Thank you! Yes, I know it’s in the blog entry, but I’m looking for some more info (if there is any) about the clay itself. So hoping I get a reply soonBok wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 5:58 amTea Adventures „ Like other duanni, it is favoured for rounding out the harsher notes of some teas. It is very porous compared to other zisha and is better at retaining heat.“ You have your answer right there in the blog entry
Rounding out unwanted things and retain heat well, both good attributes for the Puerh you want to drink. 130ml is a good volume as well and the large opening is practical to put in chunks of Puerh.
mud and leaves
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What kind of more information? The clay is Duanni, from huang long shan. There's not much that can be said.Tea Adventures wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 6:31 amThank you! Yes, I know it’s in the blog entry, but I’m looking for some more info (if there is any) about the clay itself. So hoping I get a reply soonBok wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 5:58 amTea Adventures „ Like other duanni, it is favoured for rounding out the harsher notes of some teas. It is very porous compared to other zisha and is better at retaining heat.“ You have your answer right there in the blog entry
Rounding out unwanted things and retain heat well, both good attributes for the Puerh you want to drink. 130ml is a good volume as well and the large opening is practical to put in chunks of Puerh.
What you should ask is not about the clay, but the firing temperature used, and the mesh size.
Those are the more important questions
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Hmm. Those are good questions indeed. Thank you! I read somewhere that after the clay is mined, the time it is left alone affects the final result. Or is this less not as important as some sources say?Youzi wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 6:43 amWhat kind of more information? The clay is Duanni, from huang long shan. There's not much that can be said.Tea Adventures wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 6:31 amThank you! Yes, I know it’s in the blog entry, but I’m looking for some more info (if there is any) about the clay itself. So hoping I get a reply soonBok wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 5:58 amTea Adventures „ Like other duanni, it is favoured for rounding out the harsher notes of some teas. It is very porous compared to other zisha and is better at retaining heat.“ You have your answer right there in the blog entry
Rounding out unwanted things and retain heat well, both good attributes for the Puerh you want to drink. 130ml is a good volume as well and the large opening is practical to put in chunks of Puerh.
What you should ask is not about the clay, but the firing temperature used, and the mesh size.
Those are the more important questions
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The length of aging has no effect on the tea making ability of the teapot. If it has any effect at all, then maybe it can give a bit darker color after firing, but that's it.Tea Adventures wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 7:16 amHaha yes, but I want to make sure I pick the right one before I spend any money. I don’t have a duanni teapot so I can’t test it with shou, unfortunately.
Aging is done to increase plasticity and yield in firing.
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Aha I did not know that! It’s for things like this that I joined this forumYouzi wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 7:42 amThe length of aging has no effect on the tea making ability of the teapot. If it has any effect at all, then maybe it can give a bit darker color after firing, but that's it.Tea Adventures wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 7:16 amHaha yes, but I want to make sure I pick the right one before I spend any money. I don’t have a duanni teapot so I can’t test it with shou, unfortunately.
Aging is done to increase plasticity and yield in firing.
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The clay hasn't been aged very long (duanni doesn't need to be aged as long as zini or zhuni). As Youzi said, ageing is primarily to increase the plasticity of the clay. The mesh size is 60 mu, so quite grainy. Lengjinhuang duanni can be used the same as BS Duanni and Huangjin Duan. All are excellent clays for shu pu'er in my experience as they absorb storage aroma quite well and give you the sustained temperature needed to brew shu well. Thanks for your interestTea Adventures wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 6:31 amThank you! Yes, I know it’s in the blog entry, but I’m looking for some more info (if there is any) about the clay itself. So hoping I get a reply soonBok wrote: ↑Tue Mar 10, 2020 5:58 amTea Adventures „ Like other duanni, it is favoured for rounding out the harsher notes of some teas. It is very porous compared to other zisha and is better at retaining heat.“ You have your answer right there in the blog entry
Rounding out unwanted things and retain heat well, both good attributes for the Puerh you want to drink. 130ml is a good volume as well and the large opening is practical to put in chunks of Puerh.
- mudandleaves
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Firing temperature is 1160 C.
