Another sunny weekend. Another tea display. I explained a bit of this already in an earlier post¹ so I won't be repeating much of the information already provided focusing on the stuff that wasn't already provided. This is, however, a tea from 安化 (Ānhuà), a county seat in 湖南 (Húnán). I've not done a lot of exploration of Hunan tea culture, so this is my first detailed take of Hunan tea, and it's been quite the experience. This is specifically a 金花黑茶 (Jīn huā hēi chá or "Golden Flower Black Tea“) Here the "black" is in the Chinese sense, not the English sense: what we call "black tea" is "red tea" in Chinese. Black tea is specifically a fermented tea, whether "raw" or "cooked". Chinese tea are usually (but naturally not always because Chinese culture is complex!) named for the colour of their liquor, not of their leaves. The titular ”golden flowers" are an Aspergillus cristatus infection. This tea is a very aged, fermented "raw" tea: leaves picked in 2007 and final... Show more...Another sunny weekend. Another tea display. I explained a bit of this already in an earlier post¹ so I won't be repeating much of the information already provided focusing on the stuff that wasn't already provided. This is, however, a tea from 安化 (Ānhuà), a county seat in 湖南 (Húnán). I've not done a lot of exploration of Hunan tea culture, so this is my first detailed take of Hunan tea, and it's been quite the experience. This is specifically a 金花黑茶 (Jīn huā hēi chá or "Golden Flower Black Tea“) Here the "black" is in the Chinese sense, not the English sense: what we call "black tea" is "red tea" in Chinese. Black tea is specifically a fermented tea, whether "raw" or "cooked". Chinese tea are usually (but naturally not always because Chinese culture is complex!) named for the colour of their liquor, not of their leaves. The titular ”golden flowers" are an Aspergillus cristatus infection. This tea is a very aged, fermented "raw" tea: leaves picked in 2007 and final production and packaging in this form in 2018. (These tea leaves are about as old as the iPhone.) As usual, alt text has more explanations and Mastodon users will have to click through to see all the pictures. --- ¹
pixelfed.social/i/web/post/760…#
茶叶 #
中国名茶 #
黑茶 #
安化黑茶 #
金花黑茶 #
Tea #
ChineseTea #
BlackTea #
AnhuaBlackTea #
GoldFlowerBlackTea@zdl@mastodon.online@tea@a.gup.peThis is just a teaser of upcoming tea photo essays. The problem with tea is that unlike coffee, small amounts last a long time. 100g of a decent tea can last me a month or two. 100g of coffee won't last me even a week.
Pixelfed