Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors.
Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker.

Responsive image


Gunpowder tea

Gunpowder tea
Chinese Gunpowder Green Tea
TypeGreen

Other namesLo Chu Ch’a, Zhu Cha, 珠茶
OriginZhejiang Province and Taiwan Province of China, Indonesia, and others

Quick descriptionPopular worldwide. Flavor varies according to the growing location of tea used for production

Gunpowder tea (Chinese: ; pinyin: zhū chá; lit. 'pearl tea'; pronounced [ʈʂú ʈʂʰǎ]) is a form of tea in which each leaf has been individually rolled into a small pellet. Its English name comes either from some resemblance of the pellets to gunpowder, or from a phrase in Chinese that phonetically resembles the word "gunpowder". This rolling method of shaping tea is most often applied either to green tea (the most commonly encountered variety outside China) or to oolong tea.[1]

Gunpowder tea production dates back to the Tang dynasty 618–907. Leaves being processed into gunpowder tea are withered first, then steamed, rolled into pellet shape, and dried. Although the individual leaves were formerly rolled by hand, today all but the highest grades of gunpowder teas are rolled by machine. Rolling renders the leaves less susceptible to physical damage during packaging and storage, and allows them to retain more of their flavor and aroma. In addition, it allows certain types of oolong teas to be aged for decades if they are cared for by being occasionally roasted.[1]

The pellets are dried or "heat-fixed" by pan-firing, sometimes multiple times; this dry heating may contribute a slight smoky flavour. Heat-fixing is a typical part of green tea processing and stops oxidation. (Oxidation of green tea, which if allowed to continue would change it into oolong tea or black tea, has often been incorrectly called fermentation; fermentation is actually unique to pu'erh and "dark" teas). Japanese green tea processors typically stop oxidation by steaming instead of dry heating, and do not usually produce "gunpowder" style tea.

Shiny pellets indicate that the tea is relatively fresh. Pellet size is also associated with quality, larger looser pellets being considered a mark of lower quality tea. High quality gunpowder tea will have small, tightly rolled pellets.[2] The tea is graded alphanumerically, 3505AAA being considered the highest grade while 9375 is a relatively low grade.[3]

  1. ^ a b "Gunpowder Black". Archived from the original on 2016-03-02. Retrieved 2016-02-22.
  2. ^ "For All The Tea In China". Retrieved 2016-02-22.[permanent dead link]
  3. ^ "Vicony Tea". Retrieved 2019-05-08.

Previous Page Next Page






Gunpowder Catalan Gunpowder-Tee German Té Gunpowder Spanish Gunpowder (thé) French Gunpowder tea Hungarian Գանպաուդեր HY Барутен чај MK Gunpowder Dutch Gunpowder NB Gunpowder Polish

Responsive image

Responsive image