Is this tea?
9th Aug 2009 by Pei
Bright eyes and alert mind - the sweet and nutritious Goji Berry 'tea'
Bright eyes and alert mind – the sweet and nutritious Goji Berry ‘tea’

The past week or so has been very challenging for me. I’ve been very busy preparing for teanamu’s first market stall in Covent Garden on 20 August (Thursday). Working out what the crowd at the market would like: the sweet pastries for the afternoon crowd, savouries for the lunch time crowd. Also going through in my mind all that could possibly occur at the stall – How am I going to boil water for tea if there is a power cut? How do I keep my savouries warm? Would the crowd like a bit of simple homemade pastry or are they daring enough to try my tea-inspired sweets? Do I need a banner? How about coordinated t-shirts and aprons? How do I perform a tea appreciation demonstration? The list of questions buzzing in my head is endless.

On top of that, I have been busily programming the teanamu e-shop in time for the market stall, preparing the tea packaging, printing tea information cards to go with the tea, and planning loads of activities around my tea appreciation workshops etc.

All these projects are wearing me out a little and perhaps explain why I feel under the weather. My mom, although very sympathetic, seems to think I can only blame myself and that I should relax and take a breather. When I said I can feel a tickling itch at the back of my throat, she advised me to quickly brew some chrysanthemun tea. When I then said I’m lacking energy, she told me to brew up some ginseng tea. And when I said my eyes feel tired from staring at the computer screen, she said, ‘Make some goji berry tea!’

The lovely floral aroma from the jasmine and chrysanthemum combined with the hint of citrus from the goji berry is very refreshing and invigorating.
The lovely floral aroma from the jasmine and chrysanthemum combined with the hint of citrus from the goji berry is very refreshing and invigorating.

So I’ve dutifully started this morning off with a lovely medley of chrysanthemum, jasmine and goji berry concoctions, placed right by me next to my laptop, and I feel a bit as if my mom is here with me instead of thousands of miles away!

I’m inspired now by this experience to put up a quick post about “non-teas” and proper tea terminology. Strictly speaking, any infusions that don’t contain leaves from the camellia sinensis tea plant can’t be considered tea. So your “rooibos tea” is not tea, your “mint tea” isn’t tea and your “camomile tea” certainly isn’t tea! In Chinese they all would be called 非茶之茶 (fei cha zhi cha or “non-tea” tea).

Diverting from the issue of “non-teas” for a moment, jasmine tea is a fascinating case. A real, scented jasmine tea must have been scented during the manufacture of the tea with fresh jasmine flowers, rather than merely having jasmine flowers, essence or oil added after the tea is ‘finished’, i.e. all the normal tea making processes completed. Many cheap jasmine teas are in the latter category; you’ll probably recognize them by the small, dark brown to black, tea fragments, including stalks and stems, and the very heady aroma of chemicaly processed jasmine.

The sweet Rose and Honey Date 'tea' helps with digestion.
The sweet Rose and Honey Date ‘tea’ helps with digestion.

I am not one to disparage “non-teas”, for these infusions have had a long history of use in the Chinese culture. I, for one, was brought up with all sorts of interesting infusions and concoctions, which I now understand have absolutely legitimate uses (even if pedantic tea masters get their knickers in a twist when the word “tea” is wrongly bandied about!) Jasmine is known to soothe and relieve an anxious mind, aid digestion and support respiratory ease. Goji berries are known to have excellent restorative properties, improving eyesight, liver function and many effects of ageing. for the eyes (and anti-aging!) and liver. Like jasmine, chrysanthemun has detoxifying properties, and calms and soothes the tired mind.

One must be a little bit careful about consuming these substances. Chrysanthemum, for example, is very yin in nature and therefore unsuitable for women during periods or pregnancy. It is also not appropriate for people with a weak stomach. Jasmine flowers, likewise, are not suitable for consumption during pregnancy.

This is encroaching on the huge subject of Traditional Chinese Medicine. It is impossible to cover a lot of these home remedies and their medicinal properties in one single blog. Write and tell me if you’d like me to put up more posts about this topic in the future. I also have an article on the yin and yang balance that you can read here.

