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  2. Chenpi - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chenpi

    Chenpi, chen pi, or chimpi is sun-dried mandarin orange peel used as a traditional seasoning in Chinese cooking and traditional medicine. It is aged by storing them dry. The taste is first slightly sweet, but the aftertaste is pungent and bitter. According to Chinese herbology, its attribute is warm. Chenpi has a common name, 'ju pi' or ...

  3. Tea blending and additives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tea_blending_and_additives

    A Flowering tea, green tea with jasmine flowers.. Teas blended with other additives were developed in ancient China. As far back as the Jin dynasty (266–420), ground up tea leaves were boiled with scallions, ginger, and orange peels as reported in the Guangya dictionary (c. 3rd century CE). [2]

  4. Zest (ingredient) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zest_(ingredient)

    For use as a cocktail garnish, zest often is cut in a long spiral called a twist. Cocktails featuring a twist include Dry Martini and Horse's Neck. For maximum flavor and aroma, as in mulled wine, zest is simply cut from the fruit with a knife. Medicinally, lemon peels can allegedly serve as an exfoliate and be used to treat calluses. [6]

  5. Tea processing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tea_processing

    For consumption, dried tea leaves were either decocted with water and other herbs, or ground into a powder to be taken straight, or suspended in a liquid in the manner of matcha. With the increase of tea's use in Chinese herbology, production methods changed, where the processed green tea leaves were not immediately dried after steaming.

  6. Tea leaf grading - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tea_leaf_grading

    The Dutch East India Company played a central role in bringing tea to Europe and may have marketed the tea as "orange" to suggest association with the House of Orange. [14] Colour: the copper colour of a high-quality, oxidized leaf before drying, or the final bright orange colour of the dried pekoes in the finished tea may be related to the ...

  7. Herbal tea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Herbal_tea

    Kapor tea, dried leaves of fireweed; Kelp tea, East Asian tea made from kelp, known as konbu-cha in Japan; Kuzuyu, a thick white Japanese tea made by adding kudzu flour to hot water; Labrador tea, made from the shrub by the same name, found in the northern part of North America; Lavender tea [29] Lemon balm; Lemon and ginger tea; Lemongrass tea ...

  8. Compressed tea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compressed_tea

    Tea brick, on display at Old Fort Erie Porters laden with "brick tea" in a 1908 photo by Ernest Henry "Chinese" Wilson, an explorer botanist. In ancient China, compressed teas were usually made with thoroughly dried and ground tea leaves that were pressed into various bricks or other shapes, although partially dried and whole leaves were also used.

  9. Pu'er tea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pu'er_tea

    Pu'er is the pinyin romanization of the Mandarin pronunciation of Chinese 普洱. Pu-erh is a variant of the Wade-Giles romanization (properly p‘u-êrh) of the same name.In Hong Kong, the same Chinese characters are read as Bo-lei, and this is therefore a common alternative English term for this tea.