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Wholemeal Crank

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Posts posted by Wholemeal Crank

  1. Have had a couple of very nice tea days this weekend.

    Today, started with more sencha, then on to a very good session with a sometimes problematic tea, Silver Dragon, a white tea from Wing Hop Fung, but brewing it very cool really cut down on the sometimes bitter taste that can be offputting. Brewed at 150, it was surprisingly Dragon Well like. It also seems more green than white tea.

    Now working with a little Menghai tuo "2005 Early spring' that I got from Yunnan Sourcing. It is still a bit aggressive in the early infusions--not really smoky, but with a strong inclination to a bitterness and astringency that is not as easy to overcome as that in the very young loose shengs I've been drinking lately. It's now very mellow at the end of the infusions--still gets a little more flavor than simple sweet water, but not much more.

  2. That looks beautiful.

    When you're trying to achieve that effect--watching the leaves 'dance' in the cup like that--how do you set up? I presume you start out with adding leaves to water in the cup at first, but how do you handle the very slow-to-wet pileup of fuzzy floaty silverneedle leaves? Drink around them for the first few infusions, until they start to drop to the bottom of their own accord? Pour water gently over them for the next infusion?

    Yesterday, I started with a lovely bulk brewing of Ti Guan Yin from Jing Tea Shop, and then had a fabulous long session with Ya Shi dan cong from Tea Habitat. Two different sides of oolong tea, both so marvelous and distinct.

    Today, opened a fresh pouch of Den's Shin-ryoku sencha, and it's very nice to come back to it and find it still as delicious as I remembered. Mmmm.

  3. Yesterday was a nice variety tea day--started with Tai Ping Hou Kui from Jing Tea Shop, light and sweet for a change from sencha; then shared some Dragon Well with colleagues, including a new hire who says she drinks green tea at home ("this boxed stuff that my husband buys"); enjoyed a thermos full of Da Hong Pao (no idea what generation from the original trees, but quite a nice version from Norbu) during a long but surprisingly efficient meeting; moved on to some Wuliang Shan loose sheng mao cha; and ended the day with a bit of Ya Bao wild tea buds and camellia flowers.

    Today, so far, some Yin Zhen silver needles from Jing Tea Shop; and another wonderful batch of the Dong Xing deep roast oolong from Taiwan via Norbu. A nice tea for a stressful day at work.

  4. Tai ping hou kui is definitely a favorite since I first tried some, whether the lower grade version I first encountered at my local market, or the fancy version I have since enjoyed from Jing Tea Shop. The delightful spiciness is quite unexpected in a delicate sweet green tea.

    Today, some nice Da Hong Pao from Norbu, and I'm now enjoying a good session with Honey Orchid Dan Cong from Tea Habitat. Both teas with a pleasant spiciness.

  5. Had some lovely local asparagus this evening--just steamed, and it needed nothing else. Perfect, sweet, plump, tender, probably the best asparagus experience I have ever had. My favorite way to prepare my favorite spring vegetable.

  6. Denture tablets.....[are] very effective in removing mineral deposits from stainless steel. I have tried it - outside - in a stiff breeze to carry away the fumes. I don't recommend it.

    I don't recommend it either for stainless steel. This is what it did to my thermos, when I just wanted to scrub the tannin deposits away--I had a theory, which I now know was wrong, that perhaps the buildup of tannins was the problem with some of my more delicate teas when put into the thermos:

    3906176924_f2395c4a80_m.jpg

    That's steel etched by the tablets.

  7. I used about a 1:10 dilution of household bleach on that one sad stinky pot, and let it soak for about an hour. For less stinky concerns, I've been happy with denture cleaners, toothpaste, and elbow grease. I know the denture cleaners are powerful--they ate a nice stainless vacuum bottle--but hadn't considered them as potentially useful for sterilizating moldy stuff.

  8. Welcome, chutney! This is a great place to share and to learn.

    My dad liked the bargain prices on bulk items at the Food Mill in Oakland, CA in the early 70s. We'd stop there on trips to or from the city, toting a box of gallon pickle jars to be filled up with beans and rices and get mysterious bags of spices and more. I was always disappointed that he wouldn't any of the mysterious cookies and other treats for us to try, but having tried a few such things here and there since, we didn't miss much. It was so much more interesting than the regular grocery stores, and I've been drawn to bulk bins ever since.

