how often/when should matcha whisk be replaced
Just out of curiosity....how often do you do it and when do you say ok - thats it - time to get a new one?
Aug 6th, '08, 23:30
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chamekke
What she said.GeekgirlUnveiled wrote:When the tines start breaking off in my tea? Yeah, pretty much then.
In tea ceremony, you're supposed to use a fresh chasen each time you serve tea at a formal event (such as a chakai or chaji). Most people can't afford to do that in daily life, of course; like Geekgirl, I wait until I notice that the tines are beginning to give way. (Of course, you can continue to use the chasen even then, if you prefer to take a little fibre with your tea.)
I like the comments by the owner of the Tea Toys site: "One use for worn out chasen is for cleaning the spine of fish after gutting. Cut all but about 3 cm. of the tines off then use the stubb to whisk the fish spine clean."
Re: how often/when should matcha whisk be replaced
Every third fortnight, aside from months that don't have an "R."inspectoring wrote:Just out of curiosity....how often do you do it and when do you say ok - thats it - time to get a new one?

Aug 7th, '08, 10:41
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chamekke
There are a couple of temples (shrines?) in Japan where they do that, but most people just throw them out.Pentox wrote:I thought you are supposed to burn them in a ceremony at one point in the year.
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Aug 7th, '08, 13:17
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chamekke
The ceremony is called chasen kuyo (also spelled without the space between the two words). Pretty good English-language article here:auggy wrote:Can someone tell me more about the ceremony that people would burn their old whisks it? Google gets me lots of tea ceremony links and this thread.
http://www.slowfoodla.com/archives/000826.html
And a photo from a Japanese website:

The original article with other photographs can be found here:
http://sadou.at.webry.info/200804/article_34.html
Aug 7th, '08, 13:20
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auggy
Awesome! Thank you muchly!chamekke wrote:The ceremony is called chasen kuyo (also spelled without the space between the two words). Pretty good English-language article here:auggy wrote:Can someone tell me more about the ceremony that people would burn their old whisks it? Google gets me lots of tea ceremony links and this thread.
http://www.slowfoodla.com/archives/000826.html
And a photo from a Japanese website:
The original article with other photographs can be found here:
http://sadou.at.webry.info/200804/article_34.html
