A Tea Addict's Journal

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Monday August 14, 2006

August 14, 2006 · Leave a Comment

As I said, I would go back on Monday, although this time, I only had about an hour. Sat down, and tasted two dancongs. Both are roasted. One (the first one we had) was a little more robust, a bit mellow, but also a bit sour and lacks a fragrance that you’d expect from a dancong. The second was better, with more of a bite, although Tiffany used a little too much leaves and left it a little bitter.

I need to go to another teahouse, maybe today or Wednesday. I also need to book a ticket to Beijing…. ugh

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Saturday August 12, 2006

August 12, 2006 · 5 Comments

I have talked about FookMingTong before, mostly in connection with the TGY that I received via my parents from them. It’s not a bad TGY, but somewhat pricy. Today, I went to the IFC mall, which has a branch of their shop in it. My friend and I, for lack of better things to do, decided to drop in there.

I was going to compared their loose puerh and want to get a taste test, so after being ignored by the sales for a few minutes, I got one of them to sit down and brew one for us.

They have 3 loose puerhs. One is a “regular” one. One is a 1989 puerh, so they say, and the last is a “unknown year” one (named the same as the one at the Best Tea House). The crucial difference, however, is that apparently they’re all cooked, not raw. Eewwwww

I didn’t know that because they only show the tea in these weird little display cases. Imagine a slightly thicker CD jewel case, all plastic, with a little round hole on top that I suppose let you touch the tea or something. The lighting was soft, and the plastic a little stained by the tea, so I couldn’t really tell what I was looking at. When I did get to smell the dry tea they put into the gaiwan, it smelled a bit cooked with that mouldy smell, but then, it’s hard to say too.

They brewed the 1989 first. The guy was going to do a 1 minute first infusion after a brief wash. That alone should’ve tipped me off that something was wrong…. 1 minute? I told him to cut it short, and he did, and I think by that time the sales were already rather annoyed with me, the youngish man with an attitude.

Taste — your typical cooked, a bit sweet, a bit flat. It has some nice notes, but it doesn’t have that bite that is customary of raw tea that is aged. It also smelled like a cooked… and it looks like one. Oh well.

I didn’t even stay for the second tea. But before that, I asked them if they sell any raw puerh. They do, apparently, in cake form. That’s fine, I asked to see the cake, and they handed me this thing that was wrapped in your usual paper (using FookMingTong’s own paper wrapper, thus telling you nothing) sealed with a sticker on the back, and on top of it, a layer of plastic that is taped together. I asked if they have a sample, at least, that is opened, and the answer was… no. “They all come wrapped from our warehouse, and they are all sealed that way”. No sample cake at all so I can look at? “No, we don’t have any”.

How do they expect us to buy cakes? I guess you can always sell it to tourists or gift givers, who couldn’t care less what’s actually in it, but seriously…. no sample and no goods to look at? I could be buying some mouldy rotting cake for all I know.

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Friday August 11, 2006

August 11, 2006 · 12 Comments

I spent the entire afternoon today in the Best Tea House again. This time I had the whole day free to do tasting. So after lunching, I went up to where the store is and sat down to do some tasting.

Here’s our host, Tiffany

The first thing we had was actually the 1997 sample of Xizhihao I brought over. It was, once again, a comparison test thing. She likes it, but was trying to sell me something else which she deems as better. That cake is this one:

Of which there are many tongs in the store

And the list price for one piece of this is close to $300 USD. Not cheap by any stretch of the imagination. It was one of the first generation of high quality cakes produced by Taiwanese merchants. It was made in 1996, and called the Zhenchunya hao. Taiwan is already pretty much sold out on this thing, and so the Best Tea House has the market basically cornered.

The cake is a more subdued tea. Compared to the 1997 Xizhihao, which is rather spicy in taste and has a strong menthol flavour, the Zhenchunya hao is more mellow and restrained. It is a bit creamy/milky in flavour and smell, with a bitter edge. It doesn’t, however, have that menthol sort of taste that is rather common, it seems, in Xizhihao cake. I do not know if it is the aging or if it is the tea, as menthol tastes do tend to disappear over time.

After this, which took about two hours, we went on to something else (and another tea buyer joined in, a gentlemen called Ben). Our skilled host brewed two teas at the same time like this

Bet you can’t do that.

On the left (our left) is tea from a 2005 tuo. It’s a 500g tuo, selling for 25 USD (yeah, that’s a lot of tea for not a lot of money, which Tiffany tried to push on me), made by the Fengqing tea factory. The liquor is slightly cloudy, with a very sweet, mellow taste, almost green tea like. I don’t like it, and I doubt I’ll buy something like this.