  9. I've enjoyed my sessions reading the book, so far distressingly few of them, with food nearby, and while I haven't spilled on it yet, that will surely come in time. But if I wait for food-free time to read it, away from the kitchen, dining room, or midnight snacks, it will take years to get through at present rates--not due to readability issues, it's more readable than most of my trade journals, but simply due to time constraints. And I want to get through that first reading ASAP, so I can start incorporating new ideas and techniques into my cooking. Just this weekend, I made some filled cookies, that might have benefited from a better knowledge of thickening agents to help solidify the filling a bit and preserve their shape better without the inevitable flavor dilution of cornstarch.

  10. I've mostly blocked the distressing details from memory, but I did once leave a kyusu with leaves in it for quite a few days--I expected to come back the next day, and I'd only had one or two infusions of a very classy tea, but I didn't come back the next day, and when I did come back, I didn't remember that it had leaves in it. So.....it was some days before I realized the error--it's a pot I only use about once a week on average anyway.

    It got bleached, if I recall correctly, copious rinsing, and a long airing out before I used it again.

  11. If Wholemeal Crank took a sip of a tea I brewed, we would be calling 911; if I drank hers, I would wonder why she likes to drink water out of tea cups. It's personal. Just have fun.

    True enough. I just set up an infusion of the Lao Ban Zhang and forgot to pour it out right away--I know better than to turn my back on any infusion of this tea, it's so powerful--but fortunately it was the first infusion after a while, and the cool gaiwan seems to have save it from something destined to fit Richard's taste to one fit for me. Whew!

  12. More on topic....some HouDe Wood-roasted Shui Xian this afternoon, and starting a session with Lao Ban Zhang loose puerh from Norbu this evening.

    It is hard to know what a new tea drinker will like, and I almost didn't try the Lao Ban Zhang because Greg warned it could be quite bitter. But a little practice and I came up with a way to brew it that I love. Still, if I'd had it when I was first starting to branch out from my SeaDyke traditional roast TGY and jasmine green teas, I would have given up on the idea of puerh for a good long time to come. Fortunately, I met some mellow ripe puerhs first, then some more aggressive but tasty shengs, and I was ready for this one when it came my way--thanks to a TT&D here on egullet.

  13. Lao cha tou is essentially the crap at the bottom of the pile whe they make ripe puer. It's not a tea I'd recommend drinking, esp. if you're new to puer.

    The particular Lao Cha Tou I was recommending, the 2009 private label from Norbu, is plummy, fruity, sweet, only mildly earthy, and not at all dreg-like.

    I would also recommend staying away from Dan Congs, much as I love them, for a little while. They're fabulous teas but not what I'd recommend for a beginner, because it takes a little practice to get the best out of them. I'd wait until you're comfortable with a less expensive Wuyi oolong or two before trying them--mostly because the good ones from Imen are too expensive to use for practice.

  14. Almost invariably my tea-bag drinking acquaintances start out being most pleased by a nice jasmine green tea. Others that are very popular with new tea drinkers are Anji white tea (really a green tea by processing, but usually labelled a white tea); the Yunnan Mao Feng I've been getting from Norbu is exceptionally mellow; strongly floral green oolongs like Norbu's Diamond TGY and Alishan oolongs; and a good silver needle white tea is almost always welcome.

    I adore the Lao Mansa but would not recommend it as a beginner puerh; when you're ready to start with puerh again, I'd go with the Lao Cha Tou first.

  15. The next day I tried the 2007 Lincang Grade 1 Ripe pu-erh tea from Norbu (3.5 g; 10 oz water; Boil; 10", 3', 3.5', ...). I'd never tried a pu-erh before and it was a little too earthy for me.

    Those sound like quite long infusion times to me, or at least, very long initial infusion times, although I usually use about 1 gram of tea per 1 to 2 ounces of water. If it's not to your preference, I'd set it aside to try again in a few months, rather than compost it. If you're willing to try again, you might try this 2009 Lao Cha Tou shu pu from Norbu, that I find exceptionally forgiving, but milder on the earthiness than some others. It's available in 25g samples to start.

