Monday, July 7, 2014

Summer time tea in NYC

For our June tea meeting we had fresh green teas from Korea.  Hand made "dami" tea from Korea.  Hand picked and hand roasted by a Buddhist monk Jidam.  He hand picks fresh green tea leaves from the wild tea trees growing in the Jiri mountains where his Buddhist temple is located.

We also tasted this year's spring tender picks by the youngest daughter of Cho Taeyeon.  We had tasted green teas by Cho Taeyon before, but it is the first time tasting green tea made by one of his children.  Her first flush green tea had the most tea oil of any tea that I had ever tasted.  As soon as the tea entered my mouth the thick tea oil coated my mouth, throat and stomach, absolutely amazing.

Dr. Lee is an imminent linguist.  He got his doctorate in Turkey.  Korean, Turkish, Finnish, Japanese, and Mongolian all belong in the same language group.  If you are curious about Finnish, all I can tell you is that the northern Finnish people have the most Korean DNA among all ethnic groups.  I know it sounds strange.  But it is all connected with how Koreans have DNA that most closely resembles 6000 years old frozen shaman from Siberia.  Anyway Dr. Lee surprised us with teas from Turkey served in crystal cups.  It was delicious.  He promises more tea from around the world next time.  Speaking of next time.  Our July tea meeting will take place on Friday, July 25th at 7 pm at Korea Language Institute.  See you there.  

Jaenam

Monday, December 23, 2013

Happy Winter Solstice!

Happy Winter Solstice!





Thanks for our delicious tea gatherings in 2013.  Wishing all your wishes come true in 2014.


Saturday, November 23, 2013

Tea time in Teaneck

We had a wonderful tea gathering at Ms. Sei's house for our November meeting.  She runs gallery Om and holds traditional Korean tea workshops at various locations.  Her house is a gallery in itself, filled with lots of wonderful artworks.  We sincerely thank her for inviting us.

For our December Tea Meeting, we will meet at Lee Young Hee museum on December 12th, Thursday at 6:30 pm.  We will drink lots of festive teas for the winter solstice.  In Korea we eat red bean porridge on the winter solstice day, so expect a bowl of red bean porridge with your tea!

In January we will hold our customary dinner get together on January 10th, Friday around 6:30 pm at Peace Food Cafe, www.PeaceFoodCafe.com, on East 11th Street between Broadway and University Place in Greenwich Village.  We need to RSVP, so let us know soon if you are coming.

Jaenam










All gone.

Tuesday, August 27, 2013

August Tea Meeting

We had a lot of fun at our August tea meeting at Lee Young Hee museum. 


  It is always comforting and enjoyable to meet at Lee Young Hee museum, especially since we are surrounded by tradition and color of beautiful costumes of Madam Lee Young Hee.

 In Korea there is a tradition of using Ohmija berries to purify and to circulate the blood.  It helps to calm the mind, strengthen the brain function, relieve stress and ease asthmatic condition.  It could be made into tea using cold water or hot water.  With hot water, simmer the berries for about 2 minutes.  With cold water simmer the berries overnight.  You can drink it all day long and it will refresh you.

Tea friends are enjoying tea and chatting.


 We also tasted 50 years fermented Pureh tea.  It is full of good bacteria that aids digestion.  I bet everyone had wonderful bowl movements and found their bellies gone. 

I had served as a Korean School of NJ principal and now am a board member.  We will be hosting a 30th anniversary and fundraising gala on Thursday October 17th at Fort Lee Double Tree Hotel at 6:30pm.  If you wish to join me, please let me know.

Jaenam

Sunday, July 21, 2013

July Tea Meeting; Hwarang style


During Shilla dynasty, the Hwarang youths traveled the nation drinking tea, meditating, practicing martial arts, singing songs and reciting poems.  And for the Hwarang youths, to become government officials they had to pass exams in tea ceremony and singing.  During the Shilla dynasty, tea leaves were made into powders by mills like above and was drunk as powder tea, or the powders were cooked into round cakes to be carried around and drunk in travels.  


