually prolong them. Good pu-erh can be brewed 10-15 times. More about brewing pu-erh can be found herehttp://www.pu-erh.net/sections.php?Choice=How_To_Brew About that tea is written here, toohttp://forums.travel.com/tea-forum/261525-strage-tuocha.html have a nice day Tomas tuochatea.blogspot.com Tomas, Thank you, this is very helpful. I am drinking a cup now. About two days ago, I brewed some using about 2 teaspoons (I don't have a gram scale) per 10-12 ounces water, and by the fourth infusion the tea was much clearer-a beautiful color. At the first infusions there was some astringency, but the last two cups (3 and 4 infusion) the tea was very nice with a sweetness, especially the aftertaste. And the leaves in the pot were almost whole and up to two inches long. Very interesting to see this mass of compressed leaves resurrect into whole leaves! BTW, I like your blog Thanks, Gregory Just a note since you are just beginning down the puerh road, the tea you currently have is very low quality and it gets much much better. Not that there is anything inherently wrong with what you have, and in fact it is a great starting point. Much better to experiment and trial/ error on inexpensive tea than high-end. Also, I always like to point out that it helps you to learn and appreciate the better quality tea when you've started at the ground floor and work up. I started with tuo's very similar to what you have there, and even though puerh isn't a particular favorite of mine I have learned to appreciate it, occasionally crave it, and I have tasted the amazing difference between years, makers, and storage/brewing. There are some real puerh connoisseurs on this forum, and many great sites and links. Welcome, and enjoy the journey. It always starts just like this ![]() - Dominic |