Not exactly my experience and besides .... how do we define quality of something as complex as tea? Anyway, there sure are teas that require (and deserve) a lot more attention to detail than others to really shine through. One reason I love those Himalayan leaves and shengs that much is exactly this: some can be finicky as hell and still challenge the living c..p out of me after all those years, especially compared to something more 'stoic' like e.g. the average el-cheapo, nuke-ish, just-add-hot-water Tie Guan Yin.stevorama wrote:
I've noticed that higher quality teas come through well in most situations. Other teas require more finesse!
BTW, one thing that puzzled me back in the day when I still used to smoke next to drinking a casual cup of tea is that I could taste almost the entire flavor spectrum of some TGY whereas most of my Darjeelings and shengs tasted more like hot water.
Indeed carbon block filters don't remove minerals, but do remove particulate.
I have a two stage system with a prefilter that takes care of particles, ans prevents the carbon-block from premature clogging. From what I remember the carbon-block stage removes 99.xxx% of the organic compounds (agrochemicals, pharmaceuticals/antibiotics (big issue over here), bacteria, ...) and most heavy metals. It's been developed for professional applications and is used in the food industry, universities, by the Red Cross, NGOs, ... couldn't be more happy.
Yep, climate, water, teaware (cups, cups, cupsI notice changes with weather. My guess is that changes in temp and humidity of my storage area impact the tea. It's been 65-70% RH and 65-80'F in there, and most teas are tasting great. Of course water really impacts things too. And teaware. And my mood.![]()

Can't wait to fly back home though and expose my bings to the average 25°C and 75%RH down there but that's yet another story (clearing customs with 40+ kg of strange looking leaves

Sorry for another ramble - back OT.