I recently read a comment on TeaDB that made me reflect on how
to think about my puerh drinking. In the
comment section of this article on justifying the purchase of shu puerh
James places his tea drinking into logical categories with rationale as to what
teas make most sense for each category.
He states:
For me tea drinking
falls into three basic categories. (1) Casual brews I drink/make for my wife.
(2) Teas I drink gong-fu throughout the day. (3) Teas I drink with other
people.
Ripe pu’erh tends to
do very well in category 1 and depending on the audience category 3. It doesn’t
make sense for me to be brewing something fancy for category 1 and for whatever
reason I just about never want to drink ripe as my gong-fu session for the day.
That just leaves category 3, and I’m not sure I’m at the point where I can
justify fancier boutique ripe sheerly to serve guests. I’ll admit to having
considered but I’m not quite there for myself. I also certainly wouldn’t fault
the person who chooses to buy it.
For me, even a few years ago, my tea drinking was very very
different but for the last year or two it has been pretty consistent mainly due
to stable life circumstances. My tea
drinking falls into (1) morning gongfu I drink/ make for wife and family. (2) Stored
productions that I bring out of storage to drink with my family on a rare
occasion. (3) Teas I drink with other people. (4) Everyday drinkers I one cup
steep at work. (5) better teas I gong fu at work.
Over the last while category 1 tends to be aged sheng of increasingly
decent quality but also can include shu puerh, Korean Balhyocha, or Oolong. My children regularly drink tea with us so I make
sure it is of a certain base level of quality.
My wife will not tolerate anything overly harsh or unusual and if its
sheng, it better be aged. She has an increasingly
discerning pallet when I’m gong fu brewing.
Category 2 tends to be sheng puerh that I have lesser quantities
of and I am trying to hold on to-expensive or cheap, old or young. Usually, it has some quality of rareness to
it preventing me from putting a cake into my regular rotation thereby
preventing me from drinking through it on a day-to-day basis. It also has some level of quality to it, otherwise
I would just drink through the cake in Category 4.
Category 3 tends to be similar to category 2 but is
sometimes Darjeeling which my wife enjoys as well but that I rarely consume
these days.
Category 4 tends to be a lot of factory sheng that I have acquired
over the last year. If I’m simply
looking for caffeine after lunch and my day is too busy to deeply appreciate
such things it could be some lesser quality sheng that I have a sample cake of
or some cheaper Menghai Factory stuff.
If I’m feeling like something of better quality, I go up the quality ladder
without hesitation. I will even consume
fresh sheng samples as well at work.
Category 5 tends to be nicer aged sheng or samples where I
can spend some time with and enjoy and often blog or write about.
Anyways, I think that helping to categorize your tea
drinking is another way other than measuring your consumption that can
help guide your future purchases. This
is especially true if you consider yourself more of a puerh drinker rather than
collector.
In my case, I have amassed enough tea to satisfy categories
2-4 over the past year and from years before.
So, right now my buying is focused more on high quality drinkers that satisfy
Category 1 and maybe for some more special stuff that satisfies Category 2
& 5. Currently, my generous onslaught
of samples are satisfying these categories nicely without me dipping into my
stored cakes. I am also wondering if I
should take the plunge into buying more shu puerh? I really prefer sheng but my wife also enjoys
shu and doesn’t really pay to much attention to weather its sheng or shu
anyways, as long as its good. I also
feel that my purchasing is slowing down because I have enough to last me many
many years.
I hope that this reflection has helped you evaluate your own
drinking needs. I wonder what your
drinking categories are and how that influences your purchasing, if at all?
Hummmm…. Something to meditate on…
Peace
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