- mudandleaves
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For the second year in a row, we will be carrying First Flush Longjing tea from Mei Jia Wu, West Lake. Mei Jia Wu, like Shifeng, is one of only a handful of officially-recognized Longjing tea gardens beside the West Lake in Hangzhou. We are now accepting pre-orders for this tea; orders will begin shipping at the end of March. Shipping this week!
This is TeJi / premium grade of Longjing / Dragon Well Tea that is picked before the Qing Ming Festival in Mei Jia Wu 梅家坞. The #43 cultivar of Longjing buds earlier than other varieties, making it the earliest harvest of Longjing from the West Lake gardens. #43 Longjing grown in Mei Jia Wu is prized for its mouth feel, subtly layered flavours and rich aroma. These are the first buds, and are more tender and delicate than those from later harvests. Each package of 250g comes with a sticker that provides the official serial number and QR Code allowing you to verify the authenticity of the tea and trace its origin. Click here for more details:
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https://www.mudandleaves.com/store/p463 ... jiawu.html
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This is TeJi / premium grade of Longjing / Dragon Well Tea that is picked before the Qing Ming Festival in Mei Jia Wu 梅家坞. The #43 cultivar of Longjing buds earlier than other varieties, making it the earliest harvest of Longjing from the West Lake gardens. #43 Longjing grown in Mei Jia Wu is prized for its mouth feel, subtly layered flavours and rich aroma. These are the first buds, and are more tender and delicate than those from later harvests. Each package of 250g comes with a sticker that provides the official serial number and QR Code allowing you to verify the authenticity of the tea and trace its origin. Click here for more details:
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https://www.mudandleaves.com/store/p463 ... jiawu.html
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- mudandleaves
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12% off all Spring 2019 Taiwanese Oolong Tea. Use coupon code spring19 during checkout. Sale ends Monday April 6th.
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https://www.mudandleaves.com/store/c37/ ... g_Tea.html
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Our smallest Yixing Teapot yet at only 80ml at full capacity!
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These classic shuipings were specially designed for MudandLeaves by Lin Hanpeng to meet our request for a small Yixing Teapot for solo sessions. We chose dicaoqing clay for its versatility and beauty after seasoning.
Click here for more details:
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https://www.mudandleaves.com/store/p686 ... /80ml.html
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These classic shuipings were specially designed for MudandLeaves by Lin Hanpeng to meet our request for a small Yixing Teapot for solo sessions. We chose dicaoqing clay for its versatility and beauty after seasoning.
Click here for more details:
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https://www.mudandleaves.com/store/p686 ... /80ml.html
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Spring 2020 Taiwanese Oolongs are in! Spring High Mountain Oolong has arrived from Alishan, HeHuanShan, ShanLinXi, Lishan and DaYuLing Correction: Still waiting on the higher elevation teas. Spring Alishan High Mountain Tea, Alishan Jin Xuan, and Dong Ding are in now. Winter harvest 2019 is still available for higher elevation teas (ShanLinXi, Hehuanshan, Lishan and DaYuLing).
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Last edited by mudandleaves on Mon Apr 20, 2020 11:11 am, edited 2 times in total.
Hi there @mudandleaves, curious how does this springs High Mountain compare to last years?mudandleaves wrote: ↑Fri Apr 17, 2020 9:24 amSpring 2020 Taiwanese Oolongs are in! Spring High Mountain Oolong has arrived from Alishan, HeHuanShan, ShanLinXi, Lishan and DaYuLing:
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Our assistant at our Guangzhou office has only tried the Alishan HMT for this spring so far, but she was very happy with it; nice aroma, depth of flavour, subtle sweetness, mouthfeel and leaf steeping longevity. She's been a part of tea tasting / selection at MudandLeaves since the beginning. The pandemic has kept us in Canada this spring, so Siyan and I are still waiting to try the new teas for ourselves; waiting for the parcels to arrive.Hi there mudandleaves, curious how does this springs High Mountain compare to last years?
Because of frost damage in the fields at higher altitudes, we are expecting much smaller harvests for those from Lishan and DaYuLing (maybe 1/3 or less). Frost damage in the 100K Garden in DaYuLing was pretty bad.