Following 78 Tea Drinkers

DarkStar 36 followers

I live and work in cold Aberdeen, Scotland at the moment. Main interests are...

Tea Drunk 17 followers

We commission all of our teas in the most conservative fashion to bring disce...

Yunnan Sourcing 175 followers

Pu-erh fanatic… Yunnan black and green teas!

Lily Duckler 115 followers

Married into tea! :) I enjoy reading everyone’s insights- there’s so much to...

boychik 442 followers

I’ve stopped rating teas long time ago. Couldn’t be happier ;D Puaddict flir...

Matt Warren 33 followers

Tea drinker. Student. Cook. Gardener. Simple.

What-Cha 118 followers

I’ve been a tea enthusiast for the past 10 years and have recently decided to...

Misty Peak Teas 130 followers

Located in Yiwu Xishuanbanna. Bringing the finest Pu’er Tea to your doorstep…...

nannuoshan 55 followers

I’m Gabriele, the founder of www.nannuoshan.org. We at nannuoshan travel to t...

DigniTea 174 followers

I drink mostly puer and sometimes what we as Westerners think of as black tea...

Profile

Bio

I have far too many interests. Tea is one of them.

Background in bioethics, medical anthropology, and evolutionary biology with aspirations of eventually going into a medical field. I also have strong interests in theater, computer science, and food (which shouldn’t be particularly surprising).

Brewing
Brewing method is usually Western style for black teas (2-3 minutes at near-boiling), “grandpa style” for shu pu’ers and longjing, and gongfu (with a gaiwan) short steeps for sheng and shu pu’ers (two 5-second rinses, then 5, 10, 15-second steeps with a gradual increase in steep times to taste). The gaiwan is also used for oolongs though I sometimes use a brew basket if the gaiwan is occupied and I’m taking a break from pu’er.

Preferences
I enjoy black teas, pu’er, and oolongs (leaning towards aged, cliff/Wuyi, or roasted/dark), depending on my mood. I don’t usually drink green tea but do enjoy a cup every so often.

Ratings
My rating methods have changed over time and as a result, they’re very inconsistent. For the most part, as of 11 November 2014, unless a tea is exceptional in some way (either good or bad), I will refrain from leaving a numerical rating.

The final iteration of my rating system before I stopped (note: I never did get around to re-calibrating most of my older notes):
99 & 100: I will go to almost any lengths to keep this stocked in my cupboard.
90-98: I’m willing to or already do frequently repurchase this when my stock runs low.
80-89: I enjoy this tea, and I may be inclined to get more of it once I run out.
70-79: While this is a good tea, I don’t plan on having it in constant supply in my tea stash.
50-69: This might still be a good tea, but I wouldn’t get it myself.
40-49: Just tolerable enough for me to finish the cup, but I don’t think I’ll be trying it again any time soon.
Below 40: Noping the heck out of this cup/pot.

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