![]() |
|
Welcome to FoodBanter.com forums which provide access to the finest food and drink related newsgroups. You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most newsgroup discussions and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics to the food related newsgroups, communicate privately with other FoodBanter.com members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today! If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact support. |
|
|||||||
| 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. |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
|
|||
|
i ordered some puerh.
would it help or not to use a clean coffee grinder to pulverize the leaf? then it would be like teabag leaf size ? would this get more flavour out, or be more bitter ? yes, i am new to puerh alan |
|
|||
|
I would also suppose that pulverizing the leaf would ruin one of the
great aspects of puer, which is that you can brew the same leaves over and over and get a whole bunch of different cups of tea with just a few grams of leaf. You can do the same with oolong, but puer tends to have more staying power in my experience. With tea dust, as you find in tea bags or finely chopped leaves even, I think the flavors would leach out much more quickly and you wouldn't get nearly as much enjoyment or value out of the tea. cha bing |
|
|||
|
On Apr 3, 5:42*am, wrote:
i ordered some puerh. would it help or not to use a clean coffee grinder to pulverize the leaf? then it would be like teabag leaf size ? would this get more flavour out, or be more bitter ? yes, i am new to puerh alan Be kind. Keep the coffee grinder far away from the pu-er. :") Kevo |
|
|||
|
On Apr 2, 5:42*pm, wrote:
i ordered some puerh. would it help or not to use a clean coffee grinder to pulverize the leaf? then it would be like teabag leaf size ? would this get more flavour out, or be more bitter ? yes, i am new to puerh alan You could use one of these: http://tea.timzhao.com/CTCOM/teapot/PIC/042.JPG |
|
|||
|
Alex wrote:
You could use one of these: http://tea.timzhao.com/CTCOM/teapot/PIC/042.JPG There's a good demo of this tool in Miyazaki's extraordinary movie "Spirited Away." -DM |
|
|||
|
On Apr 4, 7:45*am, DogMa wrote:
Alex wrote: You could use one of these: http://tea.timzhao.com/CTCOM/teapot/PIC/042.JPG There's a good demo of this tool in Miyazaki's extraordinary movie "Spirited Away." -DM I think it is a herb pulverizer... kevo |
|
|||
|
DogMa writes:
Alex wrote: You could use one of these: http://tea.timzhao.com/CTCOM/teapot/PIC/042.JPG There's a good demo of this tool in Miyazaki's extraordinary movie "Spirited Away." Ah, thanks for reminding me of _Spirited Away_! Just thinking about it makes me smile. By the way, there's a memorable tea scene in that movie - *everything* in that movie is memorable - though it isn't Japanese tea. Charles: I don't know if there's enough tea in the movie for your purposes, but sheer greatness has to count, no? /Lew --- Lew Perin / http://www.panix.com/~perin/babelcarp.html |
|
|||
|
On Apr 4, 10:27 am, Lewis Perin wrote:
DogMa writes: Alex wrote: You could use one of these: http://tea.timzhao.com/CTCOM/teapot/PIC/042.JPG There's a good demo of this tool in Miyazaki's extraordinary movie "Spirited Away." Ah, thanks for reminding me of _Spirited Away_! Just thinking about it makes me smile. By the way, there's a memorable tea scene in that movie - *everything* in that movie is memorable - though it isn't Japanese tea. Charles: I don't know if there's enough tea in the movie for your purposes, but sheer greatness has to count, no? /Lew --- Lew Perin / I just have to pop in to say that Hayao Miyazaki is pure genius. I own his entire library as well as anything put out by Studio Ghibli. Spirited Away is amazing. Some other of note for anyone interested: Grave of the Fireflies, Howl's Moving Castle, Princess Mononoke, Porco Rosso, and Nausicaa. Also Metropolis is another great Anime. - Dominic |
|
|||
|
On Apr 4, 8:17 am, "Dominic T." wrote:
On Apr 4, 10:27 am, Lewis Perin wrote: DogMa writes: Alex wrote: You could use one of these: http://tea.timzhao.com/CTCOM/teapot/PIC/042.JPG There's a good demo of this tool in Miyazaki's extraordinary movie "Spirited Away." Ah, thanks for reminding me of _Spirited Away_! Just thinking about it makes me smile. By the way, there's a memorable tea scene in that movie - *everything* in that movie is memorable - though it isn't Japanese tea. Charles: I don't know if there's enough tea in the movie for your purposes, but sheer greatness has to count, no? /Lew --- Lew Perin / I just have to pop in to say that Hayao Miyazaki is pure genius. I own his entire library as well as anything put out by Studio Ghibli. Spirited Away is amazing. Some other of note for anyone interested: Grave of the Fireflies, Howl's Moving Castle, Princess Mononoke, Porco Rosso, and Nausicaa. Also Metropolis is another great Anime. - Dominic Yes, good Miyazaki is very much like a good tea - spiritually fulfilling in the kindest way. I collect his works as well, and have some very rare stuff on DVD (e.g, Future Boy Conan, Marco, and his music video "On Your Mark"). I even have his son's first Studio Ghibli film, Tales of Earthsea. The tool shown in the photo matches one described in Lu Yu's Ch'a Ching, used to grind tea leaves for the Tang Dynasty style tea. |
|
|||
|
On Apr 4, 10:27*pm, Lewis Perin wrote:
DogMa writes: Alex wrote: You could use one of these: http://tea.timzhao.com/CTCOM/teapot/PIC/042.JPG There's a good demo of this tool in Miyazaki's extraordinary movie "Spirited Away." Ah, thanks for reminding me of _Spirited Away_! *Just thinking about it makes me smile. By the way, there's a memorable tea scene in that movie - *everything* in that movie is memorable - though it isn't Japanese tea. *Charles: I don't know if there's enough tea in the movie for your purposes, but sheer greatness has to count, no? /Lew Thinking of it makes my heart warm & fuzzy, Im gonna make it my weekend stay home movie~! I like especially the song that was sung by Wakako Kaku on harp, "Itsumo Nando-demo" - Always With Me; it touches the soul immensely in a simple way, tho I dont understand a word sung... Kevo |