I like to steep my white teas multiple times. I'm actually new to tea and have really fallen in love with white teas and some herbal ones like Rooibos.
How does the time between steeps affect the tea? Should I constantly increase the time I steep for each subsequent brew or does the 15 to 30 min. between steeping them count for something? During this time the leaves are just sitting in the steeper, obviously wet and cooling to room temperature.
Thanks in advance!
Oct 24th, '10, 11:35
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debunix
Re: Time between brewing/steeping
I find that the 2nd steep can often be shorter, because the tea seems to have fully hydrated at that point, and bitterness can be more concentrated if I let that steep be as long as the first one was. This seems to be most important with senchas and many other green teas, but I have had a couple of white teas that could get bitter, and did the same thing wth them (shorter 2nd brewing). After the 2nd infusion, I again go longer, regardless of the time between infusions.
So for a green tea, I might do 30", 10", 30", 45", 1 min, 90", 2 min.
For a white tea, depending on how I pack the gaiwan or pot, it might be the same, or longer, 60", 20", 2 min, 3 min, etc, but still I shorten that 2nd infusion, same as green tea.
When in doubt, pour out a sip of the 2nd infusion, taste quickly, and decide whether or not to make the infusion longer. That's hard to do with a 10 second infusion window, but easier if your infusion times are 20 seconds or more.
So for a green tea, I might do 30", 10", 30", 45", 1 min, 90", 2 min.
For a white tea, depending on how I pack the gaiwan or pot, it might be the same, or longer, 60", 20", 2 min, 3 min, etc, but still I shorten that 2nd infusion, same as green tea.
When in doubt, pour out a sip of the 2nd infusion, taste quickly, and decide whether or not to make the infusion longer. That's hard to do with a 10 second infusion window, but easier if your infusion times are 20 seconds or more.
Re: Time between brewing/steeping
Thank you debunix! I guess I needed to see my thoughts translated out and affirmed. Knowing I'm not the only one is tea empowering and now I can quit worrying if I'm doing it "right!"
Re: Time between brewing/steeping
Yes Debunix has presented the proper method of sequntial brewing very cleary, great post.
Also the time between the brews should not be too long as the tea is degrading during this time. This is relative not too a few minutes but more than ten minutes or so between brewings. The tea leaves idealy should still be warm for the next brew, if they go cold which can happen very quickly depending on the weather, the next brew will kind of "shock" the leaves and can make for a more bitter brew.
On a small scale, yes the hot leaves are still cooking and and an adjustment with a slightly shorter brew time is made to compensate for this. Here in the teashops and tea houses, where many people are drinking there is no time inbetween so the brew times become very short - from ten seconds to no more than a minute for the final brews even with aged or compressed black tea and puer.
Also the time between the brews should not be too long as the tea is degrading during this time. This is relative not too a few minutes but more than ten minutes or so between brewings. The tea leaves idealy should still be warm for the next brew, if they go cold which can happen very quickly depending on the weather, the next brew will kind of "shock" the leaves and can make for a more bitter brew.
On a small scale, yes the hot leaves are still cooking and and an adjustment with a slightly shorter brew time is made to compensate for this. Here in the teashops and tea houses, where many people are drinking there is no time inbetween so the brew times become very short - from ten seconds to no more than a minute for the final brews even with aged or compressed black tea and puer.
Re: Time between brewing/steeping
If it does cool...I have found that pouring on the inner wall until 1/3-1/2 full, short pause/swirl then proceeding to pour over leaves as usual helps ease the bitterness from temperature shock.legend wrote:The tea leaves idealy should still be warm for the next brew, if they go cold which can happen very quickly depending on the weather, the next brew will kind of "shock" the leaves and can make for a more bitter brew.
Re: Time between brewing/steeping
I've found as a general rule that if you leave the tea sitting, wet, it does "count" to some degree for steeping time. If I return to a tea after letting it sit, I tend to make a shorter infusion than if I were to brew that infusion shortly after the previous one.
Re: Time between brewing/steeping

Are you all also saying that you REUSE your tea leaves? You get two or even three pots of tea from the same leaves?
woozl, are you saying you've let your already used tea leaves sit in the pot for 24 hours, then reuse those same leaves? I'm confused?woozl wrote:I've some oolong, 24 hrs and 5 steeps, still great the next day.
Re: Time between brewing/steeping
Personally, I rarely make multiple infusions of white tea, but I frequently do with green tea and almost always with oolong. The few times I've had yellow tea I've always made multiple infusions of it.
White tea, I usually like to make a single very long (10+ minute) infusion of. But it really depends on the type.
White tea, I usually like to make a single very long (10+ minute) infusion of. But it really depends on the type.
Re: Time between brewing/steeping
I make multiple infusions of white peony all the time. Lately I have been using about 160 degree water and a two minute +/- steep in a coffee press that I recently recieved as a gift at work with wonderful results. With a three-finger pinch of WP I can get 3 to 4 infusions. But after two infusions I increase the water temp to about 180 degrees F and increase steep time to 5 or so minutes..
Re: Time between brewing/steeping
I neither make multiple infusions, but neither green tea. And with white tea I make a long infusion too, 10 minutes or moreAlexZorach wrote:Personally, I rarely make multiple infusions of white tea, but I frequently do with green tea and almost always with oolong. The few times I've had yellow tea I've always made multiple infusions of it.
White tea, I usually like to make a single very long (10+ minute) infusion of. But it really depends on the type.