    Then, yesterday, I thought I'd try making some tea gongfu-style using my new gaiwans. Wow! I'm a complete convert. It's so much easier than I expected! Also, brewing in these little 120 ml gaiwans is so much more convenient than the 10 oz mugs -- no more cold tea at the bottom of my mug and no more infusers to clean! (I've got to thank Wholemeal Crank for mentioning using another gaiwan to drink from since it's so hard to find a teacup that isn't either way too small or way too large.)

    Glad to hear it's working so well for you!

    I'm sitting at my desk at work, about to give up on the paperwork and head home, surrounded by a pair of gaiwans, one that I was using for some very nice autumn Tie Guan Yin from jingteashop and one for some San Nen Bancha from norbu--such a great evening tea with the comforting toasty-roasty-ness. I love my gaiwans! Earlier today drank some Anji white tea (brewed in a small glass pot rather than a gaiwan, because I love how pretty the delicate needle-like leaves are as they brew), and finished day 2 of a long brewing session with Da Hong Pao from norbu, a lovely tea that forgave me for letting some of it sit overnight in the thermos, cooling to room temp, being refreshed with some hot new infusions, and still tasting pretty nice.

    Yesterday I used 1.5 g of the Xue Dian Mei Lan green tea in about 70 ml of 175°F water and steeped for 5,3,4,4,5,6,... breaths (counting after filling and before pouring). Then I tried 2.5 g of tea and it was too strong and a bit astringent for me. Today I've done 2.0 g of both the Man Tang Xiang and Xue Dian Mei Lan green teas (70 ml water; 175°F; 5,4,6,8,...) and this worked well for me. Do these leaf-to-water ratios and times sound about right to you?

    Depends on your respiratory rate, but if you're breathing 12-15 times a minute, those breaths come out to 20-25 seconds first infusion, which is pretty close to the timings I use for similar amounts of tea. If you try a larger amount of tea and your infusions are too strong with your usual timing, you can always cut the infusion time, in proportion to how much more tea you put in, and still usually rescue the set of infusions.

  16. Breakfast needs to be simple to prepare, easy on my morning-delicate stomach and eyes, and have enough solidity that I don't start chewing on the edge of my desk before lunch.

    Some variation on cereal (hot or cold) or toast, on weekends occasionally pancakes or waffles; and milk or hot chocolate; and tea. On weekends, when it can be delayed an hour or two, I have time both to prepare, and be ready to eat, a larger feast.

    One of the disappointments of my trip to Japan was that it was still so early when we finished our visit to the Tsukiji fish market, that I simply could not face sushi-for-breakfast. A bowl of udon noodles was as adventurous as I could be at 830 in the morning.

  17. I've read quite a bit about 'milk oolong', and there seems to be both a natural leaf tea that is very hard to obtain in pure form, that gives the impression of milk when drunk plain, and a horde of counterfeits including tea treated with powdered milk, sometimes disclosed to the buyer and sometimes not. All the stories about the counterfeit made me reluctant to seek it out from shops unknown to me, and I haven't seen it offered by one with which I've already done business.

    Where did you get yours? And did it taste like milk? I'm very curious, but wary.

  18. Today, I started with my staple SeaDyke Ti Kuan Yin, very pleasant in the face of a meeting that was long on details and short on interest; then finished a dozen or so brief infusions of some Ya Shi Dan Cong brewed in my tiniest yixing pot; and now am enjoying the best yet brewing of a very fancy Dragon Well--the top grade from Wing Hop Fung. It was a tea that I was so frustrated by that I gave it away the first go round, but by the time it came back into my hands, I was ready for it. Good stuff, and today I'm brewing it very cool--145 degrees or thereabouts--and it's just rich and gorgeous. Tap-dancing taste buds, happy all day.

  19. The Breads of France was probably the first cookbook I read cover to cover. It's a travelogue, a baking journal, and an endless source of ideas and inspiration. I've been working with it--making notes all over the pages, breaking the spine, taping it together, and having a dialogue with it--for 20 years. I even wrote him a fan letter with a variation I'd come up with on one of his recipes, and got a very nice reply.

    I also have his the revised Complete book of breads and Complete book of pastry on my shelves, and though I rarely follow the recipes precisely from the Complete book of breads--I get inspired but usually end up blazing a slightly different trail, being a wholemeal crank and all--I use the base pastry preparations from the Complete book of pastry frequently with little variation.

    I still haven't made Normandy Beaten Bread yet. I think it's time for some buttery dough to be pounded in his memory.

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