Country of Origin: China Region:
Zhejiang Province
Manufacture
Type: Steamed green tea
Altitude: 2500 ft. Shipping Port: Shanghai
Infusion: Very bright
Cup Characteristics: Full bodied green
tea flavor tending sweet with floral character.
Information:
Lung Ching Tea - also known as Dragonwell is produced by hand
through a 10-part process. The side of West Lake in Zhejiang Province grows the tea
used to produce Dragonwell. Dragonwell is distinguished by its beautiful shape,
emerald colour, scented smell and tending sweet floral character.
In the People’s Republic of China, mists and fog often compensate
of insufficient rainfall, at the same time cloaking the gardens in secrecy.
Here tea is produced according to ancient time-tested methods and workers
perform all tasks by hand, just like their ancestors. The tealeaves that become
Dragonwell (a.k.a. Lung Ching) are plucked before the Clear Light Festival or
at the least before the spring rains have fallen. The choicest come from a part
of the mountain called Lion’s Peak, where plucking takes place before each
tender shoot has more than one leaf.
Legend has it that in 250 AD a Taoist monk affirmed that there
must be a dragon lurking in a certain spring not far from Hangchow. The monk
implored the well dragon to come to the rescue of the poor farmers suffering a
crippling drought. Instantly, the clouds came rushing in from every side and
poured forth a timely rain. One account of this, an old temple adjoining the
spring is known as Dragon’s Well Monastery, and this tea derives its name from
the same legend.
Hot tea brewing method: When preparing by the cup, this
tea can be used repeatedly - about 3 times. The secret is to use water that is
about 180°F or 90°C. Place 1 teaspoon in your cup let the tea steep for about 2-3
minutes and then begin enjoying a cup of enchantment - do not remove the leaves
from the cup. Once the water level is low - add more water, and so on and so on
- until the flavor of the tea is exhausted.
Alternatively as with all top quality teas, scoop 2-4 teaspoons
of tea into the teapot, pour in boiling water that has been freshly drawn
(previously boiled water has lost most of its oxygen and therefore tends to be
flat tasting), steep for 2-4 minutes (to taste), stir (virtually all the leaves
will sink), pour into your cup but do not add milk or sugar since green tea is
enjoyed ‘straight-up’.
Iced tea-brewing method: (to make 1 liter/quart): Place 6
teaspoons of tea into a teapot or heat resistant pitcher. Pour 1 1/4 cups of
freshly boiled water over the tea. Steep for 5 minutes. Quarter fill a serving
pitcher with cold water. Pour the tea into your serving pitcher straining the
leaves. Add ice and top up the pitcher with cold water. Garnish and sweeten to
taste. [A rule of thumb when preparing fresh brewed iced tea is to double the
strength of hot tea since it will be poured over ice and diluted with cold
water.