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2007年11月4日星期日

Chinese Tea, More Important than Rice

People throughout China drink tea daily. Tea is to the Chinese as wine is to the French, as beer is to the Germans, as cigars are to the Cubans.




Chinese Tea, More Important than Rice


People throughout China drink tea daily. Tea is to the Chinese as wine is to the French, as beer is to the Germans, as cigars are to the Cubans.

History
It is true that the word for tea, cha, never appeared in ancient Chinese texts; the character cha was created by Lu Yu in the 8th century during the Tang dynasty (618-907 A.D.). Based on written records and more recently excavated archaeological evidence, we know that tea as a beverage had become rather popular in Central China along the Yangzi River and its tributaries during the Western Han period (206 B.C.-24 A.D.) at the latest.
Chinese drink tea at meals and serve it to friends when they come for a visit. "On such occasions, it is served continually as long as they remain together engaged in conversation," wrote Matteo Ricci (1552-1610), an Italian Christian missionary who stayed in China for 28 years, in "China in the Sixteen Century: The Journals of Matthew Ricci: 1583-1610." "This beverage is sipped rather than drunk and it is always taken hot," Ricci wrote. He also remarked that the bitter taste of tea was not unpleasant and was good for one's health.
Category
Because of the geographic location and climate, different places grow various kinds of tea. In general, there are five kinds of tea classified according to different techniques involved in the brewing process.


Green tea
Green tea keeps the original color of the tealeaves without fermentation during processing. Top brands include Longjing in Zhejiang Province, Maofeng of Huangshan Mountain in Anhui Province, and Biluochun in Jiangsu Province.
Black tea
Black tea, known as "Red Tea" (hong cha) in China, is fermented before baking. The best brands are Qihong in Anhui, Dianhong in Yunnan, Suhong in Jiangsu, Chuanhong in Sichuan and Huhong in Hunan.
Wulong tea
This represents a variety half way between the green and the black teas, and it is made after partial fermentation. Wulong tea abounds in Fujian, Guangdong, and Taiwan along China's southeast coast.
Compressed tea
It is compressed and hardened into a certain shape. It is easy to transport and store and is mainly supplied to the ethnic minorities living in the border areas of the country. Most of the compressed tea is in the form of bricks, thus the name "brick tea." Sometimes it is cake or bowl-shaped. It is mainly produced in Hubei, Hunan, Sichuan and Yunnan provinces.
Scented tea
It is made by mixing fragrant flowers in the tealeaves in the course of processing. The flowers commonly used for this purpose are jasmine and magnolia among others. Jasmine tea is a well-known favorite among the northerners in China.Tea artistry
Tea is far more than a thirst quencher in China. Many people appreciate the art form of brewing and drinking tea. The tea culture involved is relaxing, allowing people to supposedly forget all their troubles during the process of brewing, serving and drinking tea.
Making a good pot of tea is not so easy. With tea of the same quality, one can produce different tastes by using different water, tea sets and brewing techniques. Tea of top quality should be brewed with top-grade water. Teaware embellished with artistic designs are needed to complement the elegance of tealeaves. Brewing time, water temperature, and the ratio of water to tealeaves depends on tea quality and category.












