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Temperature controlled kettle worth it? - YES!
  • I do enjoy the control the gooseneck provides.

    I've even dabbled making pour over tea with it. I have a fancy clay filter with fine holes that steeps some broken teas just right.

  • Genmai Cha with Matcha
  • Looks vibrant and tasty!

  • Today's tea: Amber Gaba Oolong from Mei Leaf

    meileaf.com Amber Gaba Oolong

    Summer rain, apricot jam, wet wood and chestnut honey. Organic Oolong processed in nitrogen to increase GABA to 200mg per 100g.

    Amber Gaba Oolong

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    5.5g, 200F, gong fu method

    I'd describe it as honey sweet, warm baked, chocolate, and a tanginess for intrigue. This is the heaviest roast I've tried from Taiwan, but with their hot air roasting method, I think it works well. I do enjoy lighter roasts too, but this brings more depth and makes the tea last for more steeps. I think of this as the ultimate dessert tea. For me, it fully replaces the need for actual dessert.

    This is my most favored tea from Taiwan. I like to have this tea once every week or two. It is in a class of its own for me. I'd be interested to try other teas that I would consider comparable, to compare quality. So if you know one, please share!

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    Temperature controlled kettle worth it? - YES!
  • You have this one? https://www.mi.com/global/product/xiaomi-electric-kettle-2/

    When muted it won't make noise for any functions.

  • What's your favorite tea?
  • I too enjoy the unsmoked ones. I don't tolerate the smoke very well.

  • Temperature controlled kettle worth it? - YES!

    My experience

    Having a temperate controlled kettle has greatly improved my tea enjoyment. Not just for more sensitive tea types, such as greens, but for all tea types.

    When I started my journey with tea, I primarily drank black tea. I believed that I just didn't enjoy green tea and even many of the black teas that I was trying. It turns out that I was not only over-steeping them, but also negatively affecting the balance of the profile by only using boiling water. I have since learned that some teas need a lower temperature to be in balance. Temperature control has enabled me to experience all tea types at varying temps, tweaking the balance and profile to get that perfect cup. I have found more complex and enjoyable profiles in teas that I thought were simple and harsh.

    I know that temperate control is not for everyone, either due to differing preparation methods making it not necessary or maybe you are better than me at getting the temperature right on your own. For me, my kettle is my most important teaware. I'd gladly give up all other teaware to keep it.

    My kettle

    I have the kettle shown as the image of this post. You can find it by searching "temperate controlled goose-neck kettle" on Amazon. It must be a generic, as it has gone by multiple manufacturer names. I have 2 of these, one at home and one at work. After a few years with them, I am still happy. It is a cheaper kettle, but it still has all of the features that I want. My only complaint is that I wish it held more water, so I didn't have to refill as often.

    • Single degree temperate control
    • Easy and fast to change temperature
    • Mute mode
    • Hold function (holds for 2 hours)
    • No plastic in contact with water

    Share your water preparation method and teaware!

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    Today's tisane: Butterfly Pea Lemongrass from Arbor Teas
  • https://www.arborteas.com/organic-holy-basil-tulsi.html

    ... cooling in the mouth and wonderfully spicy. Think of it as a blend of flavors including mint, lemons, basil, chamomile, cardamom, rosemary, and nutmeg ...

    Wow, that's a powerful profile from a single plant! I'll keep it in mind next time I order.

  • Today's tisane: Butterfly Pea Lemongrass from Arbor Teas

    www.arborteas.com Organic Butterfly Pea Lemongrass

    Shop Arbor Teas for the finest Organic Butterfly Pea Lemongrass. Sold in 3 sizes of innovative compostable packaging. Read reviews, brewing tips & health info.

    I've been greatly enjoying this tisane lately. I enjoy the clean simplicity of it. It's just 2 ingredients. It's been refreshing in the summer heat.

    In the morning, I'll drink it hot, to wake up my breathing and perk up from the brightness. In the afternoon, I'll drink it over ice as a relaxing and cooling summer beverage, indoors or outdoors.

    My first experience with this tisane was unintentional. I needed just a little more in my cart to get free shipping, so I tried this one out on a whim. I'm so glad that I did.

    What's your favorite tisane lately?

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    Today's tea: 2022 Sour Sap from Mei Leaf
  • Thanks for the info!

    I found a ben shan at Yunnan Sourcing. I'll add it to my sample list.

  • What's your favorite tea?
  • Gyokuro, Xi Hu Long Jing, & Taiping Hou Kui - I see you like fresh vegetal notes. These can be pricey. 🥲

    Harney and Sons Paris - I haven't tried too many flavored teas, but this sounds like an interesting blend of flavors!

  • What's your favorite tea?
  • Thanks for the recs!

    Interesting, so you add a little east Frisian to other blacks? I've had that feeling with some teas before. Blending on your own can be be fun.

