Puer Tea: Ancient Caravans and Urban Chic

One of the intentionally aged teas, Pu-Erh has a loyal following.


Apr 21st, '14, 07:20
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Re: Puer Tea: Ancient Caravans and Urban Chic

by Puerlife » Apr 21st, '14, 07:20

I watched the 4th video yesterday. So far it's the most interesting one for me (not that I didn't enjoy listening to that lady complain about everybody :lol: )because it shows how tea changes hands. That buyer has to be one his toes. I wonder where the tea he turned down ended up.

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Apr 24th, '14, 05:49
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Re: Puer Tea: Ancient Caravans and Urban Chic

by kyarazen » Apr 24th, '14, 05:49

this book is really a nice read :)

as the author is research based and not into commercial ventures, its just so nice to read her writing, unlike the other tea talks nowadays that are just all tea propaganda

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Apr 24th, '14, 12:27
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Re: Puer Tea: Ancient Caravans and Urban Chic

by the_economist » Apr 24th, '14, 12:27

The videos are really good, learned a lot! I should try and get the book...

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Apr 24th, '14, 15:22
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Re: Puer Tea: Ancient Caravans and Urban Chic

by hop_goblin » Apr 24th, '14, 15:22

Interesting,

Thanks for posting.

Apr 27th, '14, 12:07
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Re: Puer Tea: Ancient Caravans and Urban Chic

by pookguy » Apr 27th, '14, 12:07

Saw all the videos. Does anyone know where I can buy some of Pu-Erh tea highlighted in the videos?

Apr 27th, '14, 19:10
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Re: Puer Tea: Ancient Caravans and Urban Chic

by jschergen » Apr 27th, '14, 19:10

The book itself is excellent, and a very easy read. It does a particularly great job showing the different agendas and opinions surrounding pu'erh.

Apr 27th, '14, 20:29
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Re: Puer Tea: Ancient Caravans and Urban Chic

by AllanK » Apr 27th, '14, 20:29

Puerlife wrote:I'm still waiting for my order to be shipped. There was only one copy left when I posted. Should've ordered, then posted :? Not a big deal, though.
My copy of this book has not yet arrived. In the meantime I have been reading a different book from my order called The Story of Tea: A cultural History and Drinking Guide. It is a very informative book on the many facets of tea, worth reading.

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Apr 30th, '14, 15:02
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Re: Puer Tea: Ancient Caravans and Urban Chic

by kyarazen » Apr 30th, '14, 15:02

what can be more enjoyable than a late night with a nice book, and some yiwu tea to go with it the stories from yiwu?

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there are interesting excerpts from the book, i.e.
whilst producing fan for HK, the yunnanese continued to make mi for themselves. (mi = uncooked rice, fan = steamed cooked rice)
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and essential point to divide oxidation and fermentation.
Image

and what?!?! mr zheng of zheng si long tea company didnt touch that incredibly pricey red label tea?
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and essential differences in tea aromas. the typical HK style is pretty much the warehouse "qi" that influenced the tea apart from the weather

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heh.. so much hatred for sealed storage, i was surprised that the author dared write about the sacrilegious matter.
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in summary
1) pu-erh is complicated business
2) the yunnanese had been drinking "sheng" pu-erh and that is their historical style
3) there's another school of thought, the HK style pu-erh
4) the taiwanese are damn good at stirfrying and trend setting
5) storage? hmm.... oh well..
6) contamination of forest tea with terrace materials
7) down to the source its sometimes faced with dishonesty from the harvesters
8) yiwu tea, especially forest tea is not for everyone when they cannot tell the difference in the taste.
9) lots of tea with no aroma. either land problem or overharvesting issues.

and many more! get a copy of the book now!!

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Apr 30th, '14, 15:33
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Re: Puer Tea: Ancient Caravans and Urban Chic

by MEversbergII » Apr 30th, '14, 15:33

Alright, I'm convinced. I will give it an order soon as I can.

M.

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Apr 30th, '14, 15:40
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Re: Puer Tea: Ancient Caravans and Urban Chic

by William » Apr 30th, '14, 15:40

kyarazen wrote:
in summary
1) pu-erh is complicated business
2) the yunnanese had been drinking "sheng" pu-erh and that is their historical style
3) there's another school of thought, the HK style pu-erh
4) the taiwanese are damn good at stirfrying and trend setting
5) storage? hmm.... oh well..
6) contamination of forest tea with terrace materials
7) down to the source its sometimes faced with dishonesty from the harvesters
8) yiwu tea, especially forest tea is not for everyone when they cannot tell the difference in the taste.
9) lots of tea with no aroma. either land problem or overharvesting issues.

and many more! get a copy of the book now!!
Seems interesting. I will order one copy! :D

Apr 30th, '14, 16:09
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Re: Puer Tea: Ancient Caravans and Urban Chic

by shah82 » Apr 30th, '14, 16:09

That really does sound like a worthwhile book to read. I've been picking stuff together from random pdfs I find on the internet that mostly has to do with the history of the ancient trade.

