View Poll Results: What's your cuppa tea ??
- Voters
- 83. You may not vote on this poll
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White
11 13.25% -
Green
28 33.73% -
Oolong
13 15.66% -
Pu erh
7 8.43% -
Masala Chai
2 2.41% -
Matcha
4 4.82% -
Rooibos
10 12.05% -
Herbal
8 9.64% -
Iced tea
17 20.48% -
Dirty Sock (white athletic)
1 1.20% -
Dirty Sock (black dress)
1 1.20% -
Black
40 48.19%
Multiple Choice Poll.
Results 1,291 to 1,300 of 5501
Thread: Tea anyone ??!!
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11-03-2012, 07:45 AM #1291
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- May 2010
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Thanked: 1160Happy Birfsday Nosey....That's the spirit lad ! Biscuits away !!!
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The Following User Says Thank You to Nightblade For This Useful Post:
NoseWarmer (11-03-2012)
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11-03-2012, 08:10 AM #1292
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The Following User Says Thank You to fonthunter For This Useful Post:
NoseWarmer (11-03-2012)
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11-03-2012, 08:25 AM #1293
HAPPY BIRTHDAY MATE!
Don't know if it is the same over there but down here we have a birthday tradition (birthday punches) I'm sure you can guess what it entails...,you are owed 44 of them today though!
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The Following User Says Thank You to Mcduck For This Useful Post:
NoseWarmer (11-03-2012)
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11-03-2012, 09:31 AM #1294
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The Following User Says Thank You to Slur For This Useful Post:
NoseWarmer (11-03-2012)
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11-03-2012, 11:26 AM #1295
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11-03-2012, 01:39 PM #1296
- Join Date
- May 2010
- Location
- Denver Rocky Mtn. High Rent,Colorado
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- 8,705
Thanked: 1160yes it does count.
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The Following User Says Thank You to Nightblade For This Useful Post:
NoseWarmer (11-03-2012)
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11-03-2012, 06:09 PM #1297
TOTM: Mayan Treasure
Black tea with pieces of cacao and chocolate. Some sugar added.
Very nice. I wish I could accompany this cup of tea with an Austrian Sacher
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11-03-2012, 06:30 PM #1298
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11-04-2012, 07:24 AM #1299
Could somebody please tell me the difference between a raw pu erh and a ripe pu erh?
Thank you.
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11-04-2012, 07:30 AM #1300
- Join Date
- Apr 2009
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- Budapest / Hungary / Europe / Earth
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- 1,395
Thanked: 298Raw pu'er and maocha
After picking appropriate tender leaves, the first step in making raw or ripened pu'er is converting the leaf to maocha (青毛茶 or 毛茶; literally, "light green rough tea" or "rough tea" respectively). Plucked leaves are handled gingerly to prevent bruising and unwanted oxidation. Weather permitting, the leaves are then spread out in the sun or a ventilated space to wilt and remove some of the water content.[13] On overcast or rainy days, the leaves will be wilted by light heating, a slight difference in processing that will affect the quality of the resulting maocha and pu'er. The wilting process may be skipped altogether depending on the tea processor.
Relatively young raw pu'er, note the grey and dark green tones
The leaves are then dry pan-fried using a large wok in a process called "kill green" (殺青; pinyin: shā qīng), which arrests enzyme activity in the leaf and prevents further oxidation. With enzymatic oxidation halted, the leaves can then be rolled, rubbed, and shaped through several steps into strands. The shaped leaves are then ideally dried in the sun and then manually picked through to remove bad leaves.[13] Once dry, maocha can be sent directly to the factory to be pressed into raw pu'er, or to undergo further processing to make ripened pu'er.[14] Sometimes maocha is aged uncompressed and sold at its maturity as aged loose-leaf raw pu'er.
Raw pu'er tea (Chinese: 生茶; pinyin: shēngchá or Chinese: 青茶; pinyin: qīngchá), also known as green pu'er, is simply máochá tea leaves that have been compressed into its final form without additional processing.
Ripe pu'er
Ripened pu'er tea (Chinese: 熟茶; pinyin: shúchá) is pressed maocha that has been specially processed to imitate aged raw pu'er. Although it is also known as cooked pu'er, the process does not actually employ cooking to imitate the aging process. The term may come about due to inaccurate translation due to the dual meaning of shú (熟) as both "fully cooked" and "fully ripened".
The process used to convert máochá into ripened pu'er is a recent invention that manipulates conditions to approximate the result of the aging process by prolonged bacterial and fungal fermentation in a warm humid environment under controlled conditions, a technique called wòdūi (渥堆, "wet piling" in English), which involves piling, dampening, and turning the tea leaves in a manner much akin to composting.
The piling, wetting, and mixing of the piled máochá ensures even fermentation. The bacterial and fungal cultures found in the fermenting piles were found to vary widely from factory to factory throughout Yunnan, consisting of multiple strains of Aspergillus spp., Penicillium spp., yeasts, and a wide range of other microflora. Control over the multiple variables in the ripening process, particularly humidity and the growth of Aspergillus spp., is key in producing ripened pu'er of high quality.[15] Poor control in fermentation/oxidation process can result in bad ripened pu'er, characterized by badly decomposed leaves and an aroma and texture reminiscent of compost. The ripening process typically takes anywhere from half a year to one year after it has begun. As such, a ripened pu'er produced in early 2004 will be pressed in the winter of 2004/2005, and appear on the market between late 2005 and early 2006.
This process was first developed in 1972 by Menghai Tea Factory and Kunming Tea Factory[citation needed] to imitate the flavor and color of aged raw pu'er, and was an adaptation of wet storage techniques being used by merchants to falsify the age of their teas. Mass production of ripened pu'er began in 1975. It can be consumed without further aging, though it can also be stored to "air out" some of the less savory flavors and aromas acquired during fermentation. The tea is often compressed, but is also common in loose form. Some collectors of pu'er believe ripened pu'er should not be aged for more than a decade.Life is like a cup of tea... it's all in how you make it...
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