Mrs Pei's Purple Sun - green tea

Style   Green Tea
Origin   Hu Zhou, Zhejiang, China
Season   Early April Harvest
Altitude   600m
Batch   SCPB1
Plant   Wild Purple Bamboo Local Bush
Tea Master   Master Pei Hong Feng

This tea has exceptional pedigree, served as a tribute tea for the Emperor during the Tang dynasty. Impeccably made by our 76-year-old female tea master, you can expect light macadamia notes and a lingering sweetness. It's refreshing with a perfect level of astringency, and no biterness. No chemical fertiliser, pesticide, or herbicide was used in the production of this tea.

 

  80 degrees Celsius 
  1 x tablespoon (3 grams)
 

150 ml water (small tea cup)

 

Infuse for 3 minutes

Reuse the same leaves up to 3 times before discarding 



The Stories We Drink

This is a wild grown and wild crafted tea. 76-year-old Mrs Pei and her elderly mother pluck and process this tea from the garden behind their modest house in the Hu Zhou Mountain valley.

It’s a rustic, honest tea that Mrs Pei only makes to order on special request each year.

Zehijiang is an eastern coastal province with a humid, subtropical climate. It’s one of the most famous tea producing regions in country dating back 1500 years ago.

The wild tea bushes have been grown from seed and are basically left to fend for themselves.

They aren’t groomed and they sit within a bamboo forest canopy which is what really differentiates the terroir.

This environment is not typical of most tea gardens and it places significant stress on the plants resulting in interesting and unusual flavour.

This is a precious tea because as the current generation ages it’s unlikely the traditional methods will continue.

All around Mrs Pei’s garden, processing and plucking is becoming more expensive and there are less and less people in the village who can help her.

Many are too elderly to physically cope with the demanding work, while the younger generations are moving to big cities rather than staying on the land.

Mrs Pei has a close bunch of female neighbours who help her pluck the leaves for this tea when she receives our order. The tea tress grow so wildly that it’s a challenging task – even for those with spritely energy.

It’s delightful to see a band of octogenarians laughing and chatting as their still nimble fingers forage for leaves.

When Mrs Pei packs our tea she writes the harvest and processing date on a playing card and pops it in with the tea leaves.

There are so many stories in the fabric of this tea. As they grow, the leaves have a slight purple blush which is where this tea gets its name.

While this tea is not internationally well-known, it was once an incredibly famous tea during the Tang Dynasty when it was the Emperor’s favourite tea.

The tea was given ‘Tribute’ status and it was designated for the Emperor with 30,000 people employed in the area to make the tea during early spring.

To this day, it remains a firm favourite among tea connoisseurs. We’re pleased to be able to give you access to it.

 

76-year-old Mrs Pei

Mrs Pei's friends who help during harvests

The unusual bamboo forest canopy over Mrs Pei's plants

Mrs Pei firing

Prepaing for charcol firing

 

 

 

Craftsmanship

 

Plucking-01   Plucking: Depending on the weather and harvest conditions, Mrs Pei picks this tea in early April. Without fail, she always harvests in the morning and processes that same afternoon. The pluck standard is one bud, one leaf a very short spring.
Sorting-01   Sorting: The leaves are inspected and sorted to make sure the quality is suitable.
Withering-01  

Withering: After a hard morning’s work Mrs Pei lets the leaves wither for a few hours. As the leaves breathe they lose some of their moisture content in preparation for processing.

Frying: Mrs Pei takes handfuls of leaves and heats them in a wok. She wears a glove on one hand but keeps the other uncovered so she can more accurately feel the temperate of the wok and maintain the even, gentle heat required. She gently fluffs and tosses the leaves in small batches which helps retain the leaf shape. Then Mrs Pei leaves the tea to cool down to room temperature.
Shaping-01  

Roasting: Mrs Pei roasts the leaves using a special bamboo drum.  She builds a low ember charcoal fire in the base of the drum which she covers with rice and ash to make sure no flame is present that will burn the bamboo or scorch the tea. This also masks the smoky, charcoal smell so it isn’t absorbed by the leaves. She places an inverted conical bamboo lid over the drum and then places the leaves on top of the lid to dry them in small batches at a time. This process takes about three hours for a kilo of tea.

 



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