User avatar
May 20th, '14, 13:15
Posts: 32
Joined: May 12th, '14, 11:34
Location: Oregon

New ?

by TimsMom » May 20th, '14, 13:15

Is there a good tea book you all recommend which tell you which pot works best for each tea? Am I being too detailed here? TimsMom... who has taught me everything I now know about tea.

User avatar
May 20th, '14, 13:19
Posts: 20891
Joined: Apr 22nd, '06, 20:52
Scrolling: scrolling
Location: Back in the TeaCave atop Mt. Fuji
Been thanked: 2 times

Re: New ?

by Chip » May 20th, '14, 13:19

Actually, this forum may be your best bet for such purposes. :mrgreen:

User avatar
May 20th, '14, 13:37
Posts: 485
Joined: Jul 19th, '13, 21:04
Location: Kentucky
Contact: Poseidon

Re: New ?

by Poseidon » May 20th, '14, 13:37

Chip wrote:Actually, this forum may be your best bet for such purposes. :mrgreen:
+1 --- This forum dives in way more than any book or website ive read.

User avatar
May 20th, '14, 16:51
Posts: 32
Joined: May 12th, '14, 11:34
Location: Oregon

Re: New ?

by TimsMom » May 20th, '14, 16:51

I think you guys are right about tea info. But every post I read brings on another question!!
I live at the foot of the Cascades. We have hard water high in iron [we amaze the Red Cross people]. How much does this affect tea, even with filtered water?

May 20th, '14, 18:37
Posts: 70
Joined: May 24th, '09, 13:07
Location: Oregon
Contact: brose

Re: New ?

by brose » May 20th, '14, 18:37

It depends on how much. An easy cheap test is go buy some decent spring water and for comparison of tea with each water source. If you notice a big difference use the one you like, maybe getting a water softener would help the tap water become more palatable.

User avatar
May 21st, '14, 09:06
Posts: 445
Joined: Mar 25th, '13, 23:03
Location: Lexington Park, Maryland

Re: New ?

by MEversbergII » May 21st, '14, 09:06

Also worth noting: tea reduces iron absorption.

M.

User avatar
May 21st, '14, 21:51
Posts: 32
Joined: May 12th, '14, 11:34
Location: Oregon

Re: New ?

by TimsMom » May 21st, '14, 21:51

I've just read the last post about iron and tea. That is surprising. A friend couldn't donate blood because he had too much iron. So tea could kind of balance the iron, I'd think.

User avatar
May 22nd, '14, 02:09
Posts: 26
Joined: Mar 30th, '14, 06:20
Location: Slovenia

Re: New ?

by PaddyB » May 22nd, '14, 02:09

My thoughts on issue (a bit off topic, sorry):
Tea could help to balance iron in blood, but relying only on tea to regulate iron levels would be unwise in my opinion. My gf can't drink large quantities of tea because of the same issue (very low red cell count). A cup a day generally won't make any difference, but drinking a liter every day might have a negative long term impact for her.

User avatar
May 22nd, '14, 09:45
Posts: 32
Joined: May 12th, '14, 11:34
Location: Oregon

Re: New ?

by TimsMom » May 22nd, '14, 09:45

It's in the mail :-). Question: does coffee have the same effect on iron that tea does. Hubby drinks at least a pot of coffee a day. Business can get stressful.
Attachments
st.JPG
st.JPG (11.13 KiB) Viewed 1023 times

User avatar
May 22nd, '14, 12:58
Posts: 445
Joined: Mar 25th, '13, 23:03
Location: Lexington Park, Maryland

Re: New ?

by MEversbergII » May 22nd, '14, 12:58

The iron blocking qualities, for men, may not be wholly disadvantageous. If, like me, you eat a good amount of meat, you get great iron intake. However, I simply don't bleed very often nor do I donate blood. As a result, I risk high blood-iron levels and, potentially, various forms of hemo-chromotosis. This ranges in symptoms from skin lesions (which an uncle of mine suffered from) to joint pain (due to iron buildup in joints).

