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GONG FU

GONG FU

Aaron Armstrong

A portable tea space.

10 - The Angel's Share
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  • 10 - The Angel's Share

    This is a borrowed concept from the world of aging spirits, but very applicable to tea. In making tea gong-fu style the Angel’s share is the tea that is consistently poured over the yixing pot. Today I was also sharing tea with someone who couldn’t be with me in the tea space, so their share was set aside each round and then released to the pot.Today, the last episode of this season, included a beautiful, but actually unknown to me, puer cake from 2008. It is the favorite cake of my friend Anan whose sister gave it to me when she was visiting from China. This is steeped in the pixiu hongni pot and served in Japanese blue&white ware resting on seasonal tin chataku.
    Tue, 26 May 2020 - 29min
  • 9 - The Ska Polka of Tea

    This little tuocha was brought to you by the year 1990. No brand affiliation. I can taste the dirty, green plaid and the wallet chains. Tastes like youth, but 30(!) years later. It tastes great, and even better shared. The fragrance of the cup after drinking is full of trombones and saxophones. I could have gone on recording for hours, but I shared what I could. Thanks for joining me for this one.Steeped in the fully handmade pixiu yixing and served in blue and white Japanese cup from the 1940s.
    Mon, 18 May 2020 - 42min
  • 8 - Drunk, Deeply

    Today we’re sharing a kyusu of sencha made by the Ihara family and discovered at the little JA agricultural co-operative storefront in the Shimizu Ward of Shizuoka City, Japan. I recently lost a pot that I bought at this shop (and loved dearly) to a mishap, so this is a session is a celebration of discovery and the joys it reliably delivers.
    Mon, 11 May 2020 - 18min
  • 7 - The Last Taste of Last Spring

    As tea is starting to be harvested and processed in Japan for 2020, we get to enjoy the last bit of fine tea in my collection from last year. Served in the spring cups and spring saucers that have just been put into service this week, and steeped in (possibly) my favorite pot: a houhin likely from Banko in the 1920s. A beautiful little pot with three little crabs crawling across its surface. This was a short, but very sweet, tea session.
    Mon, 04 May 2020 - 12min
  • 6 - It's Alive

    This is the time of year, at least here in Pacific Northwest America, that the climate begins to warm and well-kept puer tea begins to wake up. The winter temperatures are low, as is the relative humidity. As Spring presses forward the ambient temperature and humidity rise and the tea, though sequestered in it’s semi-controlled environment, reacts. The flavors and aromas of every sheng cake, old and new, are aroused and uninhibited.



    We are enjoying a Midi sheng cake from 2007. This is served from my pixiu yixing pot through a woven silver strainer in the large kutani tea cup (still celebrating Spring~). I really need to switch to my spring saucers, but I am still using the autumn style. This episode went a little long, and it could have gone much longer. It is difficult to do an aged sheng justice in less than 90 minutes… Thanks for joining me.
    Mon, 27 Apr 2020 - 28min
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