Session 16
Gongfu vs Western
Session 16 · Block D — Comparative & Brewing

Gongfu vs
Western

Two philosophies of brewing the same leaf. One is built for a good cup with little fuss; the other is built to watch a tea reveal itself across many infusions. Neither is "correct."

Duration
40 min
You’ll need
One good oolong or pu-erh
Objective
Understand both methods and when to use each
Reading · 1 of 2

Two philosophies

Western brewing

  • Less leaf (~1.5–2 g / 100 ml)
  • One long steep
  • A larger pot or mug
  • Convenient, forgiving, everyday

Gongfu brewing

  • Lots of leaf (~5–8 g / 100 ml)
  • Many very short steeps
  • A small pot (gaiwan / yixing)
  • Exploratory — watch the tea evolve
Reading · 2 of 2

Why gongfu reveals more

Gongfu (“with skill”) packs a small vessel with leaf and draws a rapid series of short infusions — the first in seconds. Each steep differs from the last: a rolled oolong slowly unfurls, a pu-erh cake wakes and opens. You don’t get one snapshot of the tea; you get its whole arc.

Choose by goal, not dogma

Western brewing is right for a mug of black tea at your desk. Gongfu is right when you want to study a fine oolong or pu-erh and follow its evolution. The teas that most reward gongfu are exactly the multi-infusion, whole-leaf types — rolled oolongs and pu-erh. Match the method to the tea and the moment.

Check yourself

Questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

From memory:

  1. Contrast Western and gongfu on leaf ratio, steeps, and vessel.
  2. What is the main advantage of gongfu brewing?
  3. Which teas most reward gongfu, and why?
  4. When is Western brewing the better choice?
  5. Why is neither method the "right" one?
Session 17 · Block E — Origin & Terroir

China &
Japan

The two foundational tea cultures, and the cleanest terroir contrast in the tea world. One makes everything; the other perfected one thing. Their green teas alone tell the story.

Duration
40 min
You’ll need
A Chinese and a Japanese green
Objective
Contrast the two foundational cultures
Reading · 1 of 2

Two cultures

China

  • The birthplace — makes all six types
  • Pan-fired greens; home of oolong & pu-erh
  • Enormous regional diversity
  • Gongfu brewing culture

Japan

  • Almost entirely green tea
  • Steamed, not pan-fired
  • Sencha, gyokuro, matcha, hojicha
  • Shading to boost umami (L-theanine)
Reading · 2 of 2

The signatures, side by side

Click through how each culture shapes its tea:

The fastest terroir lesson in tea

Brew a Chinese pan-fired green (say Longjing) next to a Japanese steamed green (say sencha). Same plant, same near-zero oxidation — yet one is nutty and rounded, the other grassy, marine, and savory. That gap is processing tradition, not oxidation, and it’s the clearest demonstration of how origin shapes tea.

Check yourself

Questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

From memory:

  1. Why is China unique among tea-producing nations?
  2. How is Japanese green tea fixed, and what does that produce?
  3. What is shading, and which teas use it?
  4. State the clean contrast between Chinese and Japanese green.
  5. What is matcha, physically?
Session 18 · Block E — Origin & Terroir

India, Taiwan,
Sri Lanka & beyond

Beyond China and Japan, distinct regional signatures define the tea world — India’s malt and muscatel, Taiwan’s oolong craft, Ceylon’s brisk brightness, and a growing global map.

Duration
40 min
You’ll need
A Darjeeling or Taiwanese oolong
Objective
Recognize the major regional signatures
Reading

The wider tea map

Click through the major regions beyond China and Japan:

Terroir is real, but processing leads

Region matters — Darjeeling’s muscatel and Taiwan’s creamy high-mountain oolongs are genuinely tied to place. But notice these regional signatures still sit on the framework you already own: Assam and Darjeeling are black (high oxidation); Taiwanese gaoshan is light oolong. Origin colors the tea; oxidation and processing still set its type. Your dial works everywhere.

Check yourself

Questions

Drill

Flashcards

Prompt
tap to flip
The 10-minute review

Lock it in

From memory:

  1. Name the three major Indian tea regions and a trait of each.
  2. What is Taiwan most celebrated for?
  3. What does "Ceylon" signal on a label?
  4. What does Kenya mostly produce, and in what form?
  5. What makes Oriental Beauty distinctive?