How to Brew and Taste Pu-erh Tea with Tea Expert Alice Liu | What's Eating Dan?

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  • Опубликовано: 9 май 2024
  • Follow along as Dan and Grace Young head to Grand Tea Imports in NYC's Chinatown for a special tea tasting with Alice Liu.
    Check out Grand Tea Imports: grandteaimports.com/
    Tangerine Pu-erh: cooks.io/3tbzbO3
    2004 Pu-erh Tea Cake: cooks.io/363pEjn
    Vintage Lincang Raw Pu-erh Tea: cooks.io/3tbzhoT
    Follow Grand Tea Imports: / grandteaimports
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Комментарии • 138

  • @C2C.
    @C2C. 2 года назад +75

    This is one of my favorite episodes. My only wish is that it were longer. Excellent topic, the legendary Grace Young, and featuring an authentic Chinese tea experience. Alice Liu's expertise shines and she's a wonderful ambassador for tea. Dan is a great show host and listener; and I hope it becomes a series. After all, we're only scratching the very surface of teas!

    • @AdoraTsang
      @AdoraTsang Год назад +3

      But she's wrong. Pu-erh is not a White tea. There is a lot of misinformation in this video.
      Tea sellers often bank on the fact that you know even less.

  • @MysticDonBlair
    @MysticDonBlair 2 года назад +49

    I would love more tea content!!!

  • @innersunandvision1890
    @innersunandvision1890 2 года назад +43

    As a fellow tea head I love to see anyone enjoying and talking about tea, and love to see this content pop up on my YT recommendations.
    There are a couple things that were quite peculiar to me though in this video.
    First is that she was comparing Sheng Puer to White tea. I don’t think this is quite accurate. I believe a lower heated, sun-dried green tea would be a little more accurate. Although it’s in its own subsection so that does make these things tricky.
    Also, looking at the color of the brew I don’t believe there is anyway that tea could be 30+ years old. Maybe 10 years old dry stored at best.
    Also a little surprised that she served a citrus stuffed Shu Puer to start. It seems like a lot on the pallet to then go to an aged Shu Puer and then the holy grail old Sheng Puer?
    Just some observations and thoughts.
    I’d love to see you return and sit down with her with one of her favorite teas and go more in depth into her understanding and perception of making tea. I bet she has some interesting and helpful things to share.
    Cheers

    • @tomasdjng
      @tomasdjng 2 года назад +9

      Yeah i also found it strange it was so green, i have a 2014 sheng puer thats even darker

    • @spiral310
      @spiral310 2 года назад +3

      I agree that the third raw Puer does look less than 10 years old by color. I'd expect a bit more copper tint to it.

    • @handyandy58_
      @handyandy58_ 2 года назад +4

      Absolutely no way that's a 30+ y.o. tea unless it's been like vacuum sealed for that entire time.

    • @EstebanJavornik
      @EstebanJavornik 2 года назад +3

      Absolutely agree on every point you made.

    • @Eza_yuta
      @Eza_yuta 7 месяцев назад

      Thought the same. Maybe she got switched on her father's stored teas.

  • @TheMrsBeej
    @TheMrsBeej 2 года назад +21

    This is one of those episodes that you know could have been an hour or longer to explain the complexity of the tea, the brew, etc. I'd gladly watch more of this!

  • @richardheidelberg5193
    @richardheidelberg5193 2 года назад +13

    This could be a four hour documentary. Thanks so much.

  • @jodiperko2774
    @jodiperko2774 2 года назад +21

    Love this episode! I’m a devoted tea drinker and love all things tea. Thanks, Dan!

  • @lindac7146
    @lindac7146 2 года назад +12

    What a wonderful video. Loved this little ceremony. I love learning about other cultures and what they value.

  • @annabizaro-doo-dah
    @annabizaro-doo-dah 2 года назад +3

    This is a whole new magical world to me! What a gem of a show.

