Tea Adventures

Tea knowledge is endless. Today I discovered that these original…

Tea knowledge is endless. Today I discovered that these original seed grown Dragonwell roots are in fact, a few hundred, maybe even a thousand years old. The roots can live that long even for these bush type ‘Guan Mu’ types, as long as they are pruned to the roots every decade. If left to itself without management, the roots will die in 50 or so years. The old seed grown varietals are fleshier than Longjing #43, the ‘improved’ varietal, that sprouts early but is slightly bitter and much less sophisticated in taste and has none of that orchid fragrance as the seed grown old bushes.
Tea is truly a cultural history that mere machinery and a nice hillside can not replace.

內涵 -The idea of Nei Han is difficult to translate. It means…

內涵 -The idea of Nei Han is difficult to translate. It means ‘internal value’, or intrinsic value perhaps, or even, inner meaning. That is how they describe handmade Dragonwell, an increasingly rare treasure of the past. It takes a person over 20 years to master this level of skill, and so, no machine can replace someone’s brain, dexterity, dedication, and ability to endure hardship (220 C hot wok by bare hand, no sleep for days….), all requirements to make Dragonwell completely by hand.
I will have about a Jin or so of this soon, I’ve asked the tea master to make some just for those of us who want this out of the world experience.

I just died and went to tea heaven. I am sure there is such a…

I just died and went to tea heaven. I am sure there is such a place just for me in the afterlife, where I drink this 100% handmade Dragonwell whenever I want. The luxury of it having taken 4 hours to make not withstanding, it is the sweetest, most infinitely expanding bouquet on the palate. The leaves dance quickly to the bottom, said the tea master, because the fact is hand making makes…

Early morning on Westlake, Hangzhou. The nicest day I can pray…

Early morning on Westlake, Hangzhou. The nicest day I can pray for as far as being Chinese: misty rain, cool, mosquito free. Poetic and lyrical, scenes of swaying boats and gentle willow trees. Whale size koi fishes happily hopping up the water. Tourists not too loud yet.
The worst day in terms of tea: tea master probably sleeping in. With this unusual rainfall, there should be no harvesting today.

The Dragonwell on the left and the right have minuscule…

The Dragonwell on the left and the right have minuscule differences, so I was put to task to judge and discern the difference. The left has better fragrance and sophisticated entry and aftertaste while the right glass has more perfect looking leaves. The right is probably the first picking and the left is maybe a couple ones into it, both being first flushes, Pre-Ming, and from Lion’s Peak. The right is slightly lower elevation than the left, I hazarded…..
Both were probably harvested around end of March within a day or so of each other.

All correct, said tea master. The right is about 100 meters lower than the left, but it is the first picking, while the left sprouted a little earlier and has been picked for 2 days more. Harvest date: March 27 to the right and 29 on the left.

Not being particularly a Dragonwell specialist, I am not sure how I managed to parse through such small differences.
Why purchase so early, he asked, as every early firing goes to high roller corporations to gift to government officials? They want the earliest of the early, and only really sophisticated customer palates can discern the difference anyway? Why compete with the high rollers? April 2 harvest is still Pre-Ming after all, and slightly less expensive!

It matters to my customers, I said, that they get the best, the earliest, even if they are not Communist officials!

Tomorrow: on the ground and ready to report! This year, the temps were really uneven, cold one day and hot another, causing yields to vary a lot day to day.

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