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100 per cent Tea

100 per cent Tea
Enjoy your cup of tea with a completely new feeling. Learn everything about teas.
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Articles

Tea in Wudang
2007-11-13 19:37:00
The Wudang Mountains, also known as Wu Tang Shan or simlpy Wudang, are a small mountain range in the Hubei province in central China. Here is a video about tea culture in this part of China.
Anhui green tea
2007-11-12 11:19:00
In this video you can see the traditional way of making melon seed green tea in Anhui region. Anhui region is located in east China or to be more precise across the basins of the Yangtze River and the Huaihe River.
More About: Green , Green Tea
Little extra
2007-11-09 14:15:00
Hello everyone!! I have just put an extra option to my blog. For all those of you whose mother tongue is not English there is a posiblility to read my posts in 8 different languages via Altavista Babelfish translator...Just click the flag and there it goes...The translator is located on the right side of my blog. You should find it easily. I hope that you'll find this extra option useful.Have a pleasant weekend!!
More About: Extra
Inuit teas
2007-11-09 09:47:00
Hello everyone! This time let me mention a web site about kind of exotic teas...well, certainly exotic from my point of view...Here is the link to the web site with some info about Inuit teas....Just click on it...Northern Delights teas
More About: Teas
Tea wine
2007-11-08 09:21:00
Ingredients1 gallon tea (some 16 tea bags per gallon)0.5 lb raisins3 lb sugar2 lemonsyeastMethodDissolve the sugar in the tea. Chop the raisins, and add these to the tea, along with the juice of the lemon. Pour the mixture into a clean bucket and cover the bucket and leave to cool. Once it's at room temperature, add a teaspoon of yeast to the bucket. Leave the mixture for a week, stirring daily. Strain the liquid to remove the raisins, and pour into demijohns, sealing with a fermentation lock. Leave this until fermentation has stopped, then bottle it. The wine is usually ready to drink after a further 2 months.source: The Penguin's Kitchen Companion
More About: Wine
Green tea liqueur
2007-11-07 09:39:00
First let me mention the ingredients you'll need...6 tablespoons of quality green tea leaves 3 cups of vodka 1 cup of sugar syrup 2-3 drops of green food colouringHow to make sugar syrup? Mix equal parts of sugar (white or brown) and water. Bring to a boil and simmer for five minutes. Cool before adding to the rest of stuff in the recipe. By the way, you can also use an equivalent amount of honey.Steep tea leaves in vodka for 24 hours. Do not steep for longer time cause the liquer will turn bitter. Shake the jar or bottle well when you add the tea leaves. Add the sweetener and colouring the next day.Finally, for those who do not know or are not sure....1 tablespoon is 5 ml (1/6 ounce), 1 cup is 236 ml (8 ounces).
More About: Green , Green Tea , Liqueur
Greek Mountain Tea
2007-11-04 08:41:00
Greek Mount ain Tea (Shepherd's Tea) or Tsi to Vounou is made of dried leaves and flowers of Sideritis plants (Ironwort).This tea is very popular in Greece. People use it especially in winter...in time of higher level of colds, aches, pains.It is said that Greek Mountain Tea has positive effects on colds, respiratory problems, digestion, the immune system, mild anxiety and as an antioxidant. The tea is also good as an anti-inflammatory and to reduce fever.
More About: Greek
Tetsubin
2007-11-02 09:25:00
Tetsubin are famous Japanese cast iron teapots. There are two main types of Tetsubin - those that are used for brewing tea and those that are used for heating and carrying water (only) during Japanese tea ceremony. Due to Tetsubin relief decorations on the outside, glazing with enamel on the inside, small size and often unusual shape they are popular collector item. Authentic products have the symbol of manufacturer on the base of teapot.Tetsubin holds some 1/2 litre of water. It is usually sold with a tea strainer and and iron trivet.First Tetsubin appeared in the 17th century. They were used to brew tea or just boil water. Those Tetsubin did not have decotrations like today's teapots.In the 19th century infused tea became very popular. Tetsubin became primarily status symbol, rather then functional kitchen items.Japanese prefectures Iwate and Yamagata are famous for their Tetsubin.And now here are few guidelines on how to use Tetsubin...Do not place tetsubin directly on stove to ...