  • @crimsonfirelily
    @crimsonfirelily 2 года назад +2

    This is such a delightful and fascinating episode. I learned so much more about tea than I could have ever imagined in such a short time.
    Thank you so much for this experience. Please do this again or expand on this. I would be so grateful. 💜

  • @rpaiz87
    @rpaiz87 2 года назад +6

    My mouth started watering watching the reaction after the first sip of the last tea sample. Thank you Dan for sharing this experience with us 💛💜💙

  • @simonsavelyev7399
    @simonsavelyev7399 2 года назад +4

    Fascinating! Now I have to look up tea drunk poetry

  • @Hyper88
    @Hyper88 2 года назад +22

    This is a fascinating episode, I'm not too far from this shop. I might have to swing by now

  • @gfreya9450
    @gfreya9450 2 года назад +3

    Pu-erh is very comforting and good for stomach cuz it helps digestion, it has a very unique but lovely flavour that can actually become very addictive once you get used to it.
    I love to mix it with dried chrysanthemum or rose petals, just put about 5~10g of pu-erh and a few dried chrysanthemums or roses in a teapot and add boiling water then let it brew for 10 mins, tastes just amazing♥!

  • @breinich2
    @breinich2 2 года назад +5

    I love pu erh, and I learned so much in this video. As always, Dan is great.

  • @mndlessdrwer
    @mndlessdrwer Год назад +2

    Pu-erh is a fascinating tea, particularly the ripe variety, since it is a rapid fermentation, it changes the tea so dramatically compared to the raw aged pu-erh. Both are wonderful and the raw is definitely the more desirable one once it gets about 20 years on it, but you need to be prepared for the peculiar flavor from either. Most aged raw pu-erh have interesting medicinal flavors to them whereas ripe pu-erh is just a full embracing of the earthy quality that a lot of teas have. I like both, but I understand that it would be an acquired taste for most.
    I will say, if you ever get a ripe pu-erh that has a slightly "off" aroma, or a fishiness to the smell of the dried leaves, you may want to give it a few quick rinses with hot water from your kettle. Just enough to cover it, let it sit for a couple seconds, then dump it out. I've found that this can be enough to rescue some teas that have an unpleasant odor to them. One of my favorite ways to assess pu-erh is to think back on trips to fine woodcraft vendors, the places you go to buy specialty woods. A lot of raw and ripe pu-erh teas have aromas to them that are not just a simple generic "wood" aroma, but can instead bring back memories of specific woods like cedar, cherry, pine, rosewood, etc. So it's fun to see if you can pick out which wood it reminds you most of.

  • @erikfreitas9288
    @erikfreitas9288 2 года назад

    Learned so much! Awesome video!

  • @borderlineiq
    @borderlineiq 2 года назад +2

    This reminds me of being given a private docented tour of some great museum, or perhaps hearing a world class performance of a chamber orchestra with authentic ancient instruments, and left to appreciate it in your mind in the days and weeks that follow.

  • @christophercapasso8214
    @christophercapasso8214 2 года назад

    I wish I knew you were doing this episode! I would have come down to watch!!

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. 2 года назад +7

    Dan is such a cool interviewer 👏🏽

  • @mastersplinter5966
    @mastersplinter5966 2 года назад +1

    Awesome video, it's different & I like. Fascinating and I didn't know Dan was a good Interviewer too.

  • @yanggao4639
    @yanggao4639 2 года назад +1

    Learned so much about pu-erh tea, thank you!

  • @abigailmcnaughton4661
    @abigailmcnaughton4661 2 года назад +1

    Fab episode. I have a much deeper appreciation of pu erh since reading “ the tea girl of hummingbird lane” by
    Lisa See and seeing this episode reminds me of the history and culture behind the growing of tea.

  • @jonathanniccolls1592
    @jonathanniccolls1592 2 года назад +1

    Thank you ATK & Chef Grace Young!