We drank our tea Hwarang style for our July tea meet, we drank lots of tea and heard poems recited, stories told and listened to beautiful singing.  

A friend of Sonia emailed a poem from Maui after hearing about Hwarang youths.

This tea taste of childish delights !
These children are of peace.
Within the hearts of all children we can learn to love purely
Willing to die, so another can fight.
Simple in  dignity,  long lasting in mirth.
Delivered words of  Flower Boys  by  birth.

And we listened to beautiful voice of Jade.



Drinking from tea leaves instead of from tea powder did not get fully developed until Koryo dynasty because it required development of a full set of tea wares made from pottery.  According to Chinese visitors during Koryo dynasty commenting on Korean green tea, it was said the ritual was according to high decorum for everyone had to wait before drinking tea until everyone was served.  And it was said the taste was bitter and astringent.  That sounds about right.




The essence of great teachings

Form and substance are in Buddhism.
Creative change is in Christianity.
Decorum is in Confucianism.
Receiving Heaven and Earth's emptiness and nothingness, Christianity conceived and gave form to a Dao embryo.
Receiving Heaven and Earth's stillness and silence, Buddhism gestated and gave birth to Dao.
Receiving Heaven and Earth's governance and edification, Confucianism bathed and dressed Dao.
Next comes the crowning and flourishing.
The Lord of Tushita Heaven unites and governs; emptiness and nothingness, stillness and silence, governance and edification.

Monday, June 17, 2013

June Tea Meet at Steve Globus' place


For June Tea Meet, we met at Steve Globus' place.  He built a Japanese tea house in his penthouse and we were transported to a different time and place.  It was serene, beautiful and relaxing.  The tea was delicious.  Thanks Steve.
Of course she had to make the rabbit sign, lol.  Now see all the pictures with her rabbit sign!

Wooo, Joe with his halo.

All of us at the rooftop of Steve's penthouse.

Souheki Mori  and Steve Globus greeting us; Souheki performed Japanese tea ceremony.

Our dear beloved friend Wolhee Choe.  She was going to join us for this tea meeting but unexpectedly she passed away.  I heard she went peacefully in her sleep.  She was one of my favorite person in the world.  We will miss her.

Souheki with her perfect hand movement.

Our first tea was served to Wolhee.  In Korea, tea ceremony is called "Cha-Rye," literally meaning tea ritual.  However, no one in Korea calls tea drinking "Cha-Rye."  It is a word only reserved for tea offering for ancestors and departed ones.  So our June tea meeting was a "Cha-Rye," in honor of Wolhee.  I hope she enjoyed her tea.

My tea.

After the tea.

Beautiful all around.

See you in July.

You can see more pictures at Souheki's facebook page. 

Wednesday, June 13, 2012

June Tea Meet

It is always such a pleasure to have a tea meeting at Lee Young Hee museum, www.LYHKM.org.  The place showcases traditional Korean lines and shapes.  It is definately a very unique space in the middle of Manhattan.  If you did not get a chance to visit the museum, please do so.  If you do not own a traditional Korean dress by Lee Young Hee, please run to the museum and buy one, before all of her clothes become museum pieces.