Chifir'
2007-10-30 09:36:00
Chifir' (or just Chifir) is a type of strong tea brewed in Russia. It is often associated with the Gulag system of Stalin era because inmates have been drinking it. Russian writer and historian Aleksandr Isayevich Solzhenitsyn mentions it in his book The Gulag Archipelago.Some say that Chifir' has kind of psychoactive effect.What does the word Chifir' mean? There are opinions that Chifir'comes from the word "chikhir" meaning a strong Cuacasian wine. In Siberia it means wine that has gone off and become sour and acidic. How to brew it? It is prepared with two or three teaspoons of loose tea per person. It is brewed for 10-15 minutes. It is drunk with sugar and held in mouth.
Yong Chun Fo Shou
2007-10-29 11:12:00
Yong Chun Fo Shou (Fo Shou, Buddha's Hand, Yong Chun Buddha's Hand) is Oolong tea. Fo Shou when translated means "Buddha's Hand". Why? Well, the appearance of its tea leaves resemble the leaves of a Buddha's hand fruit tree. It was first introduced in the Chinese Northern Song Dynasty (960-1127 AD) by a Zen Master, who brought the tea plant from An Xi to Yong Chun county of Fujian province. Tea leaves are tightly rolled and look like kind of question mark. Yong Chun Fo Shou tea has delicate fruity aroma. The colour of infusion is bright yellow.How to brew it? It is recommended to use purple clay or porcelain tea ware. Rinse tea cup and teapot with hot water. The teapot must be 1/4 to 1/3 full with tea leaves. Steep tea leaves in hot water at 100 degrees Celsius for about a minute for the first and second brewing. For any further brewing slightly increase steeping time and temperature.
Tai Ping Hou Kui
2007-10-28 09:13:00
Tai Ping Hou Kui (Monkey Chief, Monkey King, Monkey tea) green tea is one of ten most famous teas in China. In 2004 this tea was declared "King of Tea".Hou Keng village, at the foothill of Tai Ping county, is where best Tai Ping Hou Kui is produced.Leaves of this tea are spear shaped..huge, flat...with kind of criss-cross pattern on them.What about the taste? It's complex...nutty at the beggining and with slowly revealing sweetness..Little bit about brewing...Put 1-2 teaspoons of tea leaves for every 150ml of water. Steep tea leaves in hot water at temperature of 70-80 degrees Celsius for a minute. That is for the first and second brewing. For any further brewing increase steeping time and temperature of water.
Jun Shan Yin Zhen
2007-10-25 11:03:00
Jun Shan Yin Zhen (Mount Jun Silver Needle) is the king of Yellow teas. It is one of China's ten famous teas. The tea is originally from Jun Shan Island (known also as the Island of Immortals) of Lake Dong Ting in Hunan Province.It is a very rare tea. The yearly production of this tea is very limited, using only before and early Qing Ming harvest. Qing Ming ("clear and bright") is one of 24 Chinese solar terms relating to the plucking of tea. In western calendar it is on April 5.Juan Shan Yin Zhen tea includes needle-shape tea buds. Jun Shan Yin Zhen tea has delicate aroma with a touch of floral. The tea taste starts with light, smooth, sweet...and ends with kind of smoky. How to brew it? Rinse tea cup and teapot with hot water. Put 1-2 teaspoons of tea leaves for every 150 ml of water. Steep in hot water at 70-80 degrees Celsius for a minute for first two brewing. Slightly increase steeping time and temperature for further brewing.
