
•#3.5a: Film Series: Program Questions in Scenes
Tea: The Story of a Leaf, Episodes 1-6
•# 3.5b: (un)Natural Histories
Video by Shunan Teng
•# 3.5c: Regenerative Agriculture
•# 3.5d: Case Study Tasting Research: Tea
Oolong Tea Appreciation with Instructor Dewey Meyer
Background reading: McGee, On Food and Cooking Pages 434 – 441.
Have prepared:
- Water at 190°F temperature in kettle that can be kept at constant temperature or a thermos
- Three 1 c canning jars from kit
- Tea strainer from kit
- 1 c measuring cup for pouring
- 3 small plates for wet tea leaves
- 4 g of each tea (half the amount in each sample; can be weighed out on scale from kit)
- Timer or watch
- Tea flavor wheel from folder in kit or in electronic form below
- Tasting grid below
Tea: Camellia sinensis
Tea Type | Aroma | Color | Flavor | Body/Briskness |
Green ‘TeiGuanYin’ | Floral and Grassy Gardinia, Petrichor, Fresh | Light, Translucent Green | Floral, Sweetness, Orchids, Wet Rocks, Hay, | Smooth and a Bit Astringent |
‘Qilan Wuyi’ | Roasted, Tobacco, Coffee, Decaying Wood, | Light Brown | Mineral, Charcoal, Chicory, Sandlewood? | Lightly Astringent, Smooth, Lingers on the tongue. |
Oolong- ‘Bao Jao’ or ‘Oriental Beauty’ –leafhopper bitten | Dried Apricot, Cherries, Peaches, Hay, Woody, Baby Powder | Very light brown, but with red Undertones | Parsley, Nasturtium, Dandelion, Salt, Woody, Light Sweetness | Most Astringent, Heavy on the Tongue, Almost Fatty |


•# 3.5e: Stuckey’s Taste Book Experiments
Experiencing Mutual Suppression
This experiment was adapted from the taste experiment from barbstuckey.com.
You will need:
- 4 Lipton, PG Tips, or other black tea bags[1]
- A 2-cup liquid measure
- 3 glasses
- 4 tablespoons sugar
- 1/8 teaspoon salt
Directions:
- Pour 13 oz of boiling water over the 4 teabags and let the tea brew for 10 minutes. You want to over-brew the tea so that the bitterness is pronounced.
- While the tea is brewing, mark the glasses with tape on the bottom. Mark them:
- Tea
- Tea + S
- Tea + S + S
- Put 2 tablespoons of sugar in the glass marked Tea + S
- Put 2 tablespoons of sugar + 1/8 teaspoon salt in the glass marked Tea + S + S
- Remove the teabags after the 10 minutes are up
- You should be left with 12 oz of water. Equally divide the tea into all 3 glasses so that each glass gets 4 oz of water
- Put a spoon in each glass and stir until all the sugar and salt is dissolved.
- Pour another 4 oz of cold water into each glass.
- Taste all 3 teas and note how bitter and sweet each one tastes.
Discuss
- You’ll notice that the Tea (Tea) tastes bitter
- You’ll notice that the sweetened tea (Tea + S) tastes less bitter.
- When you taste the Tea with sugar and salt (T + S + S) you should notice that it is slightly less bitter than (Tea + S) but it’s also slightly more sweet.
- You’ve just experienced the super-heroism of salt. It thwarts the bad tastes (bitter) and enhances the good tastes (sweet).
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