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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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On Mar 5, 3:47*am, "Alton B. Wilson" wrote:
I have placed about eight online orders over the last 5 years. *Probably 3 through Adagio, 2 through Upton, 1 Teaspring, 1 Generation Tea and 1 through Green Tea Store. Based only on service, speed of delivery and website I would say my best experience has been with Adagio and Upton. *The delivery speed of Adagio and Upton is fast and the communication is good, using their "standard delivery" (ordered from both on a Sunday afternoon, minutes apart and received the samples 3 business days later within hours apart. *(My shipping location is southwest Ohio) Upton's website is good for information on tea. I have an existing order from Teaspring; and I have been waiting now 8 business days for standard delivery (I know it is from Calif, but it is getting to be too long of wait for me to consider this good service, but it is only my first order from them). I don't think Adagio has a lot of Chinese reds, but they do have a few whites and darjeelings. *I think you will have better luck with your selection if you try Upton (http://www.uptontea.com/) [ TO KEEP THE THREAD POLICE HAPPY, THIS IS NOT A SCAM ] Alton 5tein wrote: What's your opinion of the many online stores selling Chinese teas? *I have used several with varying outcomes. BTW, I'm new to this group and glad I found it. My primary interests are Chinese reds (esp. qimen) and whites, but I'm very interested in learning all about Indian teas, esp. darjeelings. Thanks!- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - TeaSpring is extremely reliable and, in general, really good tea for the price. I order from them frequently and can vouch for the quality. I am in California and their tea arrives, most often, in two weeks. They know their tea and strive for top quality and the shipping is extremely reasonable. Adagio, in my opinion, is just over-priced for very ordinary tea. Upton is great, especially for "English" tea drinkers. I just prefer the variety available in the Chinese tea businesses. Sebastien at Jing's will "special order" for you anything you prefer. In regard to "thread police", I have only been on this board a little more than two years; but, during that time, many folks have post to advertise what is generally a pretty lousy selection of over-priced junk - everything from cracked "antique" phony-baloney teapots to pu- erh made to look aged. It's just my suspicious nature - I'm one of those who tends to question authority. Anyway, this guy obviously meant no harm nor had covert attentions. Enough said. Shen |
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5tein writes:
[...] On a slightly unrelated note, my colleague is interested in green teas--actually the Chinese tea I know _least_ about, and I started talking about some basics, and it reminded me that I purchased some fabulous tea near Lu Shan, Jiangxi province. The English translation was Cloud Mist tea (my Chinese is rusty--yun wu?). Yes, Yun Wu sounds right. But it names a class of teas rather than one particular one. /Lew --- Lew Perin / http://www.panix.com/~perin/babelcarp.html |
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On Mar 4, 9:37*pm, 5tein wrote:
On Mar 4, 4:56 pm, Shen wrote: On Mar 4, 1:24 pm, 5tein wrote: SpecialTeas are okay. I find Seven Cups expensive and Adagio the high end of mediocre (in general). The shops I mentioned are all in China and/or Taiwan. HoudeAsian has predictably excellent teas. Guang is in Texas. Happy sipping! Shen I have liked Adagio's white teas, though never thought their black/red teas compared to stuff I'd get even from TenRen. *I just placed an order with Jing's--great prices, but high shipping. On a slightly unrelated note, my colleague is interested in green teas--actually the Chinese tea I know _least_ about, and I started talking about some basics, and it reminded me that I purchased some fabulous tea near Lu Shan, Jiangxi province. *The English translation was Cloud Mist tea (my Chinese is rusty--yun wu?). I'm 99% sure it was a green, though the flavor was similar to some whites I've enjoyed. Anyone know of this tea or similar varieties? From what I understand from my Chinese friends, Clouds and Mist is, indeed, Yun Wu from Zhejiang and should be available in April. Actually, the most lovely C&M I've had was from Imperial Tea Court - a little higher, but worth it. Shen |
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Shen wrote:
