| What are Mike's Tea Ratings? Please see the bottom of this page to find out! |  | | Chinese Silver Needle |
White Tea is the dried buds and very young leaves
of the tea plant. These are the baby of the tea plant
and are given extra "stuff" to survive in the cold,
cruel world. The tea plant gives
buds extra sugars
for energy, extra antioxidants as a type
of sunblock
to temper the strong rays of the sun, extra amino
acids to build the proteins to make more leaves, and extra c
affeine to ward off hungry bugs that would devour the tender buds. White Tea is dried in covered sheds or dried in ovens.
So that is why White Tea is so special. It is light and slightly sweet. Please note, contrary to many opinions, there is caffeine in white tea. Also there are tiny hairs on the buds.
 | | Lung Ching |
Green Tea is, probably, the original tea. Ancient Chinese put the green leaves into hot water to make a healthy broth. However, they needed to preserve the leaves, so they decided to "fix" the leaves green. After several centuries of experiments, the less-ancient Chinese settled upon throwing the green leaves into a hot pan and turning them around with their hands. The leaves would stay green and not turn brown. They found that using this method also allowed for pretty shapes.And the leaves developed more complex and pleasant flavors because of the sugars and amino acids combined within the hot pans. This is like the crust of bread or a steak. Still today, many Chinese teas are "fixed" green in hot pans carefully attended to by artisans (with calloused hands.)
Chinese green teas have vegetal flavors, but with more pleasant and complex flavors like roasted nuts.
Japanese Green Teas began when Buddhist monks studied at Chinese monasteries. However, Japanese Green Teas are prepared differently than Chinese Green, as the green leaves are "fixed"using hot steam for 30 - 90 seconds. And the extra seconds sure can make a difference, just like when you leave asparagus in a steamer for too long- it becomes mush. After this steam treatment, the leaves are rolled to straighten them out and dry them. The bright green color is preserved using this method. It is the moist steam (versus the dry heat of the Chinese) that defines Japanese Green Teas. Japanese green teas are very vegetal in flavor, like cooked spinach.
Most medical studies on the possible health benefits are done in China and Japan, so most studies are done on green tea. Green has highest concentrations of the most probable compounds that promote continued health the flavonols: EC, EG, ECG and EGCG. These all sound similar, however the one with the most initials (ECGC) is considered the best anti-oxidant. The highest levels of ECGC are found in Spring teas from China and Japan, such as Mejiawu Lung Ching and Ichiban Sencha.
 | | Hunan Yellow Sprout | Yellow teas are a class of rare teas that come from China. The process is secret. However, what Mike has gleaned, is that the green teas used are not completely "fixed" green. The Chinese artisans cover them over with a cloth and the leaves continue to turn color or oxidize slowly and slightly.
Yellow teas are vegetal with slightly sweet fruity flavors and aromas.
Oolong teas were developed in the coastal Chinese province of Fujian, sbout 300 - 400 years ago.We think that oolongs were developed last, because they take much skill to "tease" out the delicious flavors and wonderful colors found in various oolongs. The leaves are plucked in late spring, when the leaves are bigger and tougher. The Chinese have found that leaving the fresh leaves in the hot sunshine of late Spring is very important to bring out the complex and fruity flavors that are prized in oolongs. Then the tea is slowly, slowly rolled either into a long twist or into a tight ball. What is happening is that the leaves are slowly falling apart. All the sugars, amino acids, anti-oxidants found in white tea have become complex parts of the green leaf, and now they slowly fall apart, and recombine into other compounds. Mike calls this the "Death of a Leaf" and he is very happy to enjoy the results: great flavors and creamy body. In the olden days the dried teas were finished over charcoal fires, so they would be good for many months. Nowadays, ovens are used so the bright flavors and aromas of oolongs can be appreciated. However, there are some that appreciate the smokier taste of the traditional "charcoal-fired" oolongs.
Oolongs from China and Taiwan have complex floral and fruity flavors and lovely colors.
Black teas are the ones that we are most familiar with in the West. These were developed in China around the time when teas were first being sold to Europe and America. It probably happened when a Chinese artisan made a mistake and did not fix green teas. And the tea turned black. The Chinese were not quite sure what to do with these teas, so they sold them to the Westerners. That is why most Westerners like black tea and most Asians love green tea. Over the years, more and more Westerners asked for black tea, soon the Chinese were "harvesting mountains" of black tea. The only problem was paying for all that black tea. So the British tried several different ways to overcome this problem,none of them would be politically correct today. They ended up growing teas in India and Ceylon (now called Sri Lanka.) So there are two schools of black tea: the Chinese Teas and the British Legacy Teas (BLT.)
What happens with black tea is that the green leaves are allowed to lose the moisture found in the fresh leaves, that is they "wither." Then the leaves are put into large machines that automate what used to take many Chinese to do, "rolling" the withered leaves in their hands. This strong action mixes up compounds that are used to defend the tea plants and leaves from hungry bugs that would devour and destroy the plant. These self-defense compounds change the anti-oxidants into big, brown compounds that are hard for bugs to digest, so with an upset tummy, the bug bugs off! And we are left with a black tea.
A large factor in how tea tastes in the speed of going from fresh green leaves to the black tea. The British Legacy teas are rushed through the process fairly quickly. While, often, the Chinese find ways to slow that change in color and all the other changes (and there are many changes.)
British Legacy Teas (India, Sri Lanka, and Africa) are more brisk and assertive. Many people find they need to add milk and sugar to enjoy them.
Chinese Black Teas are mellow, complex, and slightly sweet. They may be drunk without milk and sugar.
Puerhs are teas from Yunnan Province in China. They are truly fermented teas, because variousmicrobes are allowed to react with the tea. They come in many colors, shapes and sizes. Some are drunk immediately and some are aged for decades.
Puerhs have earthy flavors. The olderones can be quite complex.
Herbals are dried plant parts and are sometimes called Tisanes. These generally do not have caffeine and are light in body. They are not from the tea plant. However there are many types of herbals.
Mike's Tea Ratings
Michael Harney rates many of our teas on three attributes. A rating of 0 indicates the tea has none of that particular characteristic, and a rating of 5 indicates that it is a primary characteristic.
Briskness refers to a tea's ability to make your mouth pucker, also known as astringency. Some astringency makes tea brisk & desirable (like white wine). Too much briskness can be a problem, but may be controlled by reducing the brewing time.
Body refers to whether or not a tea feels thick in the mouth such as Assam or light such as a white tea. Sometimes this body comes from dissolved solids from the leaves like the Assam, and sometimes it is from all the amino acids like Ichiban Sencha.
Aroma refers to whether or not the tea has a pleasant smell, often the most prized part of tea. That makes sense, since humans can smell much better than we can taste. Sometimes the pleasant smell is teased out of the tea leaf by a skilled tea maker, sometimes it is flavor blended in here by our blenders.
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