  • @jollypodger7102
    @jollypodger7102 2 года назад +3

    I’ve never really gotten into tea, now I feel like I’m missing out. That looked like a lovely experience!

  • @geekogen
    @geekogen 4 месяца назад

    I love how reverent Dan is about the whole tea and process.

  • @phranerphamily
    @phranerphamily 2 года назад

    I was fortunate enough to spend 2019 to 2021 in Beijing well my husband was working on a job. They have entire neighborhood of tea shops. I have had these types of teas and had wonderful tastings with families that have been doing this for generations. I encourage anyone to arrange a tea tasting anytime you are in a city that has a large Asian district. It's an amazing experience.

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. 2 года назад +7

    I’m always excited by a Tea Episode by Dan. 👏🏽

  • @marshab4983
    @marshab4983 2 года назад

    Very interesting, thank you! I look forward to trying the pu-erh tea.

  • @darrellobermann2315
    @darrellobermann2315 2 года назад +6

    Thank you for this glimpse into an incredible culture that has always been a mysterious to me

    • @sandyting137
      @sandyting137 2 года назад

      Thats odd though. the raw puerh you said didnt age at all. my 2005-2010 teas are reddish now.. is it stored in your fridge

  • @susanmunoz7688
    @susanmunoz7688 2 года назад

    Wonderful, I really enjoyed this 🥰

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. 2 года назад +7

    That bit about Tea is true for us in India too: Tea with Snack with a preference for Tea Leaves.

  • @MeiLeaf
    @MeiLeaf 2 года назад +8

    Great to see more exploration in tea. I think that it is worth saying that Raw PuErh is actually a sun-dried Green tea rather than a White since it does go through a Sha Qing process. Yunnan does make Whites but these are never considered PuErh. Keep the tea videos coming!

    • @martinyang5459
      @martinyang5459 2 года назад

      Sheng undergoes partial shaqing, so it lies between green tea and white tea. Yunnan green teas (Dianlü) are fully fixed, even the sun-dried ones.

    • @MeiLeaf
      @MeiLeaf 2 года назад

      @@martinyang5459 hmmm I would have to respectfully disagree. Firstly a fundamental definition of a Green is that is goes through a Sha Qing process no matter what the actual heating parameters. Secondly every Sha Qing session that I have witnessed in Yunnan has had very hot hot woks and extended cooking time, I have done it a few times myself and it is really hot and long work cooking those leaves. So I don't really consider it to be that partial. Yes, it may not fully deactivate enzymes in the leaf but that would be the same for many roughly made green teas on the market and we still call them green tea.

    • @martinyang5459
      @martinyang5459 2 года назад +3

      @@MeiLeaf The shaqing used for sheng is definitely partial; I've had producers explain to me that they can't go too hot or too long. A given leaf, when fully instead of partially fixed, tastes less bitter and less complex in my experience. It becomes Dianlü rather than sheng. The complete shaqing used for, say, longjing is definitely more thorough than the partial one for sheng.
      That said, you're probably right that there are green teas that are partially fixed. And if those are green teas, then so is unaged sheng. Thanks for explaining.

    • @MeiLeaf
      @MeiLeaf 2 года назад

      @@martinyang5459 the world of tea is beautifully nuanced with these kind of grey areas for discussion despite thousands of years of history and the learning ever ends. Wishing you plenty of delicious tea!

  • @barbaracholak5204
    @barbaracholak5204 2 года назад +5

    Hello ATK
    Salutations from California 😋

  • @andymok7945
    @andymok7945 6 месяцев назад

    Thanks. Very informative.

  • @Becausing
    @Becausing 2 года назад +5

    Grace’s face when Alice reveals the age of the last tea is incredible. 😲

  • @WildwoodCastle
    @WildwoodCastle 2 года назад

    Sitting here with my staple.. Earl Grey from Taylor's of Harrogate and enjoying this wonderful video from Dan...

