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The Gong Fu or Kung Fu Tea Ceremony (Chinese: 工夫茶) is a Chinese way of preparing tea skillfully. Image File history File links Information_icon. ...
A tea ceremony is a ritualised form of making tea. ...
Tea leaves in a Chinese gaiwan. ...
Origin
Gong Fu or Kung Fu Tea Ceremony (Chinese: 工夫茶) is the abbreviation of Chao Xian Gong Fu tea(Chinese: 潮汕工夫茶). Where Chao Xian (Chinese: 潮汕) is a district under Guangdong Province, China. The Gong Fu tea ceremony has been popular since the Qing_Dynasty. Since the Chao Xian district did not produce tea during the Qing Dynasty, the tea used in the ceremony generally comes from the Fujian Province. A tea ceremony is a ritualised form of making tea. ...
Guangdong (Simplified Chinese: 广东; Traditional Chinese: 廣東; pinyin: Guǎngdōng; Wade-Giles: Kuang-tung; Kwangtung in older transliteration; Cantonese: gwong2 dung1), is a province on the south coast of the Peoples Republic of China. ...
The Qing Dynasty (Chinese: ; pinyin: Qīng cháo; Wade-Giles: Ching chao; Manchu: daicing gurun), occasionally known as the Manchu Dynasty, was a dynasty founded by the Manchu clan Aisin Gioro, in what is today northeast China, expanded into China and the surrounding territories, establishing the Empire...
(Chinese: ç¦å»º; Pinyin: Fújià n; Wade-Giles: Fu-chien; Postal System Pinyin: Fukien, Foukien; local transliteration Hokkien from Min Nan Hok-kià n) is one of the provinces on the southeast coast of China. ...
Although Gong Fu Tea is based on descriptions from Lu Yu's The Classic of Tea, it used processed green tea such as Oolong rather than powdered green tea. Various Chinese tea consuming regions such as (China, Taiwan, Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia) have their own accustomed local style of Gong Fu tea ceremony. A statue of Lu Yu located in Xian Lu Yu (éç¾½) (733 â 804) is respected as the Sage of Tea for his contribution to Chinese tea culture. ...
Rolled Oolong tea leaves Wuyi Huang Guan Yin tea leaves Wuyi Qi Lan Oolong tea leaves Oolong (Chinese: ; pinyin: wūlóng) is a traditional Chinese type of tea somewhere in between green and black in oxidation. ...
Gongfu tea brewing innovation In the last 30 years the method of making good tea from the first brew to the last brew, and taking into account water temperature according to the variety of tea brewed has changed and become a methodology (skill brewing). In recent years in Taiwan the invention of the filtered tea pitcher has made a great improvement in tea brewing.
Tools/equipment/utensils - A small Yixing clay teapot, around 100ml to 300ml in volume
- Cups that match the number of guests; the cups should be small and hold around 30ml-50ml of beverage
- Fresh water. Tap water should be filtered.
- Kettle (clay or glass is preferable, in order to determine the temperature of the boiling water).
- Stove to boil water
- A pail or container to dispense water
- A water dispensing tray or a bowl for tea pot during water pouring
- Table
- Seat for guests
- A clean cotton cloth
There are several extra utensils required in the refined Taiwan style Gongfu tea ceremony: A Chinese Yixing Zisha teapot A Chinese Zisha teapot - Melon A Yixing clay teapot (also called zisha, or purple clay teapot) is a traditional pot used to brew tea. ...
- A tea pitcher (refined Taiwan style Gongfu Tea ceremony)
- Tea leaf filter
- Tray for cups
- An aroma pitcher
- Tweezer
Boiling water The boiling water temperature is depend on type of tea used. - 80-85 degree Celsius for Oolong tea
- 90-98 degree Celsius for compressed tea such as Pu-erh tea
The temperature of the water can be learn by timing the size and the sizzling sound of the air bubbles. Rolled Oolong tea leaves Wuyi Huang Guan Yin tea leaves Wuyi Qi Lan Oolong tea leaves Oolong (Chinese: ; pinyin: wūlóng) is a traditional Chinese type of tea somewhere in between green and black in oxidation. ...
Pu-erh (or Puer tea) is a fermented tea, named after Puer county near Simao, Yunnan, China. ...
- 75-85 degree Celsius. Known as "crab eyes," ~ 3mm in diameter, with rapid and loud sizzling sounds.
- 90-95 degree Celsius. Known as "Fish eyes," ~ 8mm in diameter, less frequent sizzling sounds and the sizzling pitch lower.
- Boiling, no air bubbles, no sizzling sounds.
The above rules cannot be applied in highlands as the water will boil at lower temperatures in higher altitudes.
Ceremony procedures Surroundings A suitable space must be provided. A table large enough to hold the tea-making utensils, the drip tray, and the water is the minimum necessary. Ideally the surroundings should be peaceful and conducive to relaxation and socialisation. Incense, flowers, and low, soft, traditional music will all add to the ambience, as will songbirds. A songbird is a bird belonging to the suborder Oscines of Passeriformes (ca. ...
Preparation - Lay the serving cups on the table. Warm and sterilize the cups with hot water. Pour away excess water.
- Fill up the teapot with an adequate quantity of tea.
- Put the teapot into a water tray or a bowl.
- Boil the water to preferable temperature as described above in the Boiling water section.
- Fill up the teapot with water until it overflows.
- Scoop away any bubbles or debris floating on top of the teapot and close the lid.
- Pour and drain the water from the teapot as soon as possible into all the serving cups. (Taiwan style: fill up the pitcher as well)
- Pour away the water from the cups. (You may use a wooden tweezer instead of bare hand)
Brewing - Fill up the teapot again with preferable boiling water until it cover the top. Close the teapot cover.
- Pour hot water or used the water from the serving cups in preparation process and pour on the surface of the teapot.
- Wait for 20 to 50 seconds. Depends on the type and quantity of the tea used.
- Pour the tea to the serving cups in a circulating form evenly. (Taiwan style : Pour all the beverages into the pitcher before serving)
- Serve the guest(s).
- A quality oolong tea is good for anywhere from 4 to 8 brewings. Each subsequent brewing follows the same procedure.
- Taiwan style serving - Sometimes, a long slender cup will be used as the aroma cup. The tea is poured into this vessel and then poured into the shorter and wider drinking vessel. The drinker can then smell the aroma of the tea by bringing the aroma cup up to the nose and not risk spilling any tea on themselves. The tea is then drunk from the smaller, wider vessel.
End of ceremony Clean up is an important step of the ritual. - Brewed tea and tea leaves should not remain the teapot after the ritual. It must be cleaned up throughly and rinsed with clean water.
- All utensils must be sterilized with boiling water.
- Drying the utensils and serving cups.
- Clean the teapot with hot water and let it dry naturally.
See also Chinese tea culture refers to the methods of preparation of tea, the equipment used to make tea and the occasions in which tea is consumed in China. ...
Taiwanese Tea Ceremony In Taiwan most people drink tea, and tea is not only a drink but a culture. ...
A tea ceremony is a ritualised form of making tea. ...
Wu-Wo Tea Ceremony (ç¡æè¶æ/æ æè¶ä¼) is a style of Tea Ceremony. ...
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External links - Lu-Yu Small Pot Tea Laws, (陸羽小壺茶法)
- Demonstration, Chinese and English
- A collection of Chinese tea ceremony photos
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