Tea for two
2007-10-24 10:08:00
"Tea for two" is probably the most famous tea song. It is a song from the musical "No, No, Nannete" (1925) with music by Vincent Youmans and lyrics by Irving Caesar.The song is sung from the viewpoint of a lovestruck man, who plans the future with his new woman in mind.Here is this song preformed by Tommy Dorsey (1905-1956) and his orchestra. Enjoy!!
Huang Shan Mao Feng
2007-10-23 10:49:00
Huang Shan Mao Feng (Yellow Mountain Fur Peak) tea is one of ten most famous Chinese green teas. It has been grown in the Yellow Mountain (Huang Shan) region of Anhui Province for more than 300 years.Its leaves are young, tender..emerald green. Brewed Huang Shan Mao Feng tea is of jade-green colour. It has light flowery green tea fragrance.How to brew it? Rinse tea cup and teapot with hot water.Use 1-2.5 teaspoons (2.5-3 grams) of tea leaves for every 225 ml of water. Steep tea leaves in hot water at 70-80 degrees Celsius for 1 minute for the first and second brewing. For any further brewing increase both steeping time and temperature.
Bi Tan Lan Xue
2007-10-22 12:38:00
Bi Tan Lan Xue (Lan Ya, Snow Orchid) is the highest quality Chinese jasmine tea. Leaves of this tea are picked during early spring, and carefully preserved until jasmine blooming season, in which they are scented. Jasmine used for preparing this tea is from Si Chuan province.Bi Tan Lan Xue is quite rare tea because only finest young tea buds and leaves are used to make it.It has flat, straight tea leaves with some jasmine petals mixed in it. Bi Tan Lan Xue is a tea of jasmine freshness, soothing taste. Its aftertaste will leave tender sweetness in your mouth.How to brew it? Prepare it in porcelain tea ware. Put 1-2 teaspoons for every150 ml of water. Steep tea leaves in hot water at 70-80 degrees Celsius for 1minute for the first and second brewing. For any further brewing increase steeping time and temperature.
Tasseography
2007-10-21 12:24:00
Tasseography (also known as tasseomancy or tassology) is a fortune-telling method that interprets patterns in tea leaves, coffee grounds, or wine sediments.The terms derive from the French word tasse (cup), which in turn derivesf rom the Arabic tassa (cup), and the Greek suffixes -graph, -logy, and -mancy (divination). After a cup of tea has been poured, without using a tea strainer, the tea is drunk or poured away. The cup should then be shaken well and any remaining liquid drained off in the saucer. The diviner now looks at the pattern of tea leaves in the cup and allows the imagination to play around the shapes suggested by them. They might look like a letter, a heart shape, or a ring. These shapes are then interpreted intuitively or by means of a fairly standard system of symbolism, such as: snake (enmity or falsehood), spade (good fortune through industry), mountain (journey of hindrance), or house (change, success). Source: The Encyclopedia of Occultism & Parapsychology, F...
More About: Tasseography
Sweet tea
2007-10-20 11:00:00
Sweet tea is a variety of iced tea where sugar or other sweetener is added to the hot water before brewing, while brewing the tea or post-brewing, but before the beverage is chilled and served. Sweet tea is especially popular in southern parts of the USA.
