Jan 25th, '09, 21:32
Posts: 19
Joined: Jan 22nd, '09, 00:40
Location: Camp LeJeune
Contact:
FireArmada
Brewing
I am trying to find out how much Tea to Water to use. I have a Chinese pot. And mostly use Oolong teas.
Jan 25th, '09, 23:31
Posts: 2299
Joined: Oct 23rd, '06, 19:46
Location: Seattle Area
Contact:
tenuki
I recommend you put tea in the pot, then add water, then drink it.
Do something different, something different will happen. ( Gong Fu Garden )
Jan 25th, '09, 23:49
Posts: 19
Joined: Jan 22nd, '09, 00:40
Location: Camp LeJeune
Contact:
FireArmada
Jan 25th, '09, 23:50
Posts: 2299
Joined: Oct 23rd, '06, 19:46
Location: Seattle Area
Contact:
tenuki
Now we are getting somewhere. That's a nice pot!FireArmada wrote:How much tea to use = to how much water used. My pot holds 1.8 oztenuki wrote:I recommend you put tea in the pot, then add water, then drink it.


What tea are you brewing? The thing is every tea is different, so giving you a blanket recommendation is hard to do. The more specific you get the more specific we can get.
Also, are you interested in brewing gong fu style (lots of leaf short infusions) or western style ( little leaf and long infusions).
Gong fu style the general idea is to get as much leaf in there after expansion as possible without it becoming too packed. That means every leaf type will require a different amount and sometimes you will have to experiment to find it. Some people recommend a standard 3g/100ml, but I do not. however it may be a good place for you to start. Your pot is about 80ml (small small small) So I would try 2g.
Water temperature is the next variable to figure out. For oolongs that are not close to greens I would use boiling water and 20 seconds or so infusion times. For chinese greens water closer to 180 and slightly longer, maybe 50 seconds as a starting point.
Last edited by tenuki on Jan 26th, '09, 00:02, edited 2 times in total.
Jan 25th, '09, 23:53
Posts: 19
Joined: Jan 22nd, '09, 00:40
Location: Camp LeJeune
Contact:
FireArmada
Jan 26th, '09, 00:00
Posts: 2299
Joined: Oct 23rd, '06, 19:46
Location: Seattle Area
Contact:
tenuki
Many loose leaf teas can be brewed twice, with some of higher qualtiy teas capable of 3 or 4 steeps. Some puerh teas can be brewed in excess of 10 times. That reduces the cost per cup quite a bit.FireArmada wrote:sorry was thinking of cups and i edited the last post. well i would like to save as much leaves as i can. Save money. Tea is alot of money to drink everyday