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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.

Is this real tea?



 
 
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  #1 (permalink)  
Old 27-04-2008, 09:45 PM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Gyorgy Sajo
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 25
Default Is this real tea?

Hi,

I have a question to the helpful folks at rec.food.drink.tea. I have
received a nice gift from my sister: it is a piece of a compressed cake made
of dry buds and leaves of some kind of dried herbs. She bought it from a
small vendor of Chinese teas, for quite a high price admittedly. The vendor
said it was a puerh cake made of the finest tea buds. My sister wrote the
name of the tea on the wrapping as she heard it from the vendor: "Shen puerh
Ya Ping".

I have brewed and tasted the tea and I have my serious doubts. It does not
taste and smell like tea at all - has almost no taste and has a weak and
unpleasant sweet smell - and the wet buds definitely do not look like
Camelia Chinensis. I am wondering what it could be, and I hope that some of
the more experienced readers of this group could tell me.

Here you can see some pictures of both the dry and the wet leaves:

http://i29.photobucket.com/albums/c2...hitecake01.jpg
http://i29.photobucket.com/albums/c2...hitecake02.jpg
http://i29.photobucket.com/albums/c2...hitecake03.jpg
http://i29.photobucket.com/albums/c2...hitecake04.jpg

Thank you,
Gyorgy


  #2 (permalink)  
Old 27-04-2008, 11:10 PM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Grasshopper
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Posts: 4
Default Is this real tea?

Maybe it's a compressed version of Ya Bao. Here's a link:
http://www.royalpuer.com/Ya-Bao.asp
~grasshopper
  #3 (permalink)  
Old 28-04-2008, 12:04 AM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Lewis Perin
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Posts: 621
Default Is this real tea?

Grasshopper writes:

Maybe it's a compressed version of Ya Bao. Here's a link:
http://www.royalpuer.com/Ya-Bao.asp


I agree on the resemblance. And when I had a chance to taste Yabaocha
a while ago, I found it kind of nasty in a way that made me doubt it
really was Camellia sinensis, which is what the original poster was
saying. Please note that I'm not saying it isn't tea, just that it's
.... weird.

/Lew
---
Lew Perin /
http://www.panix.com/~perin/babelcarp.html
  #4 (permalink)  
Old 28-04-2008, 12:26 AM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Gyorgy Sajo
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Posts: 25
Default Is this real tea?

Thank you, Grasshopper and Lewis! Yes, the resemblance of the wet leaves is
striking, so it is almost certainly the same tea.

Lewis, I would also describe the taste of this tea as nasty and weird. Quite
the opposite of what the reviewers say at the Royal Puer site.

Gyorgy

"Lewis Perin" skrev i en meddelelse
news
Grasshopper writes:

Maybe it's a compressed version of Ya Bao. Here's a link:
http://www.royalpuer.com/Ya-Bao.asp


I agree on the resemblance. And when I had a chance to taste Yabaocha
a while ago, I found it kind of nasty in a way that made me doubt it
really was Camellia sinensis, which is what the original poster was
saying. Please note that I'm not saying it isn't tea, just that it's
... weird.

/Lew
---
Lew Perin /
http://www.panix.com/~perin/babelcarp.html



  #5 (permalink)  
Old 28-04-2008, 08:14 AM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Balt
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Posts: 35
Default Is this real tea?

On Apr 27, 10:45*pm, "Gyorgy Sajo" wrote:
Hi,
I have brewed and tasted the tea and I have my serious doubts. It does not
taste and smell like tea at all - has almost no taste and has a weak and
unpleasant sweet smell - and the wet buds definitely do not look like
Camelia Chinensis. I am wondering what it could be, and I hope that some of
the more experienced readers of this group could tell me.


Hi György (are you Hungarian? :-)

the cake looks to be of pure buds (tea-rügy) like this one
http://cgi.ebay.com/2007-Silver-Bud-...QQcmdZViewItem

The very young tea leaves are probably less powerful then more grown
leaves. Unlike pu-erh, this cake will also not age well.


Tomas

http://tuochatea.blogspot.com
  #6 (permalink)  
Old 28-04-2008, 08:46 AM posted to rec.food.drink.tea
Gyorgy Sajo
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 25
Default Is this real tea?

"Balt" wrote:
On Apr 27, 10:45 pm, "Gyorgy Sajo" wrote:

Hi György (are you Hungarian? :-)


Yes. Thanks for the double dots. :-)

the cake looks to be of pure buds (tea-rügy) like this one
http://cgi.ebay.com/2007-Silver-Bud-...QQcmdZViewItem


Yes, they are indeed buds, they just do not look like any other teabuds that
I have seen before. They have a very unusual structure with many small
leaves developing almost simultaneously from the same base point.

György


 




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