Pu-erh Tea - Recipes

Recipes

Tea factories, particularly formerly government-owned factories, produce many cakes using recipes for tea blends, indicated by a four-digit recipe number. The first two digits of recipe numbers represent the year the recipe was first produced, the third digit represents the grade of leaves used in the recipe, and the last digit represents the factory. The number 7542, for example, would denote a recipe from 1975 using fourth-grade tea leaf made by Menghai Tea Factory (represented by 2). There are also those who believe that the third number indicates a recipe for a particular production year.

  • Factory numbers (fourth digit in recipe):
    1. Kunming Tea Factory
    2. Menghai Tea Factory
    3. Xiaguan Tea Factory
    4. Lan Cang Tea Factory or Feng Qing Tea Factory
    5. Pu'er Tea Factory (now Pu'er Tea group Co.Ltd )
    6. Six Famous Tea Mountain Factory
    7. unknown / not specified
    8. Haiwan Tea Factory and Long Sheng Tea Factory

Tea of all shapes can be made by numbered recipe. Not all recipes are numbered, and not all cakes are made by recipe. The term "recipe," it should be added, does not always indicate consistency, as the quality of some recipes change from year-to-year, as do the contents of the cake. Perhaps only the factories producing the recipes really know what makes them consistent enough to label by these numbers.

Occasionally, a three digit code is attached to the recipe number by hyphenation. The first digit of this code represents the year the cake was produced, and the other two numbers indicate the production number within that year. For instance, the seven digit sequence 8653-602, would indicate the second production in 2006 of factory recipe 8653. Some productions of cakes are valued over others because production numbers can indicate if a tea was produced earlier or later in a season/year. This information allows one to be able to single out tea cakes produced using a better batch of máochá.

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Famous quotes containing the word recipes:

    Science means simply the aggregate of all the recipes that are always successful. All the rest is literature.
    Paul Valéry (1871–1945)