Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
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 | Display Modes |
Posted to rec.food.drink.tea
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have been drinking loose leaf tea daily for somewhere over a year
now, and have largely focused on developing a sense for what is out there in the very broadest sense: Japanese Green, Chinese Green, light oolong, dark oolong, pu-er (cooked, raw), assam, darjeeling, china black(red), etc. Now I am at the point where I am trying to focus on the finer distinctions in various teas, such as regional characteristics, production techniques, time of harvest, etc. I am doing this casually, mind you, but with an intent to slowly learn as much as possible about tea for my own personal enjoyment. I have thus far focused a bit on taste and I think my sense is developing. I have some problems brewing consistently, but I now notice things that I originally didn't even think about at all a year ago: e.g., mouth feel rather than just taste. In an attempt to evolve my evaluation of tea, I am thinking about bringing a slightly more analytical focus to spent tea leaves. Does anyone have any good resources in this regard? Here are some things I have noticed: 1. tea leaf shape appears largely the same, but size varies. Oolongs are larger leafed, greens are typically smaller, often with just tea buds. Pu-er is typically large as well. I suppose this is related to the ability of delicate young (i.e., small) teas being able to withstand the harsher production techniques required in the oolong manufacture. 2. whole leaf/part leaf: many teas, such as Japanese tea and India tea, are not whole leaf. At first I thought of this as a negative characteristic, but now I am more interested in learning what torn leaves contribute to tea. I generally like Japanese greens and many India teas, so how can the fact that they are cut (possibly machine harvested?) be a bad thing? 3. leaf color: of course, green tea is largely green, but not all green's are equal. Gyokuro is famous for being shaded and a darker green. I had a longjing that was yellowish. Oolongs and black teas are darker. Pu-er teas seem to reveal a lot regarding color. At some point online, I even saw an analysis of color *patterns* on tea leaves (e.g., examining where the leaves should be red in a properly processed tea). 4. leaf condition: what really made me start thinking about tea leaves more carefully is that I was drinking a tea after trying gongfu brewing in a small cheap yixing-style pot for the first time and I noticed that all of the leaves were crinkled and semi-furled afterwards. I wondered if it was because I put too many in the pot, but I don't think that is it. Why does some tea unfurl and some tea not unfurl--is it a result of roasting? Some of the tea (my example is a low grade Kings Tea dark oolong from Ten Ren) seems extraordinarily dark--almost black. I have seen this in Pu-er as well. In the case of pu-er, are there ways to determine wet storage/dry storage from leaf condition after brewing? 5. miscellaneous. pouring from a gaiwan through a tea filter, I have noticed that some teas produce a lot of white/yellow "fuzz" that I at one point collected and rolled into a soft ball (not sure why). I received lots of fuzz from green tea with lots of buds, so thought the buds may be the source at first. But I have also seen it in Oriental Beauty, which I had thought of as a dark oolong. What does it signify? Also, some tea leaves seem shiny and firm after brewing, some are dull and fall apart. I have seen some talk of differences in the edge shape of leaves (jagged or not?). I have heard mention of certain teas having holes in the leaves from tiny bugs--is this a sign that the leaves are organic? picked at a certain time of year? I often find myself looking at tea leaves after I drink tea, but I am never sure what I am looking for. I know there are a ton of different things that can likely be told from leaves, and maybe there is no easy way to catalog it all into an easy reference. But if anyone has resources on this topic, I would be interested in hearing more. If anyone has thoughts about the observations above, or other observations, I would also be curious to read them. Sorry for long post. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Bay leaves | General Cooking | |||
Bay leaves | General Cooking | |||
The Re-Use of Leaves | Tea | |||
Tea Leaves | Preserving | |||
Bay Leaves... | General Cooking |