M.

User avatar
May 31st, '14, 02:04
Posts: 1051
Joined: Jul 7th, '07, 01:37
Scrolling: scrolling
Location: Portland, OR
Contact: ABx

Re: New ?

by ABx » May 31st, '14, 02:04

My understanding is that the polyphenols bind with the iron, reducing bioavailability.

I'd bet that the water would make it a bit more smooth and sweet, like using an iron kettle. Just make sure to get rid of the chlorine. Of course you should also experiment with different water to find what works best.

No book can really tell you what pot is going to work best. There will be some loose guidelines, but there will be a good amount of individual variation. Your best bet is to get good teapots and experiment.

User avatar
May 31st, '14, 13:30
Posts: 1885
Joined: Mar 22nd, '08, 22:26
Location: Yixing

Re: New ?

by chrl42 » May 31st, '14, 13:30

There's no book which specializes in such topic, but many books (yixing) suggests such in paragraphs or pages. But not all has the same opinions, but similarities.


For Black, many Yixing books suggest taller shape but none-Yixing sources suggest round shape, in a round shape it can produce a circular wave that fastens and balances the brewing.

For Oolong, traditionally they used stout and small, aka Shui Ping teapot, the traditional Shui Ping teapots were usually under 160ml so small that leave the aroma intact. Spout is usually straight-line or a bit curve with its end horizontal.

For Green, Yixing books suggest also stout shape...but the Japanese might have different preference though.

For Puerh, there are many variations, as it has a relatively younger tradition. But many suggests relatively bigger volume. :D

User avatar
May 31st, '14, 13:44
Posts: 1657
Joined: Sep 2nd, '13, 03:22
Location: in your tea closet
Been thanked: 1 time
Contact: kyarazen

Re: New ?

by kyarazen » May 31st, '14, 13:44

i love reading yixing books both in english and in chinese (with a nice platter of salt as a snack)

any great books to recommend given the vast variety that you have had read? prefer none of those pure "pictorial" books that provide almost no useful intellectual information
chrl42 wrote:There's no book which specializes in such topic, but many books (yixing) suggests such in paragraphs or pages. But not all has the same opinions, but similarities.


For Black, many Yixing books suggest taller shape but none-Yixing sources suggest round shape, in a round shape it can produce a circular wave that fastens and balances the brewing.

For Oolong, traditionally they used stout and small, aka Shui Ping teapot, the traditional Shui Ping teapots were usually under 160ml so small that leave the aroma intact. Spout is usually straight-line or a bit curve with its end horizontal.

For Green, Yixing books suggest also stout shape...but the Japanese might have different preference though.

For Puerh, there are many variations, as it has a relatively younger tradition. But many suggests relatively bigger volume. :D

User avatar
May 31st, '14, 14:30
Posts: 470
Joined: Jan 23rd, '07, 14:50
Location: Philadelphia
Contact: Evan Draper

Re: New ?

by Evan Draper » May 31st, '14, 14:30

TimsMom wrote:I live at the foot of the Cascades. We have hard water high in iron [we amaze the Red Cross people]. How much does this affect tea, even with filtered water?
Some people use testusbin (cast-iron kettles) to get iron IN their teawater. So you've saved yourself the trouble :wink:
Don't get a water "softener"; that's just to protect your pipes and makes your water salty. I make tea only with spring water, but you should experiment and see how low-mineral spring waters--not distilled--make a difference for your tea preparation.

User avatar
Jun 3rd, '14, 11:46
Posts: 1051
Joined: Jul 7th, '07, 01:37
Scrolling: scrolling
Location: Portland, OR
Contact: ABx

Re: New ?

by ABx » Jun 3rd, '14, 11:46

Evan Draper wrote:
TimsMom wrote: Don't get a water "softener"; that's just to protect your pipes and makes your water salty.
You can, however, get filter pitchers that will remove more of the minerals, if needed. Like you, though, I just use bottled spring (not filtered) water.

+ Post Reply