Take good care and hope to see you all on 20 August at the piazza market in Covent Garden! We’re there all day from noon onwards!

Here are some of the brews that my mom would make for the family:

Chrysanthemum Summer Cooling “tea” for those particularly hot days when we could be especially crabby and irritable:
Prepare equal quantities of dry chysanthemum, dry jasmine and goji berries – put all the ingredients into a tea pot and add boiling water. Allow to infuse for 5 min. Drink hot.

Goji Berry “tea” for those tired and puffy eyes:
Put 5g of goji berries into a mug and pour on boiling water. Allow to infuse 5 min. Drink hot. Continue to infuse, as desired, several times over the course of day.
Or put 50g goji berries in a pot, add about 1 litre of cold water, bring to a boil and leave to cool. Put in fridge for a refreshing cold drink.

Ginger Chinese Date “tea” for cold coughs:
3 thick slices of young ginger (bruised), 7 Chinese dates (stoned) and 250ml water in a pot and bring to a simmering boil for 15 min. Brew for 15min. and drink warm.

Jasmine Satsuma “tea” is great for indigestion or headaches:
Infuse 6-8 dry jasmine flowers in boiling water for 3 min. Add 30ml of satsuma juice, 1tblsp of honey and 300ml water. Enjoy!

Rose and Honey Date “tea” is very good for indigestion and will calm an upset stomach:
Infuse 1 chinese honey date in half a glass of boiling water for 6-8min. Top up with more hot water and add dry rose buds. Infuse for 2min and sip it slowly while hot.

Sugar Cane Water Chestnut “tea” – a very yin and soothing tea, suited to those of us whose constitution is perhaps not strong enough for other “cooling teas”:
Bring 600g sugar cane (washed and cut into 10-cm lengths), 100g candied winder melon strips, 25g fresh water chestnuts (peeled) and 2 litres of water to a simmering boil for about 1 hour.
Drink warm.

Warmly,

Pei
pei@teanamu.com
~~ sip a good brew, steal a slice of tranquility, glimpse a lingering fragrance, gladden the heart and refresh the mind ~~

240-year old shipwrecked tea
12th Jun 2009 by Pei
Götheborg - the vessel that capsized in 1745 with 370 tonnes of Chinese teas including Songluo green tea.
Götheborg – the vessel that capsized in 1745 with 370 tonnes of Chinese teas including Songluo green tea.

On the way back from her third journey to Canton on 12 September 1745, the Swedish East India Company vessel “Götheborg” capsized just 1 mile away from the harbour of the Swedish port of the same name. The ship was commissioned by the Company to purchase luxury goods and was carrying 2,388 parcels of porcelains, 370 tonnes of tea leaves and innumerable items like rattans and silks. Two thirds of her cargo sank straight to the bottom of the sea, but fortunately the rest of the cargo just sufficed to cover the cost of the voyage.

One of the teas that went down with the ship was 松萝 Songluo green tea from Anhui Province (amongst other teas like Dahongpao black tea and Oolong Wuyi Yan tea).

Two hundred and forty years later in 1985, the shipwreck was discovered and archaeologists recovered 2,000 wooden crates (mostly rotten) holding tin containers of tea. Amazingly, and thanks largely to the tins’ seals, the Songluo green tea though oxidised was still very aromatic and perfectly drinkable even after 240 years at the bottom of the sea!

Map showing Xiuning County - birthplace of Songluo green tea
Map showing Xiuning County – birthplace of Songluo green tea.

Songluo is a really gorgeous aromatic green tea packed full of umami sweetness. I was invited to Xiuning County where it’s produced on my tour of Anhui province last month. Unfortunately, I’d picked a rainy, muddy day to visit the area, so it would have been impractical to see the tea hills at very close quarters, but I did enjoy the privilege of viewing the locality’s brand new, state owned tea processing plant.

While the plant manager, Ling Yuejing 凌跃进, was showing me around, and kindly letting me take some video shots (which I hope to upload soon on to this site), it was fascinating for me to hear him refer to the traditional Songluo production process, which was historically based in monasteries.

Plant manager Mr. Ling giving me a warm welcome to his factory.
Plant manager Mr. Ling giving me a warm welcome to his factory.

