I used to! Anyway now I understand why my cat likes Puerh!wyardley wrote:I hope you don't ever eat, say, peanut butter....JRS22 wrote: If the first rinse is primarily for cleaning then I would think it would be more effective to do it in a strainer rather than the pot. And after reading your description of possible contaminants I might not have the stomach for puer without giving it a 'bath' first!
Re: Why rinse?
Re: Why rinse?
I know some people may combine these steps to save time and / or water, but typically, I, and most people I know, preheat the teaware first, then rinse.beecrofter wrote:Rinsing in a strainer does nothing to preheat your pot.
Feb 8th, '12, 14:59
Posts: 529
Joined: Jul 23rd, '08, 17:07
Location: The Isle of Malta
Re: Why rinse?
I'm guessing you guys don't have a "five second rule".Saayuq wrote:In Yup'ik culture we are taught not to let anything go to waste. The bowl is always cleaned completely, nothing is left on the plate. Having lived here for a long time I have become somewhat acculturated, therefore I have a hard time rinsing the leaves. My tendency is to throw that into my first cup and drink it. Help me understand the purpose of rinsing before the first infusion.
Try some baoyan brick without rinsing it.

Re: Why rinse?
I'm guessing you guys don't have a "five second rule".
The catch is it doesn't count as waste if it goes to the dogs, or in our case, the chickens.
The catch is it doesn't count as waste if it goes to the dogs, or in our case, the chickens.
Re: Why rinse?
Just found the video below while searching on CCTV. This could just be a "show" to reassure CN of their own food safety standard.
http://search.cctv.com/playVideo.php?de ... a341c00834
Main take away
1. Pesticides can't be washed away easily as it's not soluble.
2. Washing could waste 20% of "goodness".
Afaik, 1 brick tea I had made in 2011 with QS label and all had a 5mmx5mm lump of sand in it.
http://search.cctv.com/playVideo.php?de ... a341c00834
Main take away
1. Pesticides can't be washed away easily as it's not soluble.
2. Washing could waste 20% of "goodness".
Afaik, 1 brick tea I had made in 2011 with QS label and all had a 5mmx5mm lump of sand in it.
Re: Why rinse?
I actually don't rinse.
I'm not worried about pesticides, since its not going to go away in just one rinse.
I think it wastes a perfectly good brew, and I'm just lazy haha
I'm not worried about pesticides, since its not going to go away in just one rinse.
I think it wastes a perfectly good brew, and I'm just lazy haha

Mar 17th, '14, 14:19
Posts: 702
Joined: Sep 4th, '10, 18:25
Scrolling: scrolling
Re: Why rinse?
It often isn't a very good brew unless you push it long. My sense is that throwing the first flash rinse helps subsequent infusions but I'm sure there are people who feel differently.
I don't think tea is processed in sterile conditions with rubber gloves and all. Neither is it stored in pretty stainless steel containers most of the time.
I don't think tea is processed in sterile conditions with rubber gloves and all. Neither is it stored in pretty stainless steel containers most of the time.