At 2:00 pm on May 11, 2009, I hand harvested a small batch of tender new leaf and bud sets. These leaves were then withered indoors for 5 hours before a few minutes of gentle hand rolling. After this rolling step it was oxidized overnight (about 9 hours).
After about three hours of withering
(taken as the sun is just starting to set):
Withered about five hours
(taken as the sun has almost set):
(taken as the sun is just starting to set):
Withered about five hours
(taken as the sun has almost set):
At 6:00 am on May 12, 2009, the tea was electric-oven-baked at 250 degrees for 10 minutes. This spring's crop yielded 3 grams of finished tea (enough for one serving).
At 6:20 am, I examined my freshly baked tea. The long twisted leaves are a beautiful mix of jade green and reddish brown. It had a sugary-lilac fragrance throughout its withering phase, which it still has, but now it's less intense, with an added gentle toasty aroma. At this point the leaves have fully cooled so I've put them in a clay jar to wait until Thursday when I'll have time to drink them with my wife!
To be continued...
4 comments:
Yay! That's so cool.
This is amazing! I had no idea the conditions were decent to grow in Seattle!
Wow! That is some exclusive tea! I don't recommend picking tea without covering your whole face with a scarf and bamboo hat though!
Wow. It's exciting to see people growing tea in the U.S. I've thought about attempting to grow it here in Delaware but I think that would be a bit of a stretch--although I know a spot where I think it might grow.
In a little garden nestled in between two wings of the main academic building of U. Delaware's agriculture school, protected on three sides and warmed by the heat of the building, people are successfully growing a Japanese blue oak, several species of palm, and a number of other plants from considerably warmer climates.
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