For the June meeting, we had a variety of Korean traditional green teas.  We especially got to enjoy teas made by two of the more famous Korean Tea Master, Shin Kwangsoo and Hong Sosul.  People ask me all the time how Korean green teas are different from the Japanese or Chinese green teas.  Tea is a product of people and places.  As such Korean green teas reflect heaven and earth that are particular to Korea.  Native Korean tea trees grow to be small bushes even if they are 1000 years old; however, their roots go down into the earth 10 times taller than the trees.  Native Korean tea trees keep their seeds in the pod for a year.  Just like a mother keeps its baby in the womb for 9 months, Korean tea trees are the only trees that I know of that keep their seeds in the pods for a year.  After flowers fall in Autumn, Korean tea trees bear seeds.  However, instead of letting it fall to the ground, the Korean tea trees keep their seeds in the pods for a year until new flowers come out next year.  Because they keep their seeds in the pods for a year, the seeds are more nurtured and have greater chance of sprouting and taking deep roots.  The reason most tea plantations have cloned tea trees instead of planting tea tree seeds is because tea tree seeds are notorious for being difficult to sprout and take roots.  Since most tea trees are made by attaching tea branches to different trees that are easier to take roots, essentially only leaves are tea trees and stem down to the roots are differnt trees.  That is why almost all tea trees in plantations around the world do not have deep roots like native Korean tea trees.  Because Korean tea trees are so much easier to sprout and take deep roots from its seeds, Korea is one of the very few places in the world where one will find major tea plantations with real native tea trees of deep roots.  (Korea also has other variety of tea plantations of shallow roots.)

The custom of tea ritual is also very unique to Korea.  Korea has distinctive four seasons and in Korean tea ceremonies, there are distinctive four stages of birth, growth, harvest and rest.  First, hot water is poured into a water jar; birth.  Second, cooled water is poured into a tea pot; growth.  Third, tea is harvest into a water jar; harvest.  Fourth, tea is poured into individual cups; rest.  With oxydized teas of the hotter regions of the world, where the four seasons are not as distinct, usually hot water is poured into tea pot to seep the tea and then the tea is consumed.

During the tea meet, someone asked about meditation.  Korean style of meditation and enlightenment is also very distinctive.  She asked how to empty the mind so she can go into a meditative state.  Korean meditation practice has four seasons.  When meditating to still the mind, thoughts will come in; birth.  Do not try to block the thoughts, they are coming into the mind because they need to be healed or addressed.  Let the thoughts sprout and grow for they need to be healed.  Meditation is like coming home in the evening, it is the returning process, it is the harvesting process.  Let the thoughts come in and growth, and then eventually let them be harvested and return to their origins.  Only when the thoughts return to their origins, the mind will rest.  It is like riding a bicycle, as we turn the wheel, we go forward.  Eventually as the mind rest, the water energy of the kidney will rise.  As it rise, the bottom part of the stomach will feel as if it is a stove.  The water energy will enter the heart and the whole body will feel the love of returning.  The water energy will open up the crown chakra and the universe will be with you.  The fire energy that was giving you passion and drive will come down from the head all the way down to the bottom of the stomach.  As you open up the crown chakra the energy of the universe will pierce your head down to the roots of your body.  It probably is not a good idea to leave the crown chakra open all the time, but you should be able to open it at your will as well.  Before Buddhism came into Korea, children were taught to meditate to discipline the mind and body.  Taking a cake of tea on their waist, the Hwarangs of Shilla travelled the mountains to train their mind and body.  Breaking the tea cake and sharing their tea, they meditated and opened their enlightenment.  An unfortunate consequence of Buddhist practice is that it made the practice of enlightenment jobs of monks.  Since Buddhism came from the tropics of India where there are only two seasons, the traditional Korean practice of birth, growth, harvest and rest in meditation was abandoned in favor of sudden enlightenment.  I am not saying one is better than the other.  However, I am a student of people and their thoughts.  And my job is to heal the history.

In July we have a very special tea event scheduled with our dear tea friend, Nini Ordoubadi. Nini will host a Persian afternoon tea at her tea house, Tay Home, www.TayTea.com, in Andes, New York on Saturday, July 14th at 2p. We plan to arrive in Andes, nestled in the Catskill Mountains in Delaware County, a short distance west of charming Woodstock, earlier in the day to experience the many shops & art galleries that the lovely town has to offer before our Persian afternoon tea with Nini. This should make for an enjoyable, day or weekend, tea event in the "country" among nature & fresh air. The cost for the Persian afternoon tea is $25.  Please let me know if you are coming by July 1st.  We are planning to hire a bus if we have enough people.  See you in July.

Jaenam