A lot of the people who are passionate about tea are on Pinterest. Are you one of them? I've created a number of tea related boards:
Tea
Teapots and Teacups
Tea Party Treats
Tea Towels
But I feel like I've just barely scratched the surfece. Share your favorite tea board, or your own tea board.
All things tea related, with an emphasis on thie history and health benefits of tea.
Tuesday, August 20, 2013
Friday, January 11, 2013
Tea of Week: Zhena's Ambrosia Plum White
Liquor -- light, but with a warm golden tint
Aroma -- Sweet, with a distinct floral note and a whiff of licorice
Body -- light
Flavors -- This tea has a good balance of flavors, with none of them really overwhelming the others. The fruity plum note is actually more understated than expected. You also get a nice taste of rose before a hint of acidity hits your tongue.
Wednesday, January 9, 2013
Tea Recipe: Layered Tea Jelly Mold
I have become a bit obsessed with jelly molds lately. I started picking up vintage copper molds at thrift stores, and I've even started collecting photgraphs on a Pinterest board. The need to make a tea-based layered mold wasn't a huge leap. After all, tea jelly has been around forever. In Japan, jelly desserts are plentiful and beautiful, and when tea is added, it is often a green tea, perhaps matcha. In Taiwan, jasmine tea and oolongs are favored, and cubes of the resulting jelly are often diced into bubble tea as an alternative to tapioca.
For my layered mold, I wanted to highlight the beautiful colors you can get from the liquor of different kinds of tea. I wanted a pale white, a brilliant green, and a deep black tea. (I chose a white tea with pom from a local tea shop, Joy Luck green tea, and Twinnings English Breakfast, but you can choose your own favorites). I alternated these with milky layers that incorporated the tea from the layer above. The bubbles at the top are filled in with a pure white milk jelly for contrast. The tea layers are only lightly sweetened, which balances the very sweet milky layers. The following recipe is for a 5 cup mold.
Layered Tea Jello Mold
1 1/3 c. room temperature brewed white tea
1 1/3 c. room temperature brewed green tea
1 1/3 c. room temperature brewed black tea
3 tbsp. sugar
1 can sweetened condensed milk
5 packets unsweetened geletain
To make the cream bubbles: combine 1/4 of a packet (appx. 2 grams) geletain with 1 tablespoon cold water and allow to bloom for two or three minutes. Pour 2 tablespoons boiling water over this, and mix until the geletain dissolves. Add 2 tablespoons of condensed milk. Use an eyedropper to fill the "bubbles." Place in the referigerator for 15-20 minutes, or until set.
To make the white tea layers: Meanwhile, pour 1/3 c. of the white tea into a dish and add 1 packet and an extra 1/2 teaspoon of geletain. Stir and let bloom. Heat the remaining cup of white tea to boiling. Pour over the geletain mixutre. Add 1 tbsp. sugar. Stir until sugar and gelatain dissolve. Measure out 1 c. of this liquid and allow to cool to room temperature. When cooled, spoon or cerefully pour into the mold. Return mold to referigerator until sticky-set (15-20 minutes.) To the remaining liquid, add 1/3 cup condensed milk and stir until well combined. Pour this over the transparent layer to make a creamy opaque layer.
To make the remaining layers: Repeat the above steps to make a transparent and milky green tea layer, then a transparent and milky black tea layer.
Let set overnight, then unmold onto a plate. If your jelly is resistant to unmolding,dip it in a bowl partially filled with hot water for a few seconds (being careful to keep the water from getting on the jelly), then loosen the edge with a flexible spatula or a butter knife.
For my layered mold, I wanted to highlight the beautiful colors you can get from the liquor of different kinds of tea. I wanted a pale white, a brilliant green, and a deep black tea. (I chose a white tea with pom from a local tea shop, Joy Luck green tea, and Twinnings English Breakfast, but you can choose your own favorites). I alternated these with milky layers that incorporated the tea from the layer above. The bubbles at the top are filled in with a pure white milk jelly for contrast. The tea layers are only lightly sweetened, which balances the very sweet milky layers. The following recipe is for a 5 cup mold.