More About: Sweet
More of Chinese tea quotes
2007-10-19 10:21:00
"Kissing is like drinking tea through a tea-strainer; you’re always thirsty afterwards."Chinese saying"So I must rise at early dawn, as busy as can be, to get my daily labor done, and pluck the leafy tea."Le YihBallad of the Tea PickersEarly Ch’ing Dynasty, 1644"I am in no way interested in immortality, but only in the taste of tea."Lu t'ung"The best quality tea must have creases like the leathern boot of Tartar horsemen, curl like the dewlap of a mighty bullock, unfold like a mist rising out of a ravine, gleam like a lake touched by a zephyr, and be wet and soft like a fine earth newly swept by rain."Lu Yu (d. 804)Chinese sage, hermit
More About: Quotes
Drinking tea with friends
2007-10-17 14:32:00
"What is the most wonderful thing for people like myself who follow the Way of Tea?My answer: the oneness of host and guest created through 'meeting heart to heart' and sharing a bowl of tea."Soshitsu Sen Grand Master XIVUrasenke School of Tea
More About: Friends , Drinking
Drinking tea...alone
2007-10-15 08:46:00
"In my own hands I hold a bowl of tea; I see all of nature represented in its green color. Closing my eyes I find green mountains and pure water within my own heart. Silently sitting alone and drinking tea, I feel these become part of me."Soshitsu SenGrand Master XIVUrasenke School of Tea
More About: Drinking
Hong Kong-style milk tea
2007-10-14 08:42:00
Hong Kong-style milk tea or Dai-pai-dong milk tea is a beverage that is made of black tea and evaporated milk. Similar drinks from other parts of Asia are The buble tea (boba tea) from Taiwan and the Malaysian Teh tarik. Hong Kong-style milk tea includes mix of several types of black tea (which and at what proportion are secrets of famous milk tea sellers), evaporated milk and sugar. Sugar is usually added by customers themselves. A very interesting feature of Hong Kong-style milk tea is that a sack cloth bag is used to filter the tea leaves. It is believed that such a bag makes the tea smoother, gradually develops and intense brown colour as a result of prolonged tea drenching. This bag looks like a pantyhose so this milk tea is also know as "silk stocking milk tea".Some people think that milk should be added before pouring the tea, but there are also those who claim the opposite. It should also be mentioned that the iced milk tea prepared with ice cubes also exists.A cup of hot mi...
More About: Hong Kong , Milk , Style , Hong
Japanese tea terms
2007-10-13 12:46:00
Chabatake: Tea PlantationChaboko: Tea Chest or BoxChaire or Chaki: Tea CaddyChanoki: Tea PlantChanoyu: Tea Ceremony or PartyChasen: WhiskChawan: Tea BowlFutaoki: Lid or Ladle RestKakoi: Tea enclosure within a houseKensui: Waste-Water BowlKoicha: A thick, pasty Chanoyu teaKoshikake: Waiting Bench (in inner or outer garden)Machiai: Portico in which guests wait until they are summoned to enter the tea roomMatcha: A powder green tea used in ChanoyuMidsuya: Anteroon where tea utensils are washed and arranged before being brought inMizusashi: Water jarRoji: Tea Garden, or garden path which connects the machiai with the tea roomSoto Roji: Outer GardenSukiya: Tea RoomTsukubai: Water Basin for Tea WaterUchi Roji: Inner GardenUsucha: A foamy green Chanoyu teaYoritsuki: Waiting Room
More About: Japanese , Terms
Yixing teapots
2007-10-12 09:54:00
Yixing (pronounced as "ee-shing"), near Shangai, has a long tradition of the "pottery capital" of China. World's first teapots were created there during the Ming Dynasty (1368-1644). These distinctive reddish stoneware teapots came to be considered the "best vessel for brewing tea".Yixing teapots are made from the special "Zisha" (purple sand) clay. They are not glazed. When tea is brewed in these teapots a tiny amount of tea is absorbed in the interior. Yixing teapot is never washed with soap...you just rinsed it withcold water. With continued use, a layer of tea sediment is formed.Many of Yixing teapots made for Chinese market are kind of small (100-300 ml) by Western standards. This is done so the entire content of the pot may be quickly emptied after each infusion. That way tea is always served fresh, hot and strong...
Tamaryokucha
2007-10-11 10:08:00
Tamaryokucha is a fine Japanese green tea. The word tamaryokoucha means "curly green tea" because of the curled shape of the leaves. Such shape of tea leaves is result of the extra processing steps. Tamaryokucha is made primarily on Japanese Kyushu island. Local Kumamoto prefecture produces most of Tamaryokucha in Japan.There are two types of Tamaryokucha. Pan-fried and steamed. Pan-fried, or Kamairi style was the original technique used for Tamaryokucha learned from Chinese green tea production. Current market tendency is to producemore steamed Tamaryokucha.Tamaryokucha has a deep, earthy flavor...It can be steeped more than once, each time creating little bit different flavor and aroma.This type of tea also requires a slightly cooler water temperature to bring out the full flavor and avoid "cooking" the tea leaves.
