Travelling The World To Find The Perfect Cup Of Tea | The Tea Explorer
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- Опубліковано 12 гру 2024
- Canadian explorer Jeff is a true tea aficionado, so he wonders, what exactly does it take to make the perfect cup of tea? Follow him on a grand adventure through history as he travels from the tea forests of south-west China over the Himalayas and down through the magnificent Kali Gandaki Gorge into Kathmandu, where the old tea traders once carried their leaves to market on the backs of mules.
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I have enjoyed this video, very much. I am into tea, since over a decade, I live in Italy, coffee it's very popular here, but I don't drink it anymore. I cannot find good Pu her tea, so I am importing it directly from China, and hopefully, I will enjoy a good cup of tea. I have been drinking green tea from China, Kukicha from Japan, Roibos, and I did find pu her in a tin box, loose leaves, it's ok, but I am waiting for the pu her "cakes" to arrive, so then I will get a taste, there are so many types. Jeff it seems to be a great guy.
Thank you for watching! Glad you enjoyed :)
I thoroughly enjoyed reading your comment,I run a small artisanal hand-made tea factory in Sri Lanka, where we produce a variety of high-quality hand-made teas, including green tea, black tea, and oolong tea. I'd love to send you a sample of our teas to try. Your feedback would be incredibly valuable to us, and if you enjoy our products, we would be thrilled to explore the possibility of supplying you with our tea regularly.
If you're interested, please let me know how I can send the samples to you.
Gong Fu enthusiast here. I discovered the world of traditional Chinese tea during lockdown and have accured (by now I'm sure) over a thousand Dollars worth of Gong Fu teaware and currently stock over 80 teas between my office and home. I only consume caffeine through tea. I have given up soda and coffee in June 2011.
I hope to become like u
Coffee absolutely has a story. I don't like it as much as tea, but it's valid, and does have history and tradition, even if not quite so deep and rich, it's there and it's growing and it's valid
I have recently become addicted to black teas as a way of calming down for lunch after mornings working out in the country. I'm looking forward to exploring new quality teas
I thoroughly enjoyed reading your comment and I run a small artisanal tea factory in Sri Lanka, where we produce a variety of high-quality teas, including green tea and oolong tea. I'd love to send you a sample of our teas to try. Your feedback would be incredibly valuable to us, and if you enjoy our products, we would be thrilled to explore the possibility of supplying you with our tea regularly.
If you're interested, please let me know how I can send the samples to you.
A great presentation and superb documentary, not only telling the story of tea, but showing the culture from where it came from. I lived in Asia for very nearly 30 years, but it was the 4 years in Taiwan that really taught me about tea. This documentary brought back fond memories of traveling the tea routes of Taiwan and the majestic beautiful mountains of Taiwan, shrouded in clouds, where much of the tea is grown, such as Ali Shan, an experience all of its own. The unique smells and sensations from many tea plantations and sellers can not be fully described and one only learns and matures one’s depth of experience and palate over time. Where traditional Gong Fu Tea Houses still welcome you in and instantly slow time down amidst a different, but wonderful and relaxing immersive environment from that of the hustle and bustle of the outside world. The cinematic magic of this presentation’s journey of tea definitely captures the “feeling” of these places and one can almost smell and taste the tea while little gestures, lost to most, such as casually tapping one’s fingers on the table in Taiwan to say a polite, but quiet thank you, or gently touching the bottom of a cup with the fingers of the opposite hand when giving respect and thanks for the drink, gives a further depth to one in the know, and will flood the senses and innermost soul with fond memories and will draw one in and feel a part of that experience. In China, tea areas are a mixture of peace and tranquillity amidst the quiet mountains and spectacular vistas and the constant busy and noisy hustle and bustle of daily life. Sri Lanka and India, yet again different, but I found have a similar heart and where drinking tea is more than just it’s culture and always takes time and embraces peacefulness while we can take time out from a mostly chaotic world. I enjoyed taking this relaxing journey with a very knowledgeable host on his unique journey of something more than just tea. Edit. What an incredible journey! There’s no words. Bringing to life for us to see his arduous journey following ancient steps and bear witness to a once thriving mountain trade route now dying gently as time passes on and that old generation who use them also slipping by.
This is one of the deepest journeys and tales I have experienced in a long time. For it to finish on such an epic note was truly touching. Thank you for sharing the experience and the tales of those who have made these vast journeys involving something many people of today take for granted.