  • What's your favorite tea?
  • Do you have a source/website of matcha that you would recommend? I have only tried matcha a couple times, of varying quality.

    Yunnan Sourcing has low-to-mid price options and seems to have a reliable enough quality. They do have many types and styles available as samples, so I would recommend them for random sampling.

  • What's your favorite tea?
  • Is this from Harney & Sons? Chinese golden black tea is always a tasty and fulfilling choice!

  • What's your favorite tea?
  • Looks like a very popular tea from T2Tea. Thanks for sharing!

  • What's your favorite tea?
  • That's a tough question. It depends on how much you can spend and what you are looking for.

    I recommend samples, that way you can try many types of tea without too much money or commitment. You can try a single tea from each tea type and explore from there.

    Yunnan Sourcing website does many samples. That's just my go to, but I know there are many other sites others would recommend. For more black tea blends, like your English breakfast, try Upton Tea Imports.

    But if want even less of a commitment than that, try just spending more for your tea from the store than you usually do. Price does equal quality for most teas you'll buy. Trying whole leaf tea will get you higher quality teas as well.

  • What's your favorite tea?
  • Interesting! I've only tried a few of the more widely available bottled teas, which I don't care for, but this looks like something I'd like to give a try. Thanks for recommending!

  • What's your favorite tea?
  • Don't feel bad. If you enjoy your tea, then it's a good tea!

  • What's your favorite tea?
  • English breakfast is always a safe bet. Where do you buy the golden oolong? Is that tea in a bottle? That's what I found when I searched.

  • What's your favorite tea?
  • 😄 You were drinking the good stuff to start. Gotta balance tastes with your wallet now. 🥲

  • What's your favorite tea?
  • Expensive tastes 😋😅

  • What's your favorite tea?
  • One light and one with bite. 😋

  • What's your favorite tea?
  • I started my tea journey with Upton Tea. That first one sounds like a wild mix of flavors! Sounds like you enjoy bold flavors.

  • What's your favorite tea?

    Here's my favorite tea...

    I've been exploring the world of tea for about 5 years and have tried just over 200 teas of nearly all tea types. There is one tea that I've consistently gone back to since I have discovered it. It is a sheng puer from Yunnan Sourcing. I have an interesting relationship with this tea. I have never thought of this tea as wildly complex or as an experience. Instead, it has balance with just the right amount of intrigue to work as a daily drinker. I'm always happy to drink this tea.

    2020 Wu Liang Mountain (the pic of this post)

    https://yunnansourcing.com/products/2020-yunnan-sourcing-wu-liang-mountain-wild-arbor-raw-pu-erh-tea-cake-1

    Tasting notes: Thick texture; mineral, wood, and sweet body; citrus and herb high notes; a bitter-to-sweet aftertaste transformation.

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    Today's tea: black on a lower water temp than usual

    Today, I don't want to focus on the exact tea I'm drinking. Instead, I'd like to think about the water temperature I'm using.

    For black tea, I typically use 200-205F (93-96C). I find that this brings out the strength and body, but still leaves some subtle notes for intrigue.

    But today, I wanted to brew this tea at 195F (90.5C). There are so many sweet, floral, and fruity notes that come out at this lower temp that aren't as present at the higher temp. There is still sufficient strength and body, so I'm not missing the higher temp.

    This is just a reminder to myself, and to anyone out there, to try out your teas on different water temperatures. You may find a new profile from an old tea that you enjoy even more!

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    How do you brew your loose leaf tea? Have you tried a gaiwan?

    I'd consider myself proficient with using a gaiwan now, but I wasn't for the first few years of my tea journey. I was scared of them.

    That's not going to filter the tea properly. That looks uncomfortable to use. I'm gonna burn myself!

    At first, I used tea infusers that sit in your cup. These bothered me for a few reasons: some tea types don't expand and steep well in a confined space; they clogged constantly; and they can be annoying to clean.

    I then took my first baby step towards gaiwans - with an "easy" gaiwan. It was a nicer experience, but still had some of the same issues: it tended to clog and was annoying to clean. It has a lip that is difficult to clean under. And it actually lets quite a bit of tea bits through.

    Similar to this one:

    !

    After a few years, I got my first gaiwan for cheap, and I'm so glad I did! It was just easier. You can keep the lid mostly closed and it somehow filters tea bits better than my "easy" gaiwan. It's soooo easy to clean. Now, I do actually use a filter sometimes to catch fine tea dust, but I don't actually need to.

    I'm sure gaiwans are synonymous with loose leaf tea for many people, but they aren't common where I am in the US. So for anyone who hasn't tried one, I say give it a try!

    -- PS - One cool looking kind of teaware I have yet to try is a shiboridashi. This looks like a better version of my "easy" gaiwan:

    !

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