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Chinese Tea

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  • 2008-05-26 14:08:46
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Wonton

Wonton
As a sort of traditional food in China, wonton is originated in North China. It was viewed by...

Steamed Pork Balls, Hangzhou Style

Steamed Pork Balls, Hangzhou Style
Mince the pork if it is not already ground. Add the egg white, rice wine, MSG, and salt, and stir...

Sauteed Dumplings, Henan Style

Sauteed Dumplings, Henan Style
Mix the flour and baking powder with 9 oz (250 ml) of water. Knead until smooth and elastic, then...

Tea, a drink pioneered by the Chinese, is brewed by infusing tender buds picked from tea trees in boiled water after baking. Legend has it that tea was first discovered by Emperor Shennong, who was tasting hundreds of herbal medicines to test their medicinal power in southwest China. Tea was originally used for detoxification and meant to be chewed in the mouth. Later, people began to steep it in water. Maybe because the drink has a slightly bitter taste, it was called “tu” (meaning “a bitter edible plant”) before the Qin and Han dynasties and wasn’t officially named “tea” until the Han Dynasty.    

In the Han Dynasty some 2,000 years ago, the Chinese already knew a lot about tea and gained a wealth of experiences, including tea species, baking skills, infusing, water selection, tea utensils and ways to use them etc, initially forming a set of tea drinking etiquette and customs. Meanwhile, along with the development of trade links with neighboring and central Asian countries, Chinese tea was among the goods envoys of Emperor Wu of the Han Dynasty brought to other parts of the world via “the Silk Road”. 

In the Tang Dynasty, rich experiences in the tea culture had been accumulated. Around 758 AD, a man named Lu Yu wrote Cha Ching (Classic of Tea), in which he summarized the knowledge and techniques about tea before and after the Tang Dynasty, including the history, production places, effects, cultivation, picking, baking and drinking etc.

In the Song Dynasty, tea drinking became more popular. Tea houses were everywhere in the capital city of Bianliang and those carrying a kettle for tea making were called “tea doctors”. Since the Ming and Qing dynasties, drinking tea has not only been an elegant hobby shared by high-ranking officials, scholars and ordinary people, but also been enjoyed by people across the world.   

Today, people all over the world are showing special interest in Chinese tea. Clearly, this is not just because the drink’s thirst-quenching and mind-refreshing effects, but also because its unique healthcare functions and the cultural profoundness in the art, etiquette and customs of tea.

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Details

  • Dark tea
    Dark tea
    Dark tea
    With fresh and tender shoots and leaves as the raw material, the making of black tea will undergo such processing procedures as withering, rolling, fermenting and drying. Typical products: Anhui...
  • Green tea
    Green tea
    Green tea
    A type of tea with the largest output in China. There have been over a thousand famous breeds of green tea since ancient times, such as West Lake Longjing, Taihu Biluochun, Mondy Tea, Lushan...
  • White tea
    White tea
    White tea
    Produced only in several counties in Fujian Province, China, it is free of frying and rolling in the processing course and is of extraordinarily fineness. Typical products: Silver Tip Pekoe and...
  • Yellow tea
    Yellow tea
    Yellow tea
    A breed of tea undergone light fermentation and stewing in the processing course, featuring yellow tea and yellow liquor, with Junshan Silver Needle and Mengding Yellow Buds as typical products.
  • Oolong
    Oolong
    Oolong
    A breed of tea undergone semi-fermentation. Typical products: Wuyiyan, Anxi Tieguanyin, Phoenix Single Stem and Taiwan Dongding Oolong.
  • Dark tea
    Dark tea
    Dark tea
    A breed of reprocessed tea, with long-peduncle thick-leaf dark tea and long-stored clear tea as the raw material, which is steamed, compressed and dried to make brick tea and biscuit tea of various...
  • Jasmine tea
    Jasmine tea
    Jasmine tea
    It is full of flower fragrance obtained by processing and baking tea leaves and jasmine flowers. Typical products: Fuzhou jasmine baked tea, Hangzhou jasmine baked tea and Suzhou jasmine baked tea.

Related Topics

    Why the Name TEA
    Why the Name TEA
    Why the name "TEA" Is it Chinese? Or from other Language?
    Chinese Tea House
    Chinese Tea House
    Tea House (Chaguan), a special place for the Chinese to have tea, is very popular in the Yangtze...
    Tea Gifts in Marriage Custom
    Tea Gifts in...
    Tea gift, or "Tea Silver", is a sort of betrothal gifts. In the Tang Dynasty, tea was an...
    Conventions of Tea Drinking
    Conventions of...
    Serve tea: Serving tea to the guest is a traditional Chinese convention lasting for more than...
    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 Sets
    Tea Sets
    Chinese tea culture has a long history and rich contents. And tea sets are considered as one of...

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