tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21945233.post3272560121570072756..comments2023-07-26T08:53:36.336-07:00Comments on tea closet: Conference Orchid OolongUnknownnoreply@blogger.comBlogger2125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21945233.post-3707120740458814042012-10-10T18:07:24.113-07:002012-10-10T18:07:24.113-07:00Nick-
I think you are forgetting that puerh drink...Nick-<br /><br />I think you are forgetting that puerh drinkers in the West are outliers among tea drinkers. People don't necessarily want to drink something with a complex profile. I have no shortage of friends and acquaintances who would really like Mighty Leaf's Orchid Oolong. <br /><br />Mighty Leaf are not selling to you and me because they would have been out of business by now.<br /><br />Hhsterhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/13118616887446192686noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-21945233.post-30567444298656986292012-10-10T09:53:17.557-07:002012-10-10T09:53:17.557-07:00It's annoying to me that Mighty Leaf has such ...It's annoying to me that Mighty Leaf has such a foothold in SF cafes, because their wares, though better than say, Lipton, are really not that great. However, it feels more embarrassing to me, that in this land of gourmands upon gourmands, and people with multiple pedigrees in fish, chocolate, and everything in between who are so passionate about their food-craftstmanship, that the state of locally-run tea businesses can still be relatively poor. Despite the SF Bay Area being home to such a concentrated Chinese and Asian population and history, and this gourmand culture, one can still do better living in rural Indiana and ordering mail-order when it comes to tea, in many respects.<br /><br />About the multiple bags and not noticing much of a difference--I was just thinking about this exact point last night while I was drinking my Miles' Birthday Blend Tea Urchin sample (very nice, btw). Teas like this have an inherent depth and complexity to them, and if you brew, say, 7 g instead of 4 g, or 10 g instead of 7 g, for me, the experience of drinking them over the period of the session can become deeper and different by adding more in a sort of nonlinear/multiplicative way, I've found--sort of like, if you are looking at something that is complex with a microscope, like a cell, greater magnifications will allow you to see more detail at various stages. I think a similar thing is going on with more complex , high quality teas--there are certain flavor profiles or stages associated with the 1st, 3rd, 8th, brewing period, and if you extend the life of a pot of tea by adding more leaf, these periods become more prolonged, such that you can see the characteristic sweetness of a certain tea extend itself through 3 brewings instead of just 2, and in the process of doing that, you find ANOTHER layer that is only present when you can have 3 or 4 brewings at that one flavor stage, but not discernible enough when you pass over it too quickly.<br /><br />Bagged teas/low quality teas, I think, are just the opposite. They have a limited flavor profile, and basically, they don't evolve much as you drink them, or have a very narrow, short evolution--so if you pack more in, you just get more of the same, and maybe not discernibly more if you're using the same amount of water--I'd guess you will likely reach the saturation point of nutrients/flavors the water can absorb from the leaves before you reach the point of added strength or interestingsness with such teas.Nick Hermanhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/01543497413262895759noreply@blogger.com