Layered Tea Jello Mold
1 1/3 c. room temperature brewed white tea
1 1/3 c. room temperature brewed green tea
1 1/3 c. room temperature brewed black tea
3 tbsp. sugar
1 can sweetened condensed milk
5 packets unsweetened geletain
To make the cream bubbles: combine 1/4 of a packet (appx. 2 grams) geletain with 1 tablespoon cold water and allow to bloom for two or three minutes. Pour 2 tablespoons boiling water over this, and mix until the geletain dissolves. Add 2 tablespoons of condensed milk. Use an eyedropper to fill the "bubbles." Place in the referigerator for 15-20 minutes, or until set.
To make the white tea layers: Meanwhile, pour 1/3 c. of the white tea into a dish and add 1 packet and an extra 1/2 teaspoon of geletain. Stir and let bloom. Heat the remaining cup of white tea to boiling. Pour over the geletain mixutre. Add 1 tbsp. sugar. Stir until sugar and gelatain dissolve. Measure out 1 c. of this liquid and allow to cool to room temperature. When cooled, spoon or cerefully pour into the mold. Return mold to referigerator until sticky-set (15-20 minutes.) To the remaining liquid, add 1/3 cup condensed milk and stir until well combined. Pour this over the transparent layer to make a creamy opaque layer.
To make the remaining layers: Repeat the above steps to make a transparent and milky green tea layer, then a transparent and milky black tea layer.
Let set overnight, then unmold onto a plate. If your jelly is resistant to unmolding,dip it in a bowl partially filled with hot water for a few seconds (being careful to keep the water from getting on the jelly), then loosen the edge with a flexible spatula or a butter knife.
Friday, January 4, 2013
Tea of the Week: Republic of Tea Pomegranate Green
A friend of mine left this pomegranate tea at my house, and when I opened the canister and smelled the dry tea, I just had to try it. Republic of Tea is one of my favorite brands, and I like the fact that they have brought two extremely healthy ingredients together.
Liquor -- dark, with a deep purple tint
Aroma -- Very fruity and sweet
Body -- medium
Tuesday, September 25, 2012
Tea Recipe -- Black Tea Linzer Cookies
This cookie reciepe was acutalloy inspired by a Vanilla Almond Black Tea that I really enjoy.
I decided to make a black tea jam by cooking down strong black tea with apples (to provide petin) and lemon (to add acid). The fragrance of the jam was amazing while it was cooking, with the black tea as the predominant note. You do taste a lot of the apple. If you want a purer tea taste, just let the liquid drip through the strainer, and don't press the apple pieces through. Either way, you will wind up with more jam than you need to fill the cookies. Put the extra in a lidded jar and store in the referigerator.
What better way to show off the resulting tea-hued preserve than peeking through the window of a Linzer cookie? Linzer cookies already have almonds, and I upped the vanilla to make it a little more like the tea.
Black Tea Linzer Cookies
2 1/2 c. strong black tea (English Breakfast or similar)
2 c. sugar
Juice of one lemon
1 c. slivered almonds
2 c. all purpose flour
1/2 tsp. cinnamon
1/2 tsp. salt
1 c. butter, brought to room temperature
2/3 c. sugar
2 tsp. vanilla
2 egg yolks
Zest of 1 lemon
Combine apple pieces, tea, sugar and lemon in a medium pot over medium-high heat. Cook, stirring occasionally, until mixture starts to thicken. Continue, stirring frequently, until the mixutre reaches the soft ball stage. Place a strainer over a medium bowl. Pour the apple mixture in, letting the liquid drip through, then press the apples through. Stir to combine. Set aside until needed.
