What is the best way to store white tea? The tea I bought came in two clear plastic bags, but I recall reading that white tea should be kept in a dark place.
How do you store your white tea? Are tins the best way to store it? Plastic? Metal?
Oct 19th, '07, 18:50
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Hi Trey,
The two main enemies of tea are light and air, so when storing any tea, you want to store it in a cool, dry place away from light and strong odors (don't store you tea next to your spices). So yeah, plastic bags aren't so good. Tins work great. Most of the tea I get comes shipped in mylar bags, and I use clips to keep the air out.
Follow those guide lines and you should be okay with whit tea. I haven't found white tea to be particularly fussy.
The two main enemies of tea are light and air, so when storing any tea, you want to store it in a cool, dry place away from light and strong odors (don't store you tea next to your spices). So yeah, plastic bags aren't so good. Tins work great. Most of the tea I get comes shipped in mylar bags, and I use clips to keep the air out.
Follow those guide lines and you should be okay with whit tea. I haven't found white tea to be particularly fussy.
Oct 19th, '07, 19:05
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Oct 20th, '07, 14:55
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Right, a tin it is.
Related question: How much white tea should one buy at a time to be able to store it properly? Since the tea I buy comes in plastic bags, I guess it's not that far-fetched to think that the vendor stores it in heaps of plastic bags, and the tea I buy in december, say, may not have been properly stored.
I have this image of tea lovers lining up to buy sacks of the most recent harvest the second it is ready, so they can store it properly themselves. Not unlike wine lovers with their Beaujolais
Related question: How much white tea should one buy at a time to be able to store it properly? Since the tea I buy comes in plastic bags, I guess it's not that far-fetched to think that the vendor stores it in heaps of plastic bags, and the tea I buy in december, say, may not have been properly stored.
I have this image of tea lovers lining up to buy sacks of the most recent harvest the second it is ready, so they can store it properly themselves. Not unlike wine lovers with their Beaujolais
Oct 23rd, '07, 08:08
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Actually Trey, the Beaujolais analogy is pretty good. Some vendors even make a reference to this with their first flush offerings.
It is just wrong for a vendor to store tea in plastic bags. Personally, I would try to "educate" this vendor nicely, but do not expect success.
My one local vendor of crappy tea in a local farmers' market has these huge clear glass storage jars complete with loose lids...I tried to nicely inform her of the 2 wrongs not making a right (when I also tried to get her to offer better tea).
Well, she continues to sell her crappy tea the same way years later. I cringe every time I walk by.
It is just wrong for a vendor to store tea in plastic bags. Personally, I would try to "educate" this vendor nicely, but do not expect success.
My one local vendor of crappy tea in a local farmers' market has these huge clear glass storage jars complete with loose lids...I tried to nicely inform her of the 2 wrongs not making a right (when I also tried to get her to offer better tea).
Well, she continues to sell her crappy tea the same way years later. I cringe every time I walk by.
blah blah blah SENCHA blah blah blah!!!
Chip wrote: I tried to nicely inform her of the 2 wrongs not making a right (when I also tried to get her to offer better tea).
I'll certainly try to give some hints to my dealer, who actually provides excellent service otherwise (prompt delivery and hand-written greetings with every package). Good advice. Thanks.
Hi, I'm new!
What about the three layered plastic/foil/mylar type bags? I've been told that they are not oxygen permeable. I found some white tea in my cupboard that had been pushed to the back and was over a year old. Seemingly fine; still soft and flexible and fresh tasting. In fact, I did a side by side taste test with my informal 'panel' and there was no apparent difference in color, fragrance or flavor.
Best Regards
What about the three layered plastic/foil/mylar type bags? I've been told that they are not oxygen permeable. I found some white tea in my cupboard that had been pushed to the back and was over a year old. Seemingly fine; still soft and flexible and fresh tasting. In fact, I did a side by side taste test with my informal 'panel' and there was no apparent difference in color, fragrance or flavor.
Best Regards
Oct 28th, '07, 12:23
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I can get very anal on this subject...so...I will go off in another direction.
One of the very best ways to keep your open teas as fresh as possible, only open a limited number of teas at a single time and use them quickly, within 30-60 days.
I used to have 40 or more different teas open at a given time. Now I have learned the error in my ways and try to have around 5 open. This requires a lot of discipline for me since I seem to instinctively want to have many open.
This is important mainly for white and green teas. Blacks and oolong and of course pu-erh seem to stay fresh much longer once open.
One of the very best ways to keep your open teas as fresh as possible, only open a limited number of teas at a single time and use them quickly, within 30-60 days.
I used to have 40 or more different teas open at a given time. Now I have learned the error in my ways and try to have around 5 open. This requires a lot of discipline for me since I seem to instinctively want to have many open.
This is important mainly for white and green teas. Blacks and oolong and of course pu-erh seem to stay fresh much longer once open.
Another thing I learned when visiting China - never vacuum pack or purchase vacuum packed white tea. There is something about the vacuum process, even with a nitrogen back-fill, that causes the tea to lose that soft, pillowy feel. If vacuum packed, it will come out looking like the lowest grade fannings, crumbly and hard, in a very short time. Must be the vacuum process destroys the moist feel or something?
When in Guangzhou and Nanning for my last visit, friends suggested always using the ziplock type triple-layer mylar/foil bags. They put the tea in the bag and squeeze out as much air as possible (not TOO much squeezing, please!), then seal the bag. If the bag still shows the outline of the tea inside the next day, they say the seal is good. If not, they discard and use a different bag.
I have several different cannisters for storage, but for white, my friends tell me that even the air remaining in the cannister after filling with tea will cause unwanted oxidation. I put the sealed bag in the sealed container.
Keep in mind, good white tea is a "single-harvest" tea and storage is more important than with any other kind of tea. There is simply no way to have "fresh" white tea after August or September; it's all going to be "old" by then. I usually still have white tea from the previous harvest when the new harvest occurs. I don't like to run out and have to wait for the new crop, so I always ration myself, particularly toward December. Come March, I'm ready to finish up in anticipation of the new tea. It is not quite as good in February and March as it was for the preceding months, but it still retains that unique feel and flavor. It is certainly better than not having any at all.
Best Regards
When in Guangzhou and Nanning for my last visit, friends suggested always using the ziplock type triple-layer mylar/foil bags. They put the tea in the bag and squeeze out as much air as possible (not TOO much squeezing, please!), then seal the bag. If the bag still shows the outline of the tea inside the next day, they say the seal is good. If not, they discard and use a different bag.
I have several different cannisters for storage, but for white, my friends tell me that even the air remaining in the cannister after filling with tea will cause unwanted oxidation. I put the sealed bag in the sealed container.
Keep in mind, good white tea is a "single-harvest" tea and storage is more important than with any other kind of tea. There is simply no way to have "fresh" white tea after August or September; it's all going to be "old" by then. I usually still have white tea from the previous harvest when the new harvest occurs. I don't like to run out and have to wait for the new crop, so I always ration myself, particularly toward December. Come March, I'm ready to finish up in anticipation of the new tea. It is not quite as good in February and March as it was for the preceding months, but it still retains that unique feel and flavor. It is certainly better than not having any at all.
Best Regards