china5000ys.com
  • Home |
  • Features |
  • Books |
  • Learn Chinese Characters

HOME

Scenery
  • Natural Scenery
  • Historic Sites
  • Nature Reserves
  • Rare Animals and Plants
Traditions
  • Myths and Legends
  • Festivals and Customs
  • Clothing and Ornaments
  • Folk Handicraft
  • Folk Art
  • Folk Residences
  • Ethnic Minority
Kaleidoscope
  • Medicine and Healthcare
  • Food Culture
  • Chinese Kungfu
  • Science and Invention
  • Games
  • Ming and Qing Furniture
  • Traditional Trades
Arts
  • Calligraphy
  • Painting
  • Sculpture
  • Architecture
  • Opera
  • Music and Dance
  • Bronze Ware
  • Porcelain
  • Jade Ware
  • Lacquerwork
  • Gold and Silver Ware
  • Artworks
History and Literature
  • Historical Figures
  • Historical Events
  • Archeology and Cultural Relics
  • Classics
  • Anecdotes
  • Literature
  • Humanistic Spirit

    Kaleidoscope

  • Medicine and Healthcare
  • Food Culture
  • Chinese Kungfu
  • Science and Invention
  • Games
  • Ming and Qing Furniture
  • Traditional Trades

Tea Production

  • 2008-03-10 13:17:30
  • ADD TO FAVORITE
  • PRINTER FRIENDLY
  •  

Braise Chicken, Suzhou Style

Braise Chicken, Suzhou Style
Wash the chicken and chop and chop into 1 1/2 inch (4 cm) pieces. Peel the yam or potatoes and...

Cuisines of China

Cuisines of China
Cuisine refers to a dish system possessing distinctive flavors and features in a certain region....

White Peony Tea

White Peony Tea
White peony tea, one variety of the white teas, is one of the top ten most well-known teas of...

A new tea-plant must grow for five years before its leaves can be picked and, at 30 years of age, it will be too old to be productive. The trunk of the old plant must then be cut off to force new stems to grow out of the roots in the coming year. By repeated rehabilitations in this way, a plant may serve for about 100 years.

For the fertilization of tea gardens, soya-bean cakes or other varieties of organic manure are generally used, and seldom chemical fertilizers. When pets are discovered, the affected plants will be removed to prevent their spread, and also to avoid the use of pesticides.

The season of tea-picking depends on local climate and varies from area to area. On the shores of West Lake in Hangzhou, where the famous green tea Longjing (Dragon Well) comes from, picking starts from the end of March and 1asts through October, altogether 20-30 times from the same plants at intervals of seven to ten days. With a longer interval, the quality of the tea will deteriorate.

A skilled woman picker can only gather 600 grams(a 1ittle over a pound)0f green tea leaves in a day.

The new leaves must be parched in tea cauldrons. This work, which used to be done manually, has been largely mechanized. Top-grade Dragon well tea, However, still has to be stir-parched by hand, doing only 250 grams every half hour. The tea-cauldrons are heated electri- cally to a temperature of about 250centigrade degrees or 740centigrade degrees. It takes four pounds of flesh 1eaves to produce one pound of parched tea.

For the processes of grinding, parching, rolling, shaping and drying other grades of tea various machines have been developed and built, turning out about 100 kilograms of finished tea an hour and relieving the workers from much of their drudgery.

search

Details

  • The Best Dragon Well Tea
    The Best Dragon Well Tea
    The Best Dragon Well Tea
    The best Dragon Well tea is gathered several days before Qingming (Pure Brightness, 5th solar term) when new twigs have just begun to grow and carry "one leaf and a bud". To make one kilogram(2.2...

Related Topics

    Why the Name TEA
    Why the Name TEA
    Why the name "TEA" Is it Chinese? Or from other Language?
    Chinese Tea
    Chinese Tea
    Tea, a drink pioneered by the Chinese, is brewed by infusing tender buds picked from tea trees in...
    Longjing Tea of the West Lake
    Longjing Tea of...
    Xihu Longjing Tea, a famous kind of green tea in China, grows in the mountains around the Xihu...
    Tea Culture in Ethnic Minorities
    Tea Culture in...
    China is the homeland of tea. The Chinese minority ethnic groups not only have their own tea...
    West Lake in Hangzhou
    West Lake in...
    Located in Hangzhou City, Zhejiang Province, the West Lake is also known as Qiantanghu Lake in...
    Tea picking
    Tea picking
    The words "hewing and picking," which appear in The Classic of Tea indicate that in the early...

Related Books

  • Chinese Tea

    Tea is a friend of meditation, keeping the heart immerged in profound tranquility. Tea is wings...
  • TRADITIONAL CHINESE CULTURE

    Professor Zhang Qizhi was born on November 12, 1927 in Nantong City, Zhejiang Province. After...
  • Food and Chinese Culture (Cultural...

    Collected in this book are ten essays on the art of Chinese cuisine and food culture. Chinese...
    • About Us | Statement

      © 2007-2010 cultural-china.com. All rights reserved.