Session 13
Pu-erh & dark tea
Session 13 · Block C — Types

Pu-erh &
dark tea

The one tea that steps off the simple oxidation dial. Pu-erh is defined by genuine microbial fermentation and aging — the only tea widely bought, stored, and valued like wine.

Duration
45 min
You’ll need
A shou (ripe) pu-erh to start
Objective
Understand post-fermentation and aging
Reading

What makes pu-erh different

Click through the category:

The special case

Why it’s off the dial

Oxidation vs fermentation, finally clear

Every other type is placed by oxidation — an enzyme-and-air reaction finished in hours. Pu-erh adds microbial fermentation: living microbes transform the tea over months, years, or decades. That’s why it keeps changing in storage and why aged sheng can be extraordinary. Start with an approachable shou (ripe) — smooth and earthy — before tackling a challenging young sheng (raw). And rinse the leaf first: a quick discarded steep wakes the compressed cake.

Check yourself

Questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

From memory:

  1. What makes pu-erh unique among teas?
  2. Contrast sheng (raw) and shou (ripe) pu-erh.
  3. Why was shou pu-erh invented in the 1970s?
  4. Why is pu-erh treated as an aging asset?
  5. What is the "rinse," and why do it?
Session 14 · Block D — Comparative & Brewing

Comparative
technique

The oxidation spine becomes real when you taste along it. A flight arranged up the dial turns the abstract map into something your palate can feel directly.

Duration
45 min
You’ll need
3–4 teas across the oxidation range
Objective
Build and run a flight along the dial
Reading

Building a flight that teaches

The rule is the same as the wine, cheese, and whiskey courses: hold what you can constant, and change one variable deliberately.

  1. Arrange along the dial

    A green, a light oolong, a dark oolong, a black — tasted in that order — walks you straight up the oxidation axis. The progression is the lesson.

  2. Control the brewing

    Brew each correctly for its type (cooler for green, hotter for black), but keep leaf ratio and your method consistent. With tea, sloppy brewing can masquerade as a style difference.

  3. Smell the wet leaves

    For each, lift and smell the wet leaf — the "agony of the leaves" often shows the oxidation level more clearly than the liquor.

  4. Reset between

    Plain water and a brief pause. Note where each lands on the instrument before moving on.

  5. Watch the shift

    Track how sweetness, body, and flavor family move as oxidation climbs — vegetal to malty, thin to full.

Do this now · ~12 min

Walk up the dial

Line up your teas from least to most oxidized and taste in order. The dial you learned in Session 1 should now be something you can taste, not just recite — that shift from concept to palate is the whole point of comparative work.

Check yourself

Questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

From memory:

  1. How should a flight be arranged to teach the oxidation spine?
  2. Why must brewing be controlled in a tea flight especially?
  3. What can the wet leaf reveal in a comparison?
  4. How do you reset between teas?
  5. What should you track as oxidation climbs across the flight?
Session 15 · Block D — Comparative & Brewing

Brewing
parameters

In tea, you perform the final production step. Four levers — temperature, ratio, time, and water — decide whether great leaf becomes a great cup or a bitter one. This is the session that fixes most "bad tea."

Duration
45 min
You’ll need
One tea + a way to vary temperature
Objective
Master the four levers and the fix-it order
Reading · 1 of 2

The four levers

Click through the parameters that control extraction:

Reading · 2 of 2

How much leaf? — and the real lesson

Use the calculator to see leaf quantity for your pot, then read the caveat carefully:

The most important habit in this whole course

When a cup is bitter or harsh, don’t blame the tea — adjust brewing in order: temperature first (too hot is the usual culprit), then time (shorten it), then ratio. Most "bad tea" is bad brewing. This is the payoff of tea being the one subject where you finish the production yourself: the biggest quality lever is in your hands, every single cup.

Check yourself

Questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

From memory:

  1. Name the four brewing levers.
  2. What water temperature suits delicate greens vs black/pu-erh?
  3. What is the fix-it order for a bitter cup?
  4. Why does water quality matter so much?
  5. Why is brewing more consequential in tea than serving is in wine or whisky?