An exceptional tea celebrates the New Year and it requires exceptional accessories, a great set up and a slow gongfu brewing. 2 hours are dedicated to drinking just this tea.
I let the leaves rest in a porcelain jar for a while. Then, I pick my smallest zhuni teapot, De Hua dragon cups, copper Cha Tuos with silver rim and a copper Shui Fang (kensui). For Christmas, I always purchase lily flowers to decorate our apartment. Now, they have blossomed and add a festive feeling to my Cha Xi. I could even find a matching scarf and use it as Cha Bu!
On this cold day, I'm glad to start a charcoal fire in the brazier. This Nilu is higher than the one I usually use. The space for the charcoal is deeper, but less wide. But it's just wide enough for the charcoal. The air flow is good and the fire required less efforts on my part to sustain. (All braziers are not created equal...)
Here are the leaves! They are from the Rou Gui cultivar and were harvested this spring, in May, in the official Wu Yi area. (There, leaves are only harvested once a year!)
To evaluate dry Yan Cha, we can proceed with 2 breathings. First, we smell the roasting. Second, we smell to look for fragrances of lichen moss. Yan Cha means rock tea for a reason: the trees grow between rocks and cliffs. Licken moss covers many rocks and their smell permeates real Yan Cha.
With most great teas, I recommend to use fewer leaves and long brewing times. Not for Wu Yi. This tea is best brewed strong. So, I used all the leaves above. They filled more than half of my small teapot. Its zhuni clay doesn't 'mellow' the taste very much, so I'm careful to pour the boiling water very slowly in this teapot. But what this clay and teapot does best is to make a very pure, unaldurated and powerful tea. My first brewing time is around a minute: I want it strong! Here is the first brew:
I'm salivating just looking at this picture again! From the brown look of the tea soup, I should have expected a strong taste. So, except for a slightly dry feeling on the tongue, try to imagine a warm cup of sweet velvet that lightly flows down the throat instead! The charcoal fire has mellowed the spring water to perfection! Then, it hits you. The eyes open up, the spirits lighten and the whole body warms up! Its aftertaste lets your heart pound, as if you had just glimpsed at your sweetheart after a long separation.
Amazing! Let's make more rounds:
The wholeness of the fragrance is also special: the roast fragrances are not separated from the tea. The darker roast notes so well complete the fresh tea fragrances that I don't know where one starts and the other stops.
Later brews turn a little lighter in color, but still produce a very
bright golden orange reflection. It shines in the cup as well as on the
palate. The mouth remains so pure, clean and light! There's even a hint of minty freshness on the tongue. The body experiences warm and calm bliss!
The only drawback of this kind of tea is its rarity, difficulty to find and price. (You won't find it in my selection ; I don't have enough for sale). But it serves as a bright star to guide us to understand what perfection tastes and feels like.
The open leaves turn green again. The oxidation marks are easy to see on the rims of the leaf. (This level of oxidation is similar to that of my current concubine Oolongs and Feng Huang Hung Shui Oolongs.) The leaves are strong and retain some elasticity.
Thanks to David Louveau, I have this small qingbai ever that I use to refill the tetsubin with spring water. During this kind of ceremonious Cha Xi, it adds considerable elegance. (At this stage, a plastic bottle would utterly ruin the mood). The narrow long spout creates a small, but precise flow. It takes more time to empty, but it reminds you to take it easy. There's no haste. Enjoy the sight of this fresh water spring!
The double glazing of this ever makes it very smooth to touch. The walls are thick and it's quite heavy for its small size, especially once filled with water.
The charcoal is nearly consumed by now. I say goodbye to this tea, but I will continue brewing these leaves the next days. There's still a lot of natural sweetness that can be coaxed out of them.
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10 comments:
Meilleurs voeux pour cette nouvelle année.
Nicolas
Beautiful!
Happy New Year from Seattle.
Steve
How does one reuse steeped leaves for days after the initial brewing? I've have been wanting to learn the method of doing this for a long time. How should the used leaves be stored?
Great post !! Happy New Year, Stéphane !!
Frohes Neues Jahr!
What a truly beautiful Cha Xi, I especially like the elegance of the slender Nilu.
Yesterday I also had a Rou Gui to bid the old year farewell. But my bag of Rou Gui always gives me conflicting feelings: the first 3 infusions are better than any other Yan Cha I have ever tasted, but then there is a dramatic drop in quality and the fourth infusion is merely tinted water.
I have tried many times changing different brewing parameters - still the leaves give up after 3 infusions.
How about your Rou Gui? Will it keep its quality for many more infusions?
Hope the new year continues as good as it started with this tea!
Bonne année Nicolas!
Frohes Neues Jahr Kim and Gero!
Happy New Year Steve, Jerome and all my dear readers!
I simply leave the leaves in the teapot (in a cool place, but not the fridge). Good Yixing clay helps preserve them for several days. (Beware: if you keep them too long, mold will appear). Then, I heat the outside of the teapot first and start brewing again.
Gero,
My Rou Gui is still giving very sweet water and rich smells at the 9 or 10th brew (approximately, because I don't count). It's the strong chaqi that diminishes faster, though. For later rounds, I increase my brewing time a lot.
Superbe ! Tes photos me font saliver également. Et quelle magnifique théière...
Tous mes voeux pour cette nouvelle année.
Beautiful Cha Bu ... Happy New Year & best wishes for 2012!/Celina
Thank you for the help and happy new year!
Beautiful tea. I love your tetsubin too. Happy new year!
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