Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Tea that is worth its weight in gold

- By ERIK NILSSON

Longjing tea is green gold. In fact premium leaves can be worth more than the precious metal.

Half a kilogram of top-shelf shoots sold for $28,000 in March 2012, when the equivalent amount of gold was valued at $26,680, China News Service reports.

Low-grade Longjing sells for about 1,000 yuan ($150) for 500 grams, but at whatever price, Longjing, with its rich cultural heritage, has became a cultural treasure the world over.

In Hangzhou, tea culture has roots that go back 1,500 years.

Its mystical virtues have been connected with Chan Buddhist meditation for centuries.

Emperor Kangxi (1654-1722) officially declared Longjing “imperial tea”. His grandson, Emperor Qianlong (1711-99), reportedly bestowed imperial status on 18 bushes in Longjing village and brought their leaves to his ailing mother.

It is from these surviving trees that the most expensive shoots are picked in the settlement’s Imperial Tea Garden.

They stand near the well from which Longjing takes its eponym, which translates as Dragon Well. The appellatio­n hails from the ancient belief that the shaft was a portal to a dragon’s lair, since it sustained the sole water source during droughts.

This history, or at least the lore, today enchants visitors attracted by Longjing’s cultural cultivatio­n.

The forested Longjing Street leading to the garden is skirted by plantation­s and studded with teahouses like Longyue.

Longyue’s elderly owners earn 30,000 yuan a year from their tea fields and 20,000 yuan from the teahouse that also operates as a rural restaurant.

“We live well,” Qi Yuzhen, 78, said. “We have no financial worries.”

Visitors hail from around the world, said her husband, Li Rongtu, 85. “They come to experience Longjing.” Yet establishm­ents like Longyue offer insight into the lives of Longjing’s farmers rather than into the high culture its tea brews.

Its allure is more rustic than refined. No ceremonies accompany ancient instrument­al soundtrack­s by expert hosts in traditiona­l garb. Those find homes along West Lake’s downtown banks, where the cheapest cup of tea costs hundreds of yuan, compared with 15 yuan at Longyue.

Longyue hugs the road between the garden and the China National Tea Museum, the main thoroughfa­re for travellers to view the fields, witness production and go on picking tours.

At the museum you can find out about the beverage’s social and scientific dimensions, with displays of early relics and the latest research.

The museum chronicles how tea drinking emerged from China’s southweste­rn jungles as a medicinal concoction to become the drink of choice for the sophistica­ted and eventually the world’s most drunk beverage after water.

This internatio­nalisation can be seen in downtown Hangzhou, where Martin Gamache, a Canadian, recently bought four boxes of Longjing to give hosts on his upcoming trip to Japan, plus one for himself. “I think they will appreciate it,” he said.

The shop’s owner, Fan Shenghua, is a provincial-level inheritor of the art of frying Longjing leaves. The procedure halts oxidation shortly after harvest, sealing in its botanical magic.

The skill was listed as a national-level intangible cultural heritage in 2008. The 56-year-old has been in the trade since he was 14 and aspires to rise to the national level by the time he is 60, when he would qualify for a stipend.

Certificat­es and competitio­n trophies share shelves with boxes of Longjing. The packages are printed with quick-response codes that take customers to a website with an 11-digit authentica­tion code, and informatio­n about the farm.

In Hangzhou, technology meets tradition for tea.

The Fan family line has grown and produced Longjing for decades.

Tea-frying classes are compulsory for schoolchil­dren in his native Tongwu village. Fan taught an elective course.

“Only two students enrolled. One was talented, but he decided against it as a trade. The greatest challenge is finding young apprentice­s.”

He shows a photo of his hands, red and peeling from hours of kneading scalding leaves in metal basins.

“It is not fun,” he said. “It is tough work.” But it ensures quality.

“People’s palates determine whether hand-processed Longjing is worth more,” Fan said.

 ?? LI ZHONG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? Chinese and Swiss students experience the picking of Longjing tea leaves in Hangzhou.
LI ZHONG / FOR CHINA DAILY Chinese and Swiss students experience the picking of Longjing tea leaves in Hangzhou.

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