“`html

Where do the various aromas in tea come from?

```html-1

Bitter and Astringent Taste

Tea inherently contains a bitter taste, and if there is a bitter and astringent flavor, it mainly depends on whether it dissipates quickly after being tasted. If it does not disperse, then this tea is likely not a successful one. The main reasons for a bitter and astringent taste are tender fresh leaves, insufficient sun-withering, improper processing, or summer and summer heat teas.

```html-2

Grassy Taste

The grassy taste is an original flavor found in natural plants. The presence of a grassy taste in tea is mainly due to insufficient sun-withering, processing, or pan-firing. There are other reasons as well:

1. Excessive use of nitrogen fertilizer during cultivation management.

2. Improper sun-withering or stirring during the tea-making process.

3. Indoor withering at too low a temperature, high humidity, causing poor loss in the leaves.

4. Picking overly tender tea leaves or those with heavy , or improper stirring during processing leading to water accumulation within the leaves.

```html-3

Scorched Taste

The scorched taste in tea is likely due to improper pan-firing or baking. During the pan-firing process, if the temperature is too high or the is too long, the finished product will have a scorched taste. Similarly, during baking, if the temperature is too high or increased too quickly without frequent stirring, a scorched taste often results.

Stuffy Taste

The stuffy taste in tea can be explained in three ways: stuffy yellow taste, water-stuffy taste, and red-stuffy taste. Stuffy yellow taste refers to fresh leaves that have accumulated heat, steamed during baking, or undergone vacuum formation due to prolonged rolling or wrapping. Water-stuffy taste refers to dew-soaked, rain-soaked, or piled-up leaves that were not spread out in time or cooled properly before pan-firing, or where was insufficient during processing. Red-stuffy taste refers to the flavor produced when the leaves are left in the wrapping bag for too long during rolling.

```html-4

Moldy Taste

If tea is stored improperly for a long time, absorbing from the air and fostering fungal growth, it becomes damp and develops a moldy taste, losing its unique aroma characteristics.

Sour Taste

For some fermented teas, after pan-firing, rolling, and initial drying, they need to be left to cool, allowing for further fermentation, before being rolled into balls and dried again . If, during the further fermentation stage, the initial-dried leaves contain too much moisture, microbial activity leads to a sour taste. Of course, a sour taste caused by the fresh flavor of the tea broth, similar to the taste of sour fruits, is not included in this category.

“`

Chinese Tea

Taste Dark Tea: Embrace the Millennia-Old Charm and Secrets of Health

2024-10-25 5:47:10

Chinese Tea

Mapo Tea

2024-10-25 14:40:05

0 条回复 AAuthor MAdministrator
    暂无讨论,说说你的看法吧
搜索