  • @malcolmwadley557
    @malcolmwadley557 Год назад

    I love 熟普洱茶 ripe pu er tea! Great video! I'll have to come for a visit one day!

  • @ericthompson3982
    @ericthompson3982 2 года назад +1

    Too. Freaking. Cool. My god, I'm a nerd. Both of these women are so interesting, and I adore that he's really just there to listen.

  • @rayman20us
    @rayman20us Год назад +4

    It's a little unclear what's being discussed between about 3:00 and 5:00 in this video. They're discussing using again the exact same leaves that were just brewed, to brew again and again. These multiple brewings could go more than 10 times, depending on the type of tea. Although some people would think that the flavor gets weaker, but remains the same after each brewing, many tea experts say that they can discern the taste of different flavor notes with each successive brewing.

  • @fernandadp94
    @fernandadp94 2 года назад

    this was great. and crazy. I;m goging to buy tea asap

  • @dansmith6909
    @dansmith6909 2 года назад +6

    Can confirm the existence of tea drunkenness, even with the floor sweepings we get in bags in my country. Drink too much tea in the morning on an empty stomach and it makes me very nauseous

  • @darrylgaston7009
    @darrylgaston7009 Год назад

    My two old Vietnamese friends from work introduced me to Pu-erh and Su le said to pour out the 1st batch of water and drink the 2nd! I found some golden Pu-erh that is pretty good.

  • @johannavanwinkle815
    @johannavanwinkle815 Год назад

    What a great video!!

  • @cynthiaslater7445
    @cynthiaslater7445 2 года назад +1

    I learned about Chinese teas in Beijing but I didn't know about fruity Pu 'er. I drink fermented Pu 'er. My best experience was tasting jasmine tea that was $1800 a pound!

  • @spencerkieft6021
    @spencerkieft6021 2 года назад +2

    Pu-erh is my favorite type of tea. I'm a little barbaric with my preparation. I usually simmer it for a while until it's very strong and serve it with milk.

  • @marilynsnider8183
    @marilynsnider8183 2 года назад

    I love tea. I took a tea course once.

  • @rebeccapopp9738
    @rebeccapopp9738 2 года назад

    Great video. Does this mean we can ignore the best by dates on tea in the US?

  • @sambutarbutar2276
    @sambutarbutar2276 2 года назад

    Lovely video!

  • @chaoticfloralarrangement8741
    @chaoticfloralarrangement8741 2 года назад +1

    I've never done drugs, drank alcohol, or smoked for my own personal reasons but I'm very inclined to try that tea drunkenness at least once for the experience

  • @robertmcdannold3757
    @robertmcdannold3757 2 года назад +2

    I’ve watched hours of Chinese tea ceremony videos and have grown to live the art.
    Everyone here seems to be drinking correctly. It’s customary for women to raise their lower fingers when they sip and for men to curl their fingers under the cup. Good job, Dan.
    I’ve also learned that the tea can be held in the mouth to full appreciate the flavor, but nobody seems to be doing that here.
    Wonderful video.

    • @Lou.B
      @Lou.B Год назад

      Maybe when ceremony becomes more important than being present with tea.

  • @johnb7337
    @johnb7337 Год назад +1

    Good content! Nice that people flagged the questionable parts here, that pu'er isn't white tea, and that last tea didn't look fermented enough to be more than a decade old. It could've been incredibly well preserved, stored in a cool and dry place, but then that doesn't work to skip why that's atypical, and generally not regarded positively. Still, the perspective and information was fine for introductory content. I don't think that drinking tangerine pu'er then shu then aged sheng is necessarily a problem. Drinking lighter to heavier may suit more people's preference better, and leaving citrus pu'er out of a combined tasting, but it's all just preference.

  • @kristenlu1428
    @kristenlu1428 6 месяцев назад

    So delightful. Knowledgeable, entertaining and kind people. Please share more on tea. I would love to watch more. 🫖🍵🙏

  • @azharel
    @azharel 2 года назад

    Bring more Alice and Grace on the show!