I love tea culture, When you live in a culture where dedication isn’t instilled or encouraged but shunned or ridiculed among other things by a younger generation it’s a welcomed relief to see it anywhere else like a lost treasure a reminder that there is hope… ironically through the window of my phone
It’s always great to see the passion and dedication these individuals have for tea. I always learn something watching these documentaries. Tea truly is unmatched!
This was an amazing documentary. I enjoyed every minute. It's great to get all this old knowledge of my beloved beverage. Thanks a lot for this.
Amazing documentary and lovely journey! Thank you so much!
incredible documentary! THank you so much what an inspiring research
Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for watching 🌍✨
Thank you for making this, and thank you for introducing tea enjoyed without the addition of any sweetening and fattening nonsense!
I love Chinese Gong Fu tea and also collect tea sets. My favourite is Oolong tea.
Enjoying my delicious Kenyan cup of tea while watching! thanks for sharing this beautiful journey...peace 🙏
Shangri-La is a fictional location, unless you mean the city in Yunnan renamed Shangri-La in 2001 (which appears to be the case here) in an attempt to make it more appealing to tourists. This is a delightful watch but there's several statements I would call misunderstandings if not errors of fact
What a stunning journey, documentary, exploration, reliving of a vital part of not only the history of tea but of this entire region.
I do wonder if Mr Fuchs has put the life stories into a book, to memorialize the people and practices of the Tea Horse Road?
There is a book by Jeff - it's called 'The Ancient Tea Horse Road' - it's very good
Thank you is that why I love tea so much I find it relaxing always takes the edge of whatever happens it's lovely
Thank you for this video
Charles
this is amazing!🩷
Wonderful documentary.
The Rooibos tea from South Africa tastes good treats me good ❤
This is the camelia sinensis, the true tea plant.
Oh tea, how I love it. We have a lot of variety now.❤
Amazing,, amazing video...
WOW I have got to get me some tea I'm visiting Asia in March. I hope I can afford it.
I thoroughly enjoyed reading your comment and I run a small artisanal tea factory in Sri Lanka, where we produce a variety of high-quality teas, including green tea and oolong tea. I'd love to send you a sample of our teas to try. Your feedback would be incredibly valuable to us, and if you enjoy our products, we would be thrilled to explore the possibility of supplying you with our tea regularly.
If you're interested, please let me know how I can send the samples to you.
go Jeff 📯✝️👏🧸🥰😇👍Is there a website where we can buy these teas that Jeff drinks very cool documentary 😊
Amazing
Thank you ❤
Holy cow the number of ads. I can't hardly get through a fair pot of tea while watching this without having to rip away and hit skip ad 😂
Very nice documentary. Interesting, emotional, personal, the music is great but sometimes a bit overdramatic. First and last 30min are the best, want to see more of that!
content in this video is way more than good, Excellent talent but unfortunaely he has only 14k views,
13:04
Nice 👍
good
Thanks for the video, now i know tea growers are commuting in mopeds and tea sellers selling in Lamborghini.😊
BROTHER, i am also tea enterprenuer/ explorer and way much more curious about tea,. i see myslef in you. i want to ask something how you managed to afford this trip, as it woulbe be much more expensive and in tea we dont earn much
Background music makes listening very hard - 02:24 Min. out a here - ciao!
❤
TEA ! "High Art". Awesome Video, a bit long-winded but essential to understanding the origins and cultural traditions, and having a deep appreciation for Tea.
lol at walking into Maliandao in Beijing and asking for gushu. They just have just wanted B-roll. That tea is picked thousands of miles away in Yunnan. If you’re really buying old tree material you don’t buy it in Beijing.
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I am drinking Lady Grey Tea- Twinnings Brand.
Delicious and watch this lovely documentary.