More About: Tamar , Amar
Awabancha
2007-10-10 10:48:00
Awabancha is quite an unusual Japanese tea. During summer, tea leaves are picked and then boiled.After boiling, tea leaves are rubbed and placed in a barrel to ferment. They are then dried under the sun. Awabancha is made in Tokushima (city on Japanese Shikoku island).Awabancha has kind of stale aroma
Bancha
2007-10-09 10:36:00
Bancha ("common tea") is a Japanese green tea of somehow lower grade. It is harvested from the second flush of Sencha between summer and autumn.Bancha is not very popular in famous tea production areas cause teas which can achieve higher prices are grown. Still, in rural mountain areas of Japan Bancha is still popular everyday drink.Bancha has milder flavour and the lowest level of caffeine among any standard Japanese green tea. Like any green tea it is rich in antioxidants.How to brew it? Heat the water at temperature of around 80°C. Pour the water on the Bancha (1 teaspoon per cup) and let it steep for 1 to 2 minutes.
Botebotecha
2007-10-08 10:15:00
Botebotecha is a tea or maybe better kind of snack, available in Japanese city of Matsue (western Honshu). It is made by mixing together tea flowers and hot tea in a tea bowl using a tea whisk. After that shiitake mushrooms, koyadofu (tofu) and other vegetables are added while the mixture is still hot.The name Botebotecha comes from "bote-bote" sound that is made by the tea whisk as tea is mixed. Botebotecha used to be a food of poor during famine in the Edo period. Now Botebotecha is served as local delicacy. It is customary to pat the bottom of the tea bowl as you drink the tea, vegetables and all and without using chopsticks, in one long gulp.
Tea of Hachijuhachiya
2007-10-06 16:40:00
In traditional Japanese calendar the first day of Spring is called Risshun. The 88th day after Risshun is called Hachijuhachiya (literally 88th night). This day is special because it is the beginning of year's first tea picking. Hachijuhachiya slightly varies from year to year but usually occcurs in early May. "First flush" of young leaves is considered by tea experts as the absoulute finest in quality, freshness and flavour. It is also believed that such tea will keep you from paralysis. This first tea is important for traders, farmers and consumers.
Hukamushi
2007-10-05 10:35:00
Hukamushi (Fukamushi) green tea, which means "deep-steamed tea" is fragnant, heavily flavoured tea. Prolonged steaming process of this tea results in less bitter, more mild tea,with less green aroma. It makes a great iced tea.Hukamushi is often called "misty green tea" because slightly cloudy effect of tea's infusion. How to brew Hukamushi tea? Use 1 teaspoon of loose tea leaves per cup. Heat water until 77-85 degrees Celsius. Let steep for 30-60 seconds. Multiple infusion is possible.Hukamushi tea is not common outside Japan.
More About: Mush
Kukicha
2007-10-04 09:19:00
Kukicha, stalk or stick tea is made of four sorts of stems, stalks and twigs of Camellia sinensis.Kukicha has light flavour, fresh green aroma. It has very light yellow-green colour. It can be added to a juice to make a drink for kids.Kukicha is a strong antioxidant and its level of caffeine is the lowest among all traditional teas. For best results, Kukicha is steeped in water between 70°C to 80°C (155°F - 180°F) for three minutes (otherwise, like all green teas, the result will be a bitter, unsavoury brew).Some suggest that Kukicha can be dry fried in an iron pan to make it more alkaline and good for diseases that thrive in acidic conditions.It is an inexpensive tea of enthusiasts, rarely drank outside Japan.
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