Houston Community News >> Tea Struggles for Place in Asia
10/14/2007 TAIPEI (Reuters)
-From Beijing to Tokyo, Seoul,
Hong Kong and Taipei,
fast-paced modern life means that tea has little appeal for Asian youth who
don't have the patience to wait the 10 minutes it takes to brew tea in the
traditional way.
"I don't have any time or relevant tea culture," said Becca Liu, a 25-year-old
college graduate in Taipei. "I'm more curious to know how to make coffee," she
added.
Determined to restore tea to its exalted status in Asia, tea lovers are trying
to repackage tea as a funky new-age brew to a young generation more inclined to
slurp down a can of artificially-flavored tea than to sip the real thing.
Taiwan tea expert Yang Hai-chuan sells sachets
of mixed oolong and green tea leaves at teahouses across Taipei, marketing them
as hip flavored beverages rather than the traditional teas that have been drunk
for centuries.
"Consumption of traditional tea is declining because it's not being passed
down," said Yang, who teaches tea brewing classes to a handful of students such
as Liu, who sign up mostly because of the coffee-making section in the course.
"Basically there's no one promoting it."
Yang's concoction is just one around North Asia that's sustaining tea, despite
pressure from coffee and other beverages, by catering to younger people's
fixations on their health and a thirst for novelty.
In Japan, a new tea line is winning fans among young Japanese with its claims to
reduce body fat, while a South Korean brand called "17 Tea" is popular for its
claims to blend teas that cure a host of ills.
According to a Chinese myth, tea was discovered about 5,000 years ago by
Shennong, a legendary emperor of China who was sipping a bowl of hot water when
a sudden gust of wind blew some tea tree twigs into the water.
The rest as they say is history.
It became a pillar of cultural and culinary life in Asia ever since, spreading
to Europe in the 17th century.
The elaborate tea making ceremonies of past centuries are largely defunct across
North Asia, although traditional drinkers avoid Western tea bags and devoutly
adhere to tea-making customs by pouring hot water from clay pots over tea
leaves.
Teahouses across the region, from airport waiting halls in China to parks and
temples in Taiwan, continue the tradition but mostly to the older generation who
are willing to pay up to $1 per gram for prime tea leaves.
Younger drinkers prefer canned tea, powdered tea, soft drinks and coffee. They
increasingly refer to traditional tea as "old people's drink".
Tea is so embedded in Taiwan Culture -- at
least for the older generation -- that tea lovers can argue for hours about the
merits of tea grades and water temperatures for preparation of the brew.
But Taiwan youngsters won't have a bar of it.
"Our children don't want to carry on the traditions, so in the future it will be
forgotten," complained Wang Cheng-long, a life-long bulk leaf seller in Taiwan's
historic tea-growing region of Pinglin.
Minoru Takano, director of the Japanese Association of Tea Production, admits
that canned flavored teas have helped keep consumption levels up in Japan.
"But we are concerned that tea culture will not be nurtured by these drinks,"
Takano said.
"We are trying to promote making tea by the pot. There are some households that
do not (even) have a pot. We are concerned that the tradition and culture may
disappear."
(Contributed by Reuters)