I love tea but this guy is so jaded towards coffee in pursuit of describing how wonderful tea is🤣
“It’s a bean.” 💀💀🤣
hot air and meileaf marketing.. no wonder you are not mentioned much in the community...actualky any tourist can be a guru and speak with a camera with coolness and know all. i mean it all boils down to what are you selling
I drink tea all the time, it's very nice, but it's not that important :D This guy is going around like it's something ground breaking.. I bet nobody invented tea, tea probably appeared with the discovery of fire
And don't compare tea to coffee, coffee has it's types & history, and in our day I bet we have many more coffee drinkers who can't imagine life without it
I still will try to find puer tea to try it out
tea has its types and history too and its way deeper than coffee, the number one drink it the world is tea, all of asia drinks mostly tea, its an amazing leaf and much better for you than coffee, maybe its not important for you but not for the rest of the world like the people in nepal tea is a life sustaining thing and you cant replace that with coffee because they are different completely
Are you kidding? Tea is incredibly important culturally, historically, economically-the list goes on. Do you harbor a bit of jealously or some other negative emotion?
I suggest you let it go. You'll be much happier when you can appreciate someone else's passion, instead of trying to deflate it.
@sapientia_et_virtus I drink tea every day at least once, I like it very much, so stfu Dr. Phil
it's just tea, it's nice, but rice is very nice too, has many types and flavors, throughout the countries, many things are nice, some are even much nicer than tea.
I'm just saying boiled leaves were probably one of the first things invented after fire, no need to go crazy about it, I felt snobbism to which I'm allergic.
@@mustang19ms Dr. Phil-I have to give it to you. That was funny. I'm using that.
I sensed pretentiousness, too, which I didn't like, but I can still appreciate the rich history.
@@sapientia_et_virtus haha, glad you liked it, I can't claim credit for the joke though, it's copied. Pass it on
Great video but why would somebody as crunchy as this refer to really good. Tea is being tense of thousands of dollars? It's ridiculous. Absolutely ridiculous. I'm tired of corporations and the idea of insulting somebody with the idea that it takes thousands of dollars to drink tea as if I'm impressed.
As a tea AND coffee drinker this is a really negative docu😂😂😂 this guy REALLY hate coffee😂😂😂 no history?! Coffee got a mile long history, both are Great! Both bean and leaf
Nice but india gujrati modi chai explolar
"Tea-porn"? Why would you pair these words if you admire tea so much? Unless of course....
It is hilarious. Best tea in the world is from Sri Lanka, Kenya and India. He is going in snow areas of Tibet for searching.
Different types of tea, the Puer tea is the tea enjoy with just hot water. It's known amoung Chinese as a degreaser, after a heavy meal
Do you know how many varieties there are of processing and growing camellia sinensis? Green teas are best from Japan, white and red tea from China, but this is all preference of what you're looking for in taste. Lapsong and Dan Cong being smoky. Aged tea being "zingy" and earthy. Tie Guan Yin being aromatic and flowery/fruity.
Yea, ha ha ha. Not in india, sri langka. The best is china with its varieties then green from Japan and some Oolong from Taiwan.
wow, this is great!
Lol I can't tell if he's playing into the stereotype of white person who over mystifies everything from the East
6 Min in and I already dislike his tone when he talks about tea "in the west". Seems like he thinks he's something better.
I wonder if he gets fed up of talking about tea? He must feel like a priest who is talking about God all of the time
How many hour do you need to talk about Lipton?
😂😂😂
I wish Starbucks can make a video while I gulp down latte. I fast forward and did not learn anything new...boring but thank you for your time. Indeed!!!
😂😂😂
Upity tea snobbery
here in pyongyang we have the bestest coffee, tea and vodka.
Its a decent documentary, i just wish Jeff is not such a snob about tea, like those wine experts. He didn't not translate the origin of the tea at the beginning, he man explained, its old Puer tea leaves but from early spring harvest.
I like coffee and tea, but cannot imagine waking up to tea, i need coffee! ☕🥐
I was gifted a dinner plate size Puer tea hes obsessed with , 6 years ago, its still in my drawer, untouched. Its too much trouble for a small cup of tea. Because i was working with Chinese students for the last 10 years, i was gifted with all types of tea whenever the parents visited. I regifted the tea during my world travel, for those who helped me along my journey, they loved the tea gifts! I prefer Japanese green tea
I have also sit down with those formal tea ceremony setting. The Fujian Chinese served tea in tiny cups, almost burnt my lips during a visit to a cottage factory. I still remember the okd man owner serving tea, explaining his factory capacity in a proper pajama😅
Lastly, the group of us foreign teachers wanted to visit Tibet from Guangzhou, but tge trip never happened because Americans are not allowed in, no visa granted. But my Chinese colleague was able to get to Tibet, nepal so he brought me a long golden yellow Tibet scarf 😊