On Apr 13, 1:14*am, Balt > wrote:
> On Apr 12, 4:26*pm, wrote:
>
> > For instance, is there a particular Chinese brand that is good or bad?
> > And which is best approach to fermentation? My goals are improved
> > health, since this tea has been shown to lower cholesterol, and
> > flavor.
>
> Hi,
>
> here are few sellers selling pu-erh
>
> HouDeAsianArt -http://www.houdeasianart.com/- the seller (Guang)
> lives in Texas. His prices are higher, but his teas are top quality,
> too. He is very very honest
>
> Yunnan Sourcing -http://stores.ebay.com/Yunnan-Sourcing-LLC- Scott
> is an american living in Kunming, China and selling pu-erh and other
> teas. Very trustatble, too. His prices are lower than Guangs but the
> shipping costs are higher, since he is sending the teas from China.
>
> Dragon Tea House -http://stores.ebay.com/Dragon-Tea-House- this
> vendor, Gordon, lives in China.
>
> Jing Teashop -http://www.jingteashop.com/- another trustable vendor
>
> Also, you can chceck many blogs that review pu-erh like
>
> http://tuochatea.blogspot.com- This blog is mine :-)
It's awfully nice of you to give out and comment about their honesty
of your competitors. I only drink tea at Chinese restaurants. At
home drink coffe, milk, fruit juices. No beer or hard liquor.
>http://half-dipper.blogspot.com- English gentleman Hobbes writes
> about tea
>
> and certainly there is a pu-erh tea communityhttp://community.livejournal.com/puerh_tea/
>
> Tomas