On Mar 4, 11:15 am, Warren wrote: Shen wrote: On Mar 4, 9:34 am, 5tein wrote: What's your opinion of the many online stores selling Chinese teas? I have used several with varying outcomes. BTW, I'm new to this group and glad I found it. My primary interests are Chinese reds (esp. qimen) and whites, but I'm very interested in learning all about Indian teas, esp. darjeelings. Thanks! I like TeaSpring, Jing's and a few eBay vendors who are honorable and send good tea at fair prices - Yunnan Sourcing, of course, and Dragon Tea House, Awazon, and China Health (?). I always have great experiences (fast, careful shipping etc) with TeaSpring and Jing's. Oh, and Touchatea (for puerhs only). Qimens from Jing's are superior, especially "gift" and "gung fu" quality. Shen the touchatea website has some interesting items, but if you will pardon me for sounding like a noob, I was always under the impression that tea bricks were of fairly low quality. Is this not the case (i've tried a few cups over the years and was wildly unimpressed). are there actually pe erh bricks that are actually decent tea? -- HTTP://www.sushifaq.com/The Sushi FAQ ...((((º HTTP://www.sushifaq.com/sushiotaku/The Sushi Otaku Blog HTTP://www.sushifaq.com/sushiyapedia/Sushi-Ya-Pedia Restaurant Finder HTTP://www.theteafaq.com/The Tea FAQ HTTP://www.jerkyfaq.com/The Jerky FAQ HTTP://www.omega3faq.com/The Omega 3 Fatty Acids FAQ- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Off-topic: No, no, no! It depends upon the tea - sheng, shu, where it was manufactured and by whom, how old, how new! Go to www.pu-erh.net Mike"s site will provide any info you need regarding pu-erh. There are lots of criteria. Bricks are convenient, generally economical and often just chock full of very, very good tea. Shen Very interesting website, thanks for the link and the response ![]() -- HTTP://www.sushifaq.com/ The Sushi FAQ ...((((º HTTP://www.sushifaq.com/sushiotaku/ The Sushi Otaku Blog HTTP://www.sushifaq.com/sushiyapedia/ Sushi-Ya-Pedia Restaurant Finder HTTP://www.theteafaq.com/ The Tea FAQ HTTP://www.jerkyfaq.com/ The Jerky FAQ HTTP://www.omega3faq.com/ The Omega 3 Fatty Acids FAQ |
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On Mar 5, 8:04 pm, "Alton B. Wilson" wrote:
Shen, Thanks for the good words about Teaspring. I didn't think that maybe the tea was coming from afar. I guess I have been on a journey from Celestial Seasons, to Tazo, to Adagio, to Upton and now moving more towards green and Oolong from more "boutique" suppliers, if I can use that term, meant in the best way. I am waiting on: Feng Huang Dan Cong Shui Xian Jade Tie Guan Yin Bi Tan Lan Xue Pu Ti Cha Right now, I am buying a lot of small sample packs to try to find out what I like and what I don't. Do you use the same type of tea pot for all of your teas? Do you use any type of special water for your tea? I had a guy at a Sears store try to sell me a reverse osmosis system, saying that he was a tea drinker and that it made a big difference in taste. Regards, Alton Hey Alton, This may be a great topic to start a new thread rather than buried in this one as it is a valid question and I'm sure will get some conversation started. (at least I'd take it on ![]() - Dominic |
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On Mar 5, 5:51*pm, "Dominic T." wrote:
On Mar 5, 8:04 pm, "Alton B. Wilson" wrote: Shen, Thanks for the good words about Teaspring. *I didn't think that maybe the tea was coming from afar. I guess I have been on a journey from Celestial Seasons, to Tazo, to Adagio, to Upton and now moving more towards green and Oolong from more "boutique" suppliers, if I can use that term, meant in the best way. I am waiting on: Feng Huang Dan Cong Shui Xian Jade Tie Guan Yin Bi Tan Lan Xue Pu Ti Cha Right now, I am buying a lot of small sample packs to try to find out what I like and what I don't. Do you use the same type of tea pot for all of your teas? *Do you use any type of special water for your tea? *I had a guy at a Sears store try to sell me a reverse osmosis system, saying that he was a tea drinker and that it made a big difference in taste. Regards, Alton Hey Alton, This may be a great topic to start a new thread rather than buried in this one as it is a valid question and I'm sure will get some conversation started. (at least I'd take it on ![]() - Dominic- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Agreeing with Dominic - A new topic. Wow! I've just had the 3 of the teas on your list. I left remarks on the site. The Pu Ti Cha is extrodinary. I'm sure you'll enjoy it! A very special, special tea. The Shui Xian is a great buy. Very, very flavourful and tenacious for the price. Hardly a "Chinese restaurant tea". Shen |