  • @RuStOlIuM420
    @RuStOlIuM420 Месяц назад

    Omg i need to visit this place, totally worth the drive from central ohio right lpl

  • @judyl.6550
    @judyl.6550 2 года назад

    Very interesting!!!

  • @SnakeAndTurtleQigong
    @SnakeAndTurtleQigong 2 года назад

    Fun!
    Thanks for sharing.
    💙🍵

  • @jimmychristensen7112
    @jimmychristensen7112 Год назад

    Would love to try those tea's..specialy the tangerine, and the 30+ year old

  • @ecco222
    @ecco222 3 месяца назад

    Looks like a super nice tea shop

  • @josedesilencio8851
    @josedesilencio8851 Год назад

    Are these tea cakes being sold at Shoppee?

  • @aut-1212
    @aut-1212 2 года назад

    So cool

  • @marionwarren1006
    @marionwarren1006 9 месяцев назад

    I want to order all 3 different pureh teas

  • @justanotherguy312
    @justanotherguy312 8 месяцев назад

    This is my favorite tea. Than oolong. Than jasmine

  • @AdamShaiken
    @AdamShaiken 2 года назад +1

    Constant Comment is my personal favorite...tangerine pooh bear sounds like it may be my thing, too!

  • @justanotherguy312
    @justanotherguy312 8 месяцев назад

    I’ve been saying this tea name all along and people keep trying to correct me on it saying it wrong. Lol. The same with oolong. But most people actually pronounce that one wrong

  • @joro4755
    @joro4755 2 года назад

    2:45 Dan is such a tease

  • @abigailschmick7185
    @abigailschmick7185 2 года назад

    Dans the man

  • @ynasra1065
    @ynasra1065 2 года назад +2

    Love tea thnx dan

  • @emcsquare62
    @emcsquare62 2 года назад

    I just purchased and received a box of these. I don't see comments, but do you steep the whole tangerine ball or do you empty the tea and brew only it, not the tangerine?

    • @KM-cs1dy
      @KM-cs1dy 2 года назад

      For a mug size. You break them apart. Take some tea and some tangerine peel to brew them together. For a common tea pot can be 1/2 based on your preference of taste.

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. 2 года назад +5

    Moral of the story: Tea Drunk was liquid courage for many Chinese Poets.

  • @kevinbaker6168
    @kevinbaker6168 2 года назад +1

    I wish that these What's Eating Dan segments were included in the ATK tv show segments. Dan covers things that seem not to make it in the show.

  • @noshalom
    @noshalom 2 года назад

    I'm curious though, no discarding of the first brew? I thought you always do that with puerh....

  • @PokhrajRoy.
    @PokhrajRoy. 2 года назад +4

    Grand Tea and Imports is so cool! Happy to see you not being a bull in a tea shop. 😂

  • @AdamShaiken
    @AdamShaiken 2 года назад +1

    Pooh Bear tea...loves us !!!

  • @artistlovepeace
    @artistlovepeace Год назад +1

    I love China!

  • @Kakakakakakakakakakakaka684
    @Kakakakakakakakakakakaka684 2 месяца назад

    Grace has such a powerful voice. Love that lil bish

  • @daunsimbukan
    @daunsimbukan 2 года назад +2

    😍

  • @Chemicalkinetics
    @Chemicalkinetics 2 года назад

    I realize that come to this "area" very often, but never came to this tea shop. I always come around here to the store next to this tea shop. This tea shop did not catch my eyes.

