Pandas, bamboo, the great wall, pagodas, delicate pictures of beautiful women. And tea. This pretty much sums up what I know of China. And even my tea knowledge is very sketchy. Although China is tea??s place of birth, my drinking habits are thoroughly British (down to and including warm ale, but that??s another story). And since the day they waged the Opium Wars, Brits have chosen Indian tea??which they planted and produced??over China. This attitude has changed significantly over the last few years with the advent of green tea, which has brought China firmly back on the British tea drinking map, making my ignorance of all things Chinese all the more inexcusable. Even my spell in a teashop helped little, as it took place a terrifyingly long time ago, well before customers started talking knowledgeably of Chun Mee or Bi Lo Chun.
Now I suppose I could look at this in a Socratic way and convince myself that knowing I don??t know anything is the greatest knowledge of all. But I never bought into Socrates?? maieutics and consequently keep feeling ashamed at my ignorance. Which is probably why I always did my homework back at school. I just couldn??t envisage anything more embarrassing than having to admit to the whole class that I didn??t know the answer. It happened to me once at an exam and I am still smarting years later.
“Talk to me about operation Talon Vise,” a diminutive lady wrapped in a yellow suit that set off her very dark hair and olive skin.
I couldn’t see the other students at the back but I could sense them, the buzz, the murmured answers. I felt a sudden heat rising from within and spread crimson red to my ears and cheeks.
“I am sorry, I don’t know about it,” I blurted out. And wished intensely, deeply, desperately that the earth would open and swallow me that instant.
The earth didn’t listen.
I have since found out that operation Talon Vise, later named Frequent Wind, was the one that evacuated Americans and their allies from Saigon in 1975. But that shame has stayed with me and I always feel deeply uncomfortable when I catch myself out. At the risk of sounding like a complete fruitcake, I will admit I sometimes cringe at my ignorance even in the privacy of my own home.
??Oh my goodness, I haven??t even heard about this tea and I am supposed to be something of an expert,? is a familiar sentiment.
The silver lining, of course, is that not knowing carries a distinct advantage??it means that I still have much to learn and discover. Which is exactly what I set out to do with my tea tour.
The small problem with this is that from the little I have read in books and on Chinaphile tea blogs such as Cha Dao, Tea Masters and Floating Clouds, Gliding Eagle, I could easily devote an entire lifetime to armchair touring China and I probably wouldn??t get any close to knowing much about its teas. Still, any start is a good start, and it is with this feeling and a degree of expectant trepidation that I approached the China section of my tea cupboard. My hand hovered on the teas I knew least about. What should I pick? Should I start with a cup of Zhongshan Baiye or perhaps Huangshan Mao Feng?
And then I cheated. I went straight to the familiar safety of a black Yunnan, which makes up my usual China repertoire together with Keemun, Jasmine Tea and Gunpowder. I suppose it makes sense to start this journey into the barely known from a safe harbour. Or perhaps I am simply a tasting coward. To make up for my lack of guts, though, I decided to compare two different Yunnans. The first was a Yunnan d??Or from Mariage Frères in Paris, the second a Grand Yunnan from Soana in Milan.
I brewed them both the same way, steeping 2.5g (roughly one heaped teaspoon) in six oz water for four minutes. The two cups I got looked nearly identical, a beautiful dark amber, veering slightly more to the red in the Soana tea. The scent told a different story. The Yunnan d??Or was fiercely smoky??not in a Lapsang Souchong kind of way, but in a smoky earthiness. I like to think of it as smoked undergrowth, if any such thing exists, except I am not really sure what smoked undergrowth smells like. Nevertheless, the smoky earthy note predominated in the nose and I failed to find the promised “caramelised scent recalling sometimes hazelnuts, sometimes spices.” The mouth was much milder. Sweet at first and rich, with a light smoky, earthy accent at the end. A dark, passionate Goya painting, probably the Maya.
Soana??s Grand Yunnan had definitely less smoke in the nose. It was there, but it was more delicate, ever so slightly earthier. The mouthfeel, by contrast, was a lot more robust. Earthy and malty with just a hint of smokiness at the very end. Definitely Rembrandt.
Both were excellent teas and I drained both cups. Maybe I could have been more daring, but I doubt my exploration of China could have been off a better start.