I'm going to have to read the book, but pedantic me has the following comments:

1) yup
2) One should not underestimate the diversity with which Yunnanese drink and otherwise consume tea leaves. Nor underestimate the practicalities, like its use as medicine or ceremonies. "Sheng" is a little too big a blank, especially when shu was only systematized in the '70s, and only a distinct regional community ever really went for the funk.
3) Sorta, but that's almost like saying the Guangdong style of oolong.
4) They couldn't help but be trendsetting. China was frozen for decades, man. *Anyone* who really started things up as foreigners was going to be trendsetters, simply out of a renewed respect for quality.
5) perhaps
6-7-8) Not sure this is gone over in the book, but the profound trend since the last genuine hot spots came into trade, is the use of a single über-hot region to sell area-wide tea. This has resulted in most people with only the most tenuous grasp of the virtues of any specific sort of tea. This is driving a pretty big bifurcation of the market, between those that got the hookup, cash, and tasting experience, and the rest of the tea drinking society that has to go with "LBZ" or "GFZ" or "Bingdao". Ultimately, I think this will drive the next puerh crash, when people start caring about the actual qualities of a tea and there are no new suckers who want to brag about buying LBZ. And then reckon with how limited the good stuff is, compared to the demand.
9) There are some regions that produce virtuous tea with less aroma. The fixation on aroma character is characteristic of lower class northern Mainlanders and their familiarity with cheaper green tea. In general, as a practical matter, gushu tea will have less aroma than terraced tea. More durability and character, though. This fixation on aroma also drives poor manufacturing habits, particularly high temperature shaqing, or bake drying, because the resulting aroma can sell green tea'd cake for RMB 5k to people who think puerh should be like TGY.

Yeah, like that Zhensilong guy. I can only shake my head. If someone gave ME Red Mark, I'd be like that guy in the Bud Light commercials long ago, saying "I wuv you, man..." Zero class, zero clue. I know there's taste preferences and everything (and hey, maybe it's that he knows it's a poorly stored (or fake) Red Mark , and that's what the issue is). In any gold rush, there are always guys like that, who figure they can make a mint without understanding much of anything about what they are making (with the understanding that I've not read everything about Zheng). I used to like newborn tea fine, but at this point, I strongly prefer teas that are seven or more years old, dry or wet stored. And I think that will hold true for many people.

The liqueur color thing, I've always thought was kind of weird, because I don't attach it to anything I do care about. Would have to say that intense clear reds are very much appetizing, like what I get from my nice shu.

I have not had a tendency to like any one storage over any other. There isn't really a right way, except doing it the right way. I don't tend to like Banna storage because they don't tend to be stored all that well, regardless of moisture. I think that when people complain about Kunming storage, much of the problem is about poor technique rather than moisture, so to say.

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Apr 30th, '14, 21:34
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Re: Puer Tea: Ancient Caravans and Urban Chic

by kyarazen » Apr 30th, '14, 21:34

based on the background of mr Lv, the redmark is quite definitely authentic. he led a group of venture capitalists and collectors, with collective funds to sweep and possibly monopolize all the stocks they could get their hands on in the early 90s, and he brought the cake to yiwu just in an attempt to let them know/understand the taste he is looking for.

he was also one of those whom had help pushed matters in Yiwu and for people to re-start tea harvesting and taking care of the bushes in the area

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May 1st, '14, 07:18
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Re: Puer Tea: Ancient Caravans and Urban Chic

by bob » May 1st, '14, 07:18

Puerhlife and others, thank you for posting this!

The videos are great, they give a nice sense of how the farmers live and how puerh is made. I love that old farmer lady that complains all the time, she reminds me of my grandmother... :)

I've ordered the book, can't wait to get it...

May 3rd, '14, 00:08
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Re: Puer Tea: Ancient Caravans and Urban Chic

by AllanK » May 3rd, '14, 00:08

Puerlife wrote:I watched the 4th video yesterday. So far it's the most interesting one for me (not that I didn't enjoy listening to that lady complain about everybody :lol: )because it shows how tea changes hands. That buyer has to be one his toes. I wonder where the tea he turned down ended up.
Where are these videos people have posted about? What website?

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May 3rd, '14, 00:19
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Re: Puer Tea: Ancient Caravans and Urban Chic

by MEversbergII » May 3rd, '14, 00:19

The link in post 1 has all the vids.

M.

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