Tips for brewing tea
1. Know the various qualities of different tea
Before making a pot of tea, one should first know the characteristics of the tea. Thus, one can choose the most appropriate brewing technique suitable to a specific tea to bring out its best quality. Tea quality is affected by various factors, such as weather, the land and the grower.
2. Control the amount
How much tea should be put into the pot depends on the specialty of each kind of tea as well as the brewer's habits. Generally speaking, the standard amount (the amount used by the professional tea brewer when brewing a pot of tea) is 3 grams of tea brewed with 150 cubic centimeters of water for 5 minutes.
The ratio of water to tealeaf depends on the quality of tea and the drinking method. Generally speaking, famous tea or top-grade tea requires a ratio of 50:1, and ordinary black, green, white and scented tea 75:1. The ratio of water to Oolong is 25:1.
3. Choose appropriate tea sets and water
When brewing tea, one should pay attention not only to the tealeaf's shape, color, scent and taste but also to the teapot's quality and artistic design to set off the elegant tealeaf. Generally, a big teapot is chosen when one wants to satisfy thirst while a small pot is used when one desires to taste and appreciate the tea.
Tea of top quality should be brewed with top-grade water to bring out its best. Longjing Tea (Dragon Well Tea) and Hupao Spring (Tiger Spring) are known as the two superb products of Hangzhou City. Even though the tea-brewing water deserves careful study, one should bear in mind the actual condition when making tea. Water, which reaches drinking standards and will bring out the best of tea, can be chosen to make tea. If conditions allow, one can use natural spring water or lake water or river water, which is a better choice for sure.
4. Control the water temperature
Generally, people use boiled water to brew old tealeaves, while cooling down the boiled water a little bit to brew tender tealeaves. For example, top-grade green tea and some famous kinds of tea, which should be picked when they are tender, cannot be brewed with boiling water. So one should wait until the water temperature cools down to about 80 degrees Celsius. In this way, the tea will have clear water, a pure scent, fresh taste and brightly-colored leaves.
5. Control the brewing time
Generally, brewing time should be short for those tender and strongly-scented tealeaves of a large amount, while a long brewing time is required for coarse and strong-tasting tealeaves of a small amount. For those who like drinking strong tea, its better to brew the tea for a longer time; for those who prefer a weaker taste, its better to shorten the time.

New road across China's largest desert opens to traffic

The second road across China's largest desert opened to traffic Thursday, boosting connections to the landlocked region in the country's northwest.

The 424-km north-south highway, running across the Taklimakan Desert in Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, cut the distance between the two important regional cities of Hotan and Aral by 550 km and and the travel time by about seven hours.


The 790-million-yuan (US$107 million) project is expected to promote cargo and passenger traffic between the resource-rich and densely-populated Hotan City, in southern Xinjiang, and Aral, an underdeveloped new city on the northern edge of the desert, said Xinjiang's Chairman Ismail Tiliwaldi at the opening ceremony.

The blacktop road was funded by the central government. Construction of the road began in June, 2005. It will provide easier access to the southwestern Tibet Autonomous Region as well as central and southern Asian countries such as Pakistan and Tajikistan.

It will also speed up transportation of Hotan's farm produce to Aksu, a pivotal communications center, by cutting off 430 km and about half of the time used before.

The first highway across the Taklimakan, running 522 kilometers from Lunnan in the north, to Minfeng County in the south, was opened to traffic in 1995. However, vehicles bound for Aksu had to make a detour along the westernmost border of the desert.

"The new one is wider with less sharp turns than the first road, and the surface is very smooth," said Cao Jun, a veteran driver in Xinjiang.


The Taklimakan desert is located in the center of the Tarim Basin south of the Tianshan Mountains, covering 337,600 square kilometers.


Builders spent 29 months in the desert, fighting surface temperatures of up to 80 degrees Celsius in summer and continuous sandstorms.

Workers introduced some tricks, including using reed stalks and planting salt-resistant trees, to fix the flowing sand and turn the road into a green corridor in the sandstorm-ravaged desert.

About 96 percent of the highway runs through the active sand areas and 82 percent was uninhabited, suffering from bad weather conditions.


A number of maintenance zones, parking lots, meteorological stations and electric billboards were established along the road to aid travelers.

The road is one of China's most ambitious infrastructure projects to develop its remote west. The country opened the first ever railway to Tibet in July, 2006.

Dow down more than 360 points

Photo taken on Oct. 19, 2007 shows traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. U.S. stocks plunged Thursday, pulling the Dow Jones industrial average down more than 360 points. (Xinhua/Reuters Photo)

NEW YORK, Nov. 1 (Xinhua) -- U.S. stocks plunged Thursday, pulling the Dow Jones industrial average down more than 360 points.The Dow fell 362.14, or 2.60 percent, to 13,567.87.

The Standard & Poor's 500 index was off 40.94, or 2.64