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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Space Cowboy
 
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A brain teazer. I'd agree but traditionally oxidized smaller leaf
infuses more quickly so it must be more 'porous' or it could simply be
skimming or sloughing the crusted oxidized surface. I can't even
account for the quicker infusion. As I noted before the smaller leaf
does not seem as 'bloated' proportionally as the larger oolong leaf.
I need to get leaf grades in black, oolong and green and notice the
absorbtion in each category. It is hard to get graded leaf across
each spectrum. I tried a new oolong yesterday expecting expecting a
more noticeable water drop but it behaved like some smaller blacks. I
suspect it was a less oxidized than the other oolongs. Just more
variables.

Jim

(Melinda) wrote in message . com>...
> I'm not a scientist, I don't even play one on an infomercial, but
> here's my thought. If, at a microscopic or cellular level, there are
> more open "cavaties" in a large leaf than a small one (because the
> small one has had more of it's "cavaties" crushed in the processing)
> then there would be more little pockets for the water to seep into
> after you had poured it in initially. If the water was able to get
> everywhere it eventually would be able to (by steeping for a period of
> time) when it was first poured in, then you wouldn't see a water drop
> because, indeed, the water isn't being removed. The only reason it
> could be dropping is if it were seeping into spaces it couldn't access
> immediately after you poured the water in. I hope that made sense,
> bleh....I need another cuppa....
>
> Melinda

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