The one on the right, which was brewed simultaneously, is this:

Sorry for the unclear picture. It is a cake from 1997 as well, also from the Fengqing factory. This one brewed a stronger liquor, but the OVERWHELMING TASTE was cigarette. It smelled like cigarette, and tasted like cigarette. The smoke flavour was so strong, it overpowered everything else. However, smoke generally do go away after a while — sometimes after a long while. There are hints of camphor and wood and other things in there, even a hint of sweetness, but the initial, overwhelming taste of cigarette is quite jarring. I might buy one of these for experiment/education purposes. I don’t think it is bad. I think it is just not ready. Price? $60 USD.

By then, it was 5:15, and we were all pretty tea drunk (the three of us). Then, to top it off, I had to taste test for lesseps the loose sheng that they sell. Apparently, they mix a little shou in there, but still, the taste is mostly that of aged sheng, spicy, mellow, the usual mix, and going after 6-7 infusions. Not quite the same as my loose sheng that is aged, but similar enough, I suppose, for the purpose. (tell me if you don’t want it after this description)

I was going to try a dancong and other things too, but by then, it was too late, and I was too caffeinated. My stomach was also hungry after the aged sheng (aged puerh ALWAYS makes me hungry) so I was off.

But before I finish — just a few more pics of the place and the things they sell, this is only one part of the store.

Two display cases

And finally: the Red Label, selling for a grand total of $5000 USD.

Next visit is scheduled for Monday 🙂 and Sunday I will probably go to another tea shop. So many places, so little time!

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Thursday August 10, 2006

August 10, 2006 · 9 Comments

For a tea lover, Hong Kong is quite a dangerous place.

I say that because today, in the course of doing non-tea related things around town, I walked by 3 different teashops, all selling attractive looking (packaged) and somewhat pricey teas. I was getting a haircut, and after I left the haircut joint, I passed by a branch of Fook Ming Tong, which I have talked about before — well packaged teas selling to the gift-giving crowd. They have two types of puerh (loose) on sale, for example. Both are mixed cakes, with some cooked and some raw tea mixed in. Not cheap — $10 USD for 1 oz for the pricier ones, and about 2/3 of that for the cheaper one. The woman didn’t offer me a taste though, and I didn’t exactly have enough time for one anyway for me to bother asking for one, so I dodged a bullet (in the sense that I didn’t buy anything).

Then, I walked by another tea store somewhere along the way to meeting with my sister (for afternoon tea, complete with scones). This one’s an older tea shop in Hong Kong called Ying-kei. This particular branch is newer, and is jazzed up a bit to attract the same sort of people who shop at Fook Ming Tong. I walked by, but didn’t go in. I know they won’t treat me nicely because I don’t look the part.

Then, after our afternoon tea, I went to a supermarket of sorts where they also have a few food outlets, and when I was walked towards the burger joint, there it was, another tea vendor. This one’s called Ming Cha. As you can see, it’s a nice website. Apparently (according to a tea friend in HK) this company was started by some product design person who likes tea. His tea expertise is not great, but he is good at packaging, and the stuff is packaged quite nicely. HOWEVER, the place does NOT offer any free tasting at all (Fook Ming Tong does, they just didn’t ask me to try). You have to BUY a serving of tea at this place to try something, or you can sniff the (slightly overexposed) dry leaves.

That’s just unacceptable. The prices they charge for the single serving tea is at least something like $6 USD. While it’s not bad compared to US prices for shit tea, this is just not kosher in a place like HK where I can get free tasting for free. And I don’t want to sink $30 before finding the right kind of tea that I want. AND, they brew it for you when you want the single serving, and they use a TIMER. Horror of horrors. The guy selling the tea didn’t know as much as I do, which is also a Very Bad Thing. So even though I was tempted three times today, I didn’t buy anything.

Back to the Best Tea House tomorrow with more puerh to share with Tiffany. They’re not the only show in town worth going to, but I like them. I should pay a visit to another place in a few days.

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Wednesday August 9, 2006

August 9, 2006 · 1 Comment

So I went to the Best Tea House today. I went to the main branch, where Tiffany, a trusted salesperson, was working today. I brought with me some goodies — the 99 Xizhihao sample from Hou De, as well as the Lao Banzhang from 2005.

No pictures today, as I was short on time. We tried both of them (with her brewing) and she thinks they are quite good — similar to some other cakes that she was showing me in the store that they have.

It’s rather interesting to see the sort of comparisons she makes and the observations she has about each particular tea. For example, she noticed that whereas drinking the 99 your lips do not stick to each other when you close your mouth, for the Lao Banzhang when you close your mouth, the lips get dry very quickly. It’s something I never noticed before, but she is right about that.