Using a stand or hand mixer, cream together the butter and sugar in a large bowl. Add the vanilla, egg yolks and lemon zest and beat to combine. Use a nut grinder to turn the almonds into nut meal. Add to butter mixture, and beat to combine. In a medium bowl, sift together the flour, cinnamon and salt. Add flour mixture to butter mixture in three additions, beating between additions. Divide dough in half. Wrap each half in plastic wrap and referigerate for an hour or up to overnight.
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line baking sheets with parchament paper. Roll out one half of cookie dough on floured surface to 1/4"thick and cut out using a pair of matching cookie cutters, one of which has a "window" in the middle (or using a separate smaller cutter to make holes in the top cookie). Bake for 12-15 minutes. Cool completely on cooling rack.
If you have referigerated everything overnight, heat 2/3 c. of the jam in a microwave for 20-30 seconds, or until it reaches an easily spreadable consistancy. Use a spoon to spread a thin layer of jam onto the base cookie. Place the cookie with the cutout on top. Carefully spoon more jam into the hole to fill it.
Friday, September 21, 2012
Tea of the Week: Republic of Tea Daily Green Honey Ginseng
Aroma -- Sweet, but with a slightly herbal undertone
Body -- light
Flavors -- .The main note here is the vegetal green of the tea, which is complimented by the subtler sweetness of the honey. You do not taste as much of the ginsing as you think you would by the aroma.
Tuesday, September 18, 2012
What is the "Agony of the Leaves?"
If you are into loose teas, you have probably heard the term "the agony of the leaves." What does that really mean?
This refers to the hydrating of lfull-leaf tea. It only actually occurs in tea that has been twisted or rolled, but the term is often used in relation to any loose tea. As the leaves unfurl, they twist and writhe, almost as though they are in pain (although some tea drinker prefer to think of the leaves as dancing in joy). This is most noticible in fine oolongs, which expand the most. If you want to watch it happen, brew your tea in a glass teapot.
Look at how much leaves from a basic Chinese green tea expand in this infuser.
Sure it is poetic and beautiful to watch, but what is the practicality to you as a tea drinker? For one thing, you never want to overfill your tea ball or infuser (I try not to go over 1/3 full with the dry tea). The leaves need room to expand. If you don't give them that room, they won't release as much of the plant oils, producing an inferior cup from often very expensive tea.
This refers to the hydrating of lfull-leaf tea. It only actually occurs in tea that has been twisted or rolled, but the term is often used in relation to any loose tea. As the leaves unfurl, they twist and writhe, almost as though they are in pain (although some tea drinker prefer to think of the leaves as dancing in joy). This is most noticible in fine oolongs, which expand the most. If you want to watch it happen, brew your tea in a glass teapot.
Look at how much leaves from a basic Chinese green tea expand in this infuser.
Sure it is poetic and beautiful to watch, but what is the practicality to you as a tea drinker? For one thing, you never want to overfill your tea ball or infuser (I try not to go over 1/3 full with the dry tea). The leaves need room to expand. If you don't give them that room, they won't release as much of the plant oils, producing an inferior cup from often very expensive tea.
Friday, September 14, 2012
Tea of the Week: Shan Wai Shan Dong Ding Oolong
Liquor -- Pale greenish gold
Aroma -- Nutty
Flavors -- .The main note is the roasted, nutty taste. There is a slightly floral undertone that mellows into a plesantly faint grassy aftertaste.
Tuesday, September 11, 2012
New Teapot
I got a new tea set. I held an oriental-themed tea party to take pictures for the tea party plan book I am working on, and it was a great excuse to splurge -- though the whole set only cost about 20 bucks.
I wanted to use one of the teacups to make the centerpiece. (I'm posting just one pic, as sort of a sneak-peek).
It came in a golden cardboard box, with each piece nestled in golden satin. Since I bought it for the picture on the outside of the cups, I was surprised to find out how well made it really is. The cups are somewhat small on the inside, but the double wall of the cup keeps them from getting hot to hold. There is a mark on this set, but I can't read it.