Senior monks would work through the night, hand-rolling and pan-frying the freshly picked tea leaves – using a large wok over a charcoal burner – in order to halt the natural oxidation process that would otherwise turn green tea to black. Meanwhile, younger monks busily fanned the tea leaves to remove any remaining moisture and to cool the leaves, lest they become roasted by the heat which would be just as undesirable as oxidation.

Songluo tea factory with machinery mimicking traditional tea processing techniques.
Songluo tea factory with machinery mimicking traditional tea processing techniques.

The modern version of these processes involves filtering dry heat from charcoal burners (operating at over 300°C), shaping the leaves through the use of shaking and rolling machines, then tumble-drying the leaves to bring their temperature down to 10°C, and finally, briefly microwaving them to bring any remaining moisture molecules to the surface of the leaves. The whole, basically mechanised process takes between 3 and 4 hours. So it is extraordinarily efficient, though less appealing to the romantic in me.

Nearly ready Songluo tea being dried on rattan mats feels a little moist on my hand.
Nearly ready Songluo tea being dried on rattan mats feels a little moist on my hand.

When asked if Songluo tea is steeped in history, Ling relates with enthusiasm that under the Ming emperor Zhu Yuanzhang (known as Hongwu) (1328-1398), there was a 让福 ‘Rangfu’ temple on the summit of Songluo mountain. At the temple’s entrance stood a huge urn filled with mountain rainwater and duck weeds. A pilgrim one day expressed a desire to buy the urn, and the abbot instructed his monks to store the urn away until the pilgrim’s return, first emptying it of the rainwater and weeds that had collected in it.

The pilgrim duly reappeared and was horrified to find the urn ready for his collection, completely clean and empty. It had been the jade-green water that he really wanted rather than the urn itself!

The jade green and golden edges of the fine tender Songluo green.
The jade green and golden edges of the fine tender Songluo green.

Legend has it that, subsequently, little tea plants grew and indeed thrived at the spot where the urn’s contents had been poured out. The monks then learned how to process the leaves of the tea plants, and this is how Songluo tea was born.

Brewing Songluo green tea in a gaiwan (lidded cup).
Brewing Songluo green tea in a gaiwan (lidded cup).

From the outset Songluo was renowned for its medicinal properties. For example, the old abbot discerned in it an ability to cure dysentery and by distributing it among the local villagers he reckoned on saving many lives. Even today, practitioners of Chinese medicine recommend it to relieve bloatedness, phlegm, high cholesterol, indigestion and upset stomachs.

Songluo tea is cultivated on Songluo Mountain at more than 850 metres above sea level. The leaves grow wide and thick while the stems are thin. The dried leaves are fine and curly, which is indicative of their tenderness. They are mostly green in colour with a hint of golden yellow, and they are deeply fragrant.

Götheborg - a replica that started sailing in 2003.
Götheborg – a replica that started sailing in 2003.

It all depends on your personal taste, but I suggest using about 3 grams per 150 ml (preferably soft) water, boiling the water beforehand and letting it cool to about 80°C before brewing. Brewing time is around 30 seconds, adding 10 seconds for each re-brew. In a gaiwan (a lidded cup), the wonderfully sweet umami aroma is abundant and the umami is still present after 3 brews which is indicative of its high mountain terroir. The taste is very pleasant and soothing on the chest with a strong nose of steamed sweet tender corn.

Last year the Songluo tea salvaged from the Götheborg finally returned to Xiuning County. The local people call this ‘the married daughter coming back to visit her parents’, which I thought was a lovely and very appropriate expression. I was told by Ling that, with the return of this ‘daughter’, his people were able to verify that the Songluo tea they’re making now is in the same form and shape as that produced 264 years ago by the monks. What an amazing discovery!

As a rather sweet postscript, a replica of the Götheborg has been constructed and has been sailing regularly between Sweden and the Far East for the past few years, starting with a voyage to Guangzhou in 2003.

Warmly,

Pei
pei@teanamu.com
~~ sip a good brew, steal a slice of tranquility, glimpse a lingering fragrance, gladden the heart and refresh the mind ~~

 
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