Yeah, lips and puerh tea. Never thought of that before.

Another thing she noted is that the fragrance of both the Xizhihao are not exceptionally high. While acknowledging that they are both powerful tea (in terms of cha qi) the fragrance is a little lacking. Of course, this might have to do with the “jet lagged” effect that Toki has talked about. It might also just be the case — not terribly fragrant, but strong.

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Monday August 7, 2006

August 7, 2006 · 2 Comments

I’m back in Hong Kong, tea paradise.

It’s funny though.  When I’m in Hong Kong, I drink lots of “tea in a cup” and rarely brew gongfu style.  It’s a little too much work for home, and it is also a little odd doing the whole thing in front of my family (parents).  I’m sure my mom will ridicule me for being such a tea snob, not that she doesn’t already.

I also consume WAY more tea than I usually do in the States.  Since I am basically drinking tea all day long, with little spells of water in between, caffeine intake is easily 2-3 times normal.  I will drink something in the morning when I wake up (in a cup) then go out, and visit a teashop in the afternoon (massive caffeine overload) then come home at night, and drink some more (fresh leaves).  Not a good idea…

Then again, it’s really hard to avoid tea here.  You go out, and they serve you tea pretty much by default.  You come home, and they bring out the tea.  Wherever you go, it’s tea, tea, tea.  It’s not a wonder that teas are quite nice here, and the selection is usually pretty wide.

Off to Best Tea House tomorrow.  I’m going to bring my Xizhihao sample there and see what they think.  It’ll be fun, especially since I haven’t been back since Christmas.  Second day I come back and I go hit the circuit, lol.  I am really an addict.

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Sunday August 6, 2006

August 6, 2006 · Leave a Comment

I am drinking this Darjeeling blend teabag my girlfriend bought me for my trip. It’s made by a Japanese company, and it’s one of those “pyramid teabags” that allow the tea to flow a little more freely than your regular joe teabags.

The taste? Tastes like a Darjeeling second flush blended with some Assam. Not a surprise really, since I think pure Darjeeling is a little expensive for teabag makers, and the tea leaves they use aren’t fannings either, but broken pekoe, so there’s an added cost to that. Not a bad tea for on the go, and beats Tazo or other teabags by a mile.

It’s nice to have a significant other who feeds your addiction 🙂

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Friday August 4, 2006

August 4, 2006 · Leave a Comment

Two days till going back to Hong Kong. As nice as it is there, I’m leaving behind my girlfriend and two cats. 🙁

On a more tea-related, and practical, matter, is whether or not I should be bringing pots. I think I am leaving my puerh pot here, for my girlfriend’s use. I might also leave behind my Taiwan oolong pot, simply because it probably won’t see much action while I am in China. The rest, however (the TGY pot, the high fired TGY pot, and the dancong one) are going with me, I think. I can see myself drinking lots of each of those teas.

Then there’s the question of other teaware. I’ve been wanting a new fairness cup for a while now, mostly because mine’s so cheap and ugly. I can also use a nicer drinking cup, and a nicer gaiwan for my own use. As nice as it is to not have to worry about breaking your $10 gaiwan, once in a while I do want to use something better.

All this means I will be shelling out $$ for teaware once I get to Hong Kong. I really should hold out for China, where they’re all much cheaper….

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Thursday August 3, 2006

August 3, 2006 · Leave a Comment

I just tried the 1997 sample of Xizhihao puerh from Hou De. It is really not bad, and better than I remember from my metting with Phyll and Bearsbearsbears in LA. That time, the tea tasted a bit flat and boring, but this time, it’s much better, spicy, minty, woody, and deep. I htink the water was not hot enough last time, and we didn’t put in enough leaves.

I am going to bring this, and other samples of puerh, back to HK with me, and bring it to my favourite teahouse to see what the salesperson there says about it. I know her pretty well and she’s pretty willing to share her knowledge. More reports on HK teahouses in a week’s time.

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Saturday July 29, 2006

July 29, 2006 · 2 Comments

The weather here is simply a little too hot to drink decent hot tea. Since I am poor and have no air conditioning, drinking some piping hot tea in sweltering 35 degrees temperature is just a little much.

That has driven me to iced tea, but I suspect that I drank an overabundance of iced longjing the other day. I used some of my mingqian longjing for iced tea (the dump in room temperature water and brew method), but I think it’s too “cold” for me, and yesterday I suffered from some serious stomach ailments.

A Chinese doctor has told me before not to drink much green tea, as I am natrually “cold” based and shouldn’t drink “cold” teas that much. I should really just listen and not do stupid things like this again 🙁

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