I'm fairly seriously into tea as I am with pipe smoking. There's a tea culture out there, where people collect expensive tea ware, precious and rare aged teas,
just like pipe, cigar, whiskey hobbyists do. This style of tea drinking is very different than tea culture in the west, largely inspired by the way they drink tea in Asia, mostly China and Japan. The main method is called "gong fu" brewing, in reference to the Chinese tea ceremony. The idea is you take a lot of leaf, into a porcelain or clay brewing vessel which is very small, 80-200 ml, held in one hand. You fill the vessel up, and there's this whole procedure, again, much like with pipe smoking in the way it's ritualistic-- you pack, tamp, check the draw, and so on. With tea, you rinse the leaves first. People often smell the wet leaf at this point for the most intense aroma the tea will have. Then, you begin brewing. Lightning fast brews, either 1 second of steep time, up to 20 seconds. The steep times go up, and you just keep drinking and pouring, either just for your self, or you can make it social with lots of little cups. This is getting very popular with the younger crowd in the west in the last 10 years or so.
Now, this has been a kind of a secret. Tea bags are considered the "Cigarette floor sweepings" of the tea world. I have nothing against cigarettes or tea bags, and I'm not judging anyone in the slightest to be clear, but the quality difference between properly processed tea meant for serious drinking and stuff you stick into a mug and forget about for a few minutes is night and day.
You don't have to have a fancy vessel(Some, called gaiwans, are fairly cheap and brew good tea, for only 10 or so bucks-- just a fluted porcelain cup with a lid where the lid holds the leaves back for you to pour your brew from, others can be very expensive, the "Dunhills" of teaware, rare Yixing clay). You can even brew the tea western style like you would a tea bag, just use less tea. Where can you get some?
I really like Yunnan Sourcing for an all-around vendor that carries all types of tea. They have a stock in both the US and China, the Chinese website has a
massive stock and the prices tend to be better, but the shipping can take 3 weeks to a month. If I've piqued your interest, look for the following tea types:
- Dian Hong( A black tea)
- Shou Mei( A white tea)
- Bi Luo Chun(A Green tea)
- Tie Guan Yin(An unroasted Oolong tea)
- Da Hong Pao(A completely different Oolong tea which is roasted)
Cheers~