/Niklas
"niisonge" <niis...@yahoo.com> skrev i meddelandet
news:b9d51007-4ab3-4b99...@e27g2000yqd.googlegroups.com...
Jim
PS Ill probably break down and have to order a slab of Hunan Qian
Liang from the Internet which is the well known trade name. You
already know it is fermented tea. Someone telling me it is hei cha is
superfluous.
> What teas do you expect to drink this year?
Oh, there are so many! One worth mentioning, which I don't think has
been discussed here, is Guranse from Nepal: strikingly similar to a
good Darjeeling and reliable year-to-year, but cheaper than real
Darjeelings. Plus, it makes a plausible claim of being organic.
/Lew
---
Lew Perin / pe...@acm.org
http://www.panix.com/~perin/babelcarp.html
recent addition: Dazhong Tuocha
Jim
On Dec 30, 7:29 am, Lewis Perin <pe...@panix.com> wrote:
> niisonge <niiso...@yahoo.com> writes:
> > What teas do you expect to drink this year?
>
> Oh, there are so many! One worth mentioning, which I don't think has
> been discussed here, is Guranse from Nepal: strikingly similar to a
> good Darjeeling and reliable year-to-year, but cheaper than real
> Darjeelings. Plus, it makes a plausible claim of being organic.
>
> /Lew
> ---
> Lew Perin / pe...@acm.orghttp://www.panix.com/~perin/babelcarp.html
> recent addition: Dazhong Tuocha
I have a thing of zi xun (purple bamboo; Chinese green) which I
(absurdly) have not opened yet.
I need some fresh oolongs, and to rearrange my space to make it easier
to drink gong fu style (currently I have to get up and go elsewhere to
get more water).
Otherwise, I'll be pretty happy finishing off the teas I have. :)
N.
With Guranse, I think this is true only in a narrow, technical sense.
Guranse is apparently grown just over the border from Darjeeling.
Ah! This is exactly the kind of tea I want to try! I want to try
replicated teas grown in other areas. See if they can really be of the
same quality as the originals. A friend of mine in Zhangping said some
Taiwan business people set up shop in Zhangping to grow Gaoshan Cha
(High Mountain Oolong) - except in Zhangping, where they're growing
anyway, isn't really high mountains. Still, it intrigues me enough
that I'll just have to go there and see for myself.
Jim
On Dec 30, 12:40 pm, Lewis Perin <pe...@panix.com> wrote:
> Space Cowboy <netst...@ix.netcom.com> writes:
> > My Guranse is identified as a Black Nepal. The dried and infused leaf
> > reminds me of a green Darjeeling. The aroma is Darjeeling like. The
> > taste is a little more harsh with more sweet than dry muscatel
> > aftertaste.
>
Jim
Check out the photos in this blog:
http://blog.sina.com.cn/s/articlelist_1224489453_11_1.html
These were taken on the tea farm in Zhangping.
Yes, you're right about that. But the Darjeeling district extends to
the border, and what matters in the cup is the climate and soil (not
to mention the agriculture and manufacture!)
> And if I use the business addresses in Kathmandu it is way way West
> in the Himalayas about 300km.
That's irrelevant. There are Darjeeling companies whose head offices
are in Calcutta, and their tea isn't considered to come from the
Ganges delta.
> If you want cheap Darjeeling I buy Sikkim.
I drink Sikkim tea, too, but in my experience over a few years Guranse
has had a consistent level of quality I haven't seen in the Sikkim
teas I've drunk.
Jim
Jim
On Dec 31, 8:35 am, Lewis Perin <pe...@panix.com> wrote:
> Space Cowboy <netst...@ix.netcom.com> writes:
>
> > If I place Guranse tea estates near Dhankuta Nepal it is a few
> > Himalayan peaks 100km West of the border.
>
> Yes, you're right about that. But the Darjeeling district extends to
> the border, and what matters in the cup is the climate and soil (not
> to mention the agriculture and manufacture!)
>
I think I've settled on organic Nilgiri and Ceylon for my blacks.
Occasionally a heavier, Assam type, breakfast tea. I'm still
experimenting with my taste in greens. Toci