  • @ohheycrystalhey
    @ohheycrystalhey 2 года назад

    I cackled at the 老同志 old comrade name, that's so funny

  • @jwillisbarrie
    @jwillisbarrie 2 года назад

    Enjoying the captions for the Deaf

  • @thecook8964
    @thecook8964 8 месяцев назад

    "tea drunk" to me is towards the end of a tea tasting, you're ready to put down $50 for two oz. of something called "old man's eyebrows, " in an euphoric high

  • @HughesEnterprises
    @HughesEnterprises 2 года назад +2

    I’ve tried this in Seattle. The good stuff tastes like old books. The bad stuff tastes like moldy old books.

    • @KM-cs1dy
      @KM-cs1dy 2 года назад

      Fair enough, some think cheeses taste like wet socks some love it.

  • @TheCynthiaRice
    @TheCynthiaRice 2 года назад +2

    It's called "Tribute Tea"....

  • @nonameronin1
    @nonameronin1 6 месяцев назад

    As someone who likes to keep the peels of citrus fruits for various uses I feel like I would get into an argument if a merchant tried to sell me just the meat of a tangerine 😅.

  • @jacobmelena9116
    @jacobmelena9116 Год назад

    This makes me wish I liked tea

  • @justinsteele8400
    @justinsteele8400 2 года назад +9

    That 30 year old tea has to be a mistake. There’s no way. That’s the color of a new sheng. My white teas brew darker than that. Puerh with even a handful of years would be darker.

    • @xiulanli745
      @xiulanli745 22 дня назад +1

      Agreed!!! 30 years old tea will have darker color.

  • @justanotherguy312
    @justanotherguy312 8 месяцев назад

    I’ve had some that taste almost fishy which is yummy

  • @michaelanthony1493
    @michaelanthony1493 2 года назад

    Mei leaf

  • @tuongthanh662
    @tuongthanh662 2 года назад

    Xinh chào

  • @cpa314
    @cpa314 2 года назад

    This was great, but way too short.

  • @Eza_yuta
    @Eza_yuta 7 месяцев назад +1

    No way that tea is over 30 years old. The very light color and "floral" thing mean young shu puerh.

  • @TRG92
    @TRG92 2 года назад +4

    Is that 30 year old tea like some sort of a joke? Looks like a 30 day old sheng. Or someone pressed green tea into a cake.

  • @henrycooks1883
    @henrycooks1883 2 года назад

    And where pray tell did you show us how to brew Pu-erh tea, it is a ritual, so a few hints might have been nice.

  • @Durianpieenthusiast
    @Durianpieenthusiast 2 года назад

    Someone get SteveMRE1982 in here.

  • @00000ppp
    @00000ppp Год назад

    Nice video, but I don't think one thing she said about puerh production is correct.

  • @amdog5055
    @amdog5055 2 года назад +1

    Pu-erh me a cup!

  • @Klesk1985
    @Klesk1985 2 года назад

    LOL 👋

  • @nathansmith9332
    @nathansmith9332 2 года назад +21

    "Raw puer is a kind of white tea. It's picked, dried. Not much is done to it." Well, I'm sorry to say, but she is quite off here. Raw puer's closest similar tea is green tea. Raw puer is picked, pan fried, rolled, then dried. It's kind of disappointing that she, an employee of a tea shop in Chinatown, was off by so much.

    • @EdwardLangeland
      @EdwardLangeland 2 года назад +6

      She doesn’t seem to have much knowledge about the fermentation process (wòduī) either. I think it’s usually around 45 days but could vary. Never heard about ‘at least three months’
      Pu-erh

    • @nathansmith9332
      @nathansmith9332 2 года назад +2

      @@EdwardLangeland You are correct. "At least three months" is also a wholly incorrect statement about (shou) puer processing.

  • @wenom7286
    @wenom7286 2 года назад

    Where are Bridget and Julia?

  • @RefinerSimilitude
    @RefinerSimilitude 2 года назад +1

    You know what else is made of vegetal matter, slightly moistened then fermented and also has earthy notes? Compost.

  • @oceanwonders
    @oceanwonders Год назад

    Um no one actually told me how to brew pu-erh tea.