The best thing about this set? The generous strainer that practically fills the pot!
Sunday, September 9, 2012
Taking Tea in Dallas: The Adolphus Hotel
Yesterday we were able to get reservations for afternoon tea at the Adolphus Hotel in downtown Dallas. It was everything you could expect from a historic hotel (the Adolphus is turning 100 next month). They have been doing afternoon tea since the early 1980s, so they have had plenty of time to get everything right. Tables are set up in the lobby living room, and there is a live pianist playing classical music to set the mood. The hotel has hosted a number of connoisseurs for tea, from the Queen of England to food writer Kerry Vincent (who featured the Adolphus on the Finger Food episode of Food Network's The Best Thing I Ever Ate).
Next we got a scone with clotted cream and raspberry preserves (it was so delicious I forgot to take a picture), alongside a pot of Orange Jasmine (a black tea with a delicate citrusy/floral note).
The third course was an assortment of mini-desserts. We both agreed that the tie for best flavors was between the mini-cheesecake and the pistachio macaroon. This came with a pot of pear caramel (another black tea, with a pleasing flavor, though I had a hard time actually tasting the pear).
Yet, we still felt special, seated among the antiques, and treated to impeccable service. Louis, who served as our guide to the teas presented, was both knowledgeable and accommodating.
For the first course, we received an assortment of tea sandwiches (our favorite was the egg salad on brioche, followed by the curried chicken salad) along with a pot of Africa Amber (a red rooibos with hibiscus).
Louis did offer other teas, and we listened to other tea drinkers describing their choices. Next time, I definitely want to try the vanilla black tea and the Provence-inspired blend.
If you want to attend the afternoon tea at the Adolphus, tea is served Friday through Sunday from 2pm to 4pm in the lobby living room at the front of the hotel. Reservations are required.
You can contact them at (214)742-8200.
Friday, September 7, 2012
Tea of the Week: Zhi Tea's Ancient Forest
When I was at Zhi Tea's shop in Austin, I was able to smell thier Ancient Forest tea in an open canister. The aroma even of the dry leaves was amazing, rich and complex. I just had to buy it. It is wildcrafted in Vietnam from tea plants that are estimated to be 500-800 years old.
Liquor -- Deep, warm amber
Aroma -- Rich, with a hint of caramely sweetness
Body -- Medium
Flavors -- Unusually low astrigancy for a black tea, with a note of maltiness.
Liquor -- Deep, warm amber
Aroma -- Rich, with a hint of caramely sweetness
Body -- Medium
Flavors -- Unusually low astrigancy for a black tea, with a note of maltiness.
Tuesday, September 4, 2012
Don't Spend All Your Tea in One Place
I bought a tea brick to use as a prop, and I was surprised at how beautiful it is. But tea bricks also have a rich history.
In some areas where vegetation was hard to come by, tea bricks could fill a nutritional need. Pieces of the brick would be roasted, then consumed in a soup-like form, with added savory ingredients.
Tea was used in China as money since ancient times (early on, they were used to pay taxes to the Emperor). It also became an important element for trade with Tibet and other surrounding nations -- and eventually, with the English. Tea bricks were an important commodity on the Silk Road.
The brick form made it easy to transport, and the bricks could be broken as needed to make change (often determined by weight). However, it was harder to set a standard value on the bricks, as they varied in quality (though some of the resources I have been looking at have listed standard exchange rates, such as one tea brick being worth eight Tibetan Tangka coins, or one horse being worth twenty tea bricks in Russia.
The quality of the tea tended to improve the farther from China the tea was going to be used. Some of the finest bricks were intended for use in Russia, and they weren't often preserved in bick form, so bricks with Russian writing are considered the most rare. Some of the lowest quality bricks included impurities ranging from wood to dung. The recipient of a tea brick also had to be careful, as soot was sometimes added to make inferior tea bricks look richer.
While tea bricks were prefered by some cultures (such as the Cantonese), they were eschewed by the American colonists (so no tea bricks were thrown overboard during the Boston Tea Party).
Tea bricks are considered collector's items today, and some of them can be worth thousands of dollars. Fermented teas (such as pu-erh) are still usually sold in brick -- or some other compressed shape -- form.
According to this resource: Tea Money of China: http://www.charm.ru/coins/misc/teamoney.shtml
the design with a Chinese image and chinese characters on one side and the distinctive break marks with swirls could be pre-WWII (and considered "original") or it could be from the mid 70s to mid 80s, when they were sold as novelty pieces in grocery stores. Or, it could be used for a current brick, as you can buy similar designs new from any number of on-line resources. While I bought mine on Etsy, I'm pretty sure it is a current design.
Friday, August 31, 2012
Tea of the Week: Harney and Sons Paris
I think the most comprehensive book on tea flavors I've ever read is The Harney and Sons Guide To Tea. I've been wanting to try thier Paris blend for a while. I found it while window shopping at William Sonoma. I must say it didn't disappoint.
Liquor -- deep mahogany
Aroma -- complex, but with a main note of caramely bergamot.
Body -- medium
Flavors -- This tea reminds me of an Earl Gray, only sweeter and fruitier, with a slight nod to vanilla. The flavors blend together well, though there is more emphasis on the slightly astringint black tea than the aroma suggests.
Wednesday, August 29, 2012
People in Tea: Jessica Evans
While we were in Austin over the weekend, I was able to sit down with Jessica Evans of Zhi Tea. Zhi, owned by Jeffrey Lorien, specializes in organic whole-leaf artisinal teas that they blend themselves. They are fair trade certified. They also specialize in educating their customers about the entire tea experience. Jessaca brewed samples of several teas for us to try, including a rooibos-based blend called Sweet Desert Delight, which was the first Zhi custom blend. The shop had a relaxing scent in the air, and the whole place was very serene.
Q. What got you into the tea industry?
A. I worked in the natural foods industry and I got to know the best local resources for everything from local beef to local tea. I was impressed by Zhi Tea's reputation. I liked the way they focused on community relations and were always ready to donate to non-profits. When I was looking for a job, I decided I wanted to work for them.
(They also offer discounts on re-fills for their tins, to save on the carbon footprint impact of their packaging.)
Q. What is your favorite tea?
(The shop was offering all customers samples of iced Kenya Chai, again a rooibos-based blend. They do have a full selection of black and green teas as well, including the cleverly named Austin Breakfast.)
Q. Do you have a favorite teapot or teacup?
A. I really like this one.
A. Zhi's Jeffery Lorien has made tea his passion. He samples thousands of teas, and only picks the best. He is like a curator of tea, and he has put together an exquisite collection.
Also, we are featuring a new way to make tea that allows you to steep iced tea without heat and without it becoming overly astringent.
Q. What do you want people to know about tea in general?
There are some things you can do to make tea, which is already super healthy, even healthier. If you want to avoid adding sugar to tea, you can steep some stevia leaves right along with the tea. You can also make caffieinated tea into decaf by steeping once, discarding the tea and steeping it again. Using tea concentrate instead of water is also a great way to add extra flavor to recipes.
Sometimes people say that the don't like tea, or that they only like coffee. This is often because they have only sampled one or two varieties of tea. There are blends for every taste, which is why we display our teas in containers people can open and experience. I would encourage people to continue exploring tea and trying new teas. Remember to stay curious and always have a sense of wonder.
Thanks Jessica! Want to try out Zhi Tea for yourself? Next weekend is their fifth anniversary, and they're having a ton of special events. If you want to go to the cocktail party (Friday 9/7), you will need to RSVP on facebook:
They are also having a picnic on Sunday (9/9), where everyone is invited to bring their best tea-inspired potluck item for a chance to win a $100 gift certificate. Check their web site for other related events, though for some of them, seating is limited.
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