Xian Cha - Long Jing
27 posts • Page 1 of 2 • 1, 2
Xian Cha - Long Jing
Have any of you been practicing "xian cha"? The first time I met with the owner of the shop that entertained me Long Jing.
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chado.my.teaway - Posts: 189
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- Location: Poland
Re: Xian Cha - Long Jing
its a Xing Cha...my mistake.
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chado.my.teaway - Posts: 189
- Joined: Aug 2nd, '1
- Location: Poland
Re: Xian Cha - Long Jing
or maybe a "xin cha"? "new tea"?
Southern Chinese are often confused about "g" in Chinese pinyin
Southern Chinese are often confused about "g" in Chinese pinyin
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gingkoseto - Posts: 2050
- Joined: Sep 24th, '
- Location: Massachusetts
Re: Xian Cha - Long Jing
AFAIK, waking up the tea is sometimes a step for brewing certain kinds of teas. The wash CAN sometimes achieve the same effect. I haven't seen it much myself in brewing long jing or green teas in general though.
Last edited by SilentChaos on Dec 2nd, '12, 19:47, edited 1 time in total.
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SilentChaos - Posts: 323
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- Location: Taipei
Re: Xian Cha - Long Jing
Oh I see! Usually I put small amount of water before putting in the tea and then swirl the cup a bit after putting in the tea and before filling the cup with hot water. Somewhat similar to what she does except putting water before the tea.
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gingkoseto - Posts: 2050
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- Location: Massachusetts
Re: Xian Cha - Long Jing
醒, xǐng, "to rouse." Often used to mean simply "wake up," but the 酉 radical means it has something to do with a jar, specifically to recover from drunkenness!
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Evan Draper - Posts: 156
- Joined: Jan 23rd, '
- Location: Philadelphia
Re: Xian Cha - Long Jing
Thanks for sharing. I usually flash rinse my LJ before brewing, but maybe some swirling in the first infusion might be a good thing.
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jayinhk - Posts: 514
- Joined: Aug 28th, '
Re: Xian Cha - Long Jing
jayinhk wrote:Thanks for sharing. I usually flash rinse my LJ before brewing, but maybe some swirling in the first infusion might be a good thing.
Really no need to flash rinse LJ or most green teas. Maybe brewing 1st brew a bit longer because you are going from dry to wet and the water needs more time to penetrate. Many myths associated with flash rinsing and 'cleaning' most teas.
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Tead Off - Vendor Member
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Re: Xian Cha - Long Jing
Been meaning to try this method for a while. But my Longjing wouldn't sink after several minutes! Guess it got so drunk it wouldn't rouse...the Bon Scott of Long jings.
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Evan Draper - Posts: 156
- Joined: Jan 23rd, '
- Location: Philadelphia
Re: Xian Cha - Long Jing
By the way, does anyone have a good source for buying such heat-resistant narrow glass tumblers from the US? It's the kind of thing you can just get at Walmart in China, but nobody in the states has any use for them apparently
Your choices are either a shatter-prone bud vase or an over-insulated space age travel monstrosity.
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Evan Draper - Posts: 156
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- Location: Philadelphia
Re: Xian Cha - Long Jing
Tead Off wrote:Many myths associated with flash rinsing and 'cleaning' most teas.
How about this? Removing pesticide residue.
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bagua7 - Posts: 1062
- Joined: Jul 21st, '
Re: Xian Cha - Long Jing
bagua7 wrote:Tead Off wrote:Many myths associated with flash rinsing and 'cleaning' most teas.
How about this? Removing pesticide residue.
Pesticide residue is not very soluble in water. Rinse with dish soap or you're not accomplishing anything
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entropyembrace - Posts: 1815
- Joined: Mar 3rd, '0
Re: Xian Cha - Long Jing
Evan Draper wrote:By the way, does anyone have a good source for buying such heat-resistant narrow glass tumblers from the US? It's the kind of thing you can just get at Walmart in China, but nobody in the states has any use for them apparentlyYour choices are either a shatter-prone bud vase or an over-insulated space age travel monstrosity.
Unfortunately, I've been on the same mission without much success. I think we should organize a group to do a large taobao buy for these tumblers. I especially like ones such as these: http://detail.tmall.com/item.htm?spm=a2 ... id=&pm_id= $12 on taobao, but if you could find it in the states, it would surely be $50.
Teahabitat has a few http://www.teahabitat.com/store/index.p ... cts_id=336, but I prefer the durable steel tumblers over glass.
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Poohblah - Posts: 781
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Re: Xian Cha - Long Jing
entropyembrace wrote:bagua7 wrote:Tead Off wrote:Many myths associated with flash rinsing and 'cleaning' most teas.
How about this? Removing pesticide residue.
Pesticide residue is not very soluble in water. Rinse with dish soap or you're not accomplishing anything
The HK Govt's Centre for Food Safety seems to disagree:
http://www.cfs.gov.hk/english/multimedi ... 35_03.html
Also this study from the Tea Research Institute of the Chinese Academy of Agricultural Sciences seems to indicate some pesticides are very much water soluble (DDT isn't, but dimethoate, for example, very much is):
http://www.selamat.wur.nl/NR/rdonlyres/ ... ssment.pdf
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jayinhk - Posts: 514
- Joined: Aug 28th, '
27 posts • Page 1 of 2 • 1, 2