Wednesday, June 08, 2011

A good morning Hung Shui Oolong

My family spent the Dragon Boat festival in Zhu Shan. We stayed in a new hotel surrounded by tea fields! It is located on the western side of town and it's facing the mountains of Shan Lin Shi. The sunrise is magnificent.

Lately, I have taken the habit of drinking a Hung Shui Oolong very early in the mornings. It's a time when my children are still sleeping (and everything feels peaceful). Tea brings its burst of warm and balanced energy.

In Zhu Shan, facing Shan Lin Shi, it was the perfect time and place to brew my High Mountain Hung Shui Oolong from Shan Lin Shi, harvested on April 20, 2010. (The 2011 version still needs some rest).


I brought a simple tea set with me: a Cha Bu with bamboos (because we're in Zhu Shan, bamboo mountain!), a ivory porcelain gaiwan, 3 singing cups, 3 old pewter Cha Tuo (saucers), 1 small pewter tea caddy and a small black bowl by Ginkgo for the waste water. Boiling water is almost never a problem in Taiwan, so used the water and accessories provided by the hotel.

The slow charcoal roast has done 2 things to the tea leaves:
1. intensify the fragrances: they have gone from fresh and flowery to more complex fruity, chocolate, fudge with more power,

2. sweeten and refine the taste: the Shan Lin Shi terroir has a lot of finesse and this roast has nicely underlined this characteristic.

At the same time, the core freshness is preserved: the energy of a young tea is there, but in a very balanced way.
The day has started with so much beauty and warm energy... I'm so glad that I could take these pictures to share this moment of tea happiness with all of you!

4 comments:

Kim Christian said...

*sigh*...I am soooo jealous !! :)
What a great view !!

Philippe de Bordeaux filipek said...

Quelle superbe lumière!

Merci Cher Stéphane: c'est rafraichissant à l'image de tes liqueurs dans les belles tasses ivory;que je fais souvent chanter,sonner...

à bientot.

. PHILIPPE .

TeaMasters said...

Kim,
I'll help you book a room there when you come back to Taiwan!

Merci Philippe,
Gaiwan ivoire, coupes qingbai. Accords un peu désaccordés, mais harmonisés par la lumière. Je suis d'accord!

C said...

Lovely gaiwan set, Stephane. I really must get one from you. Of course, that's only half of it. The setting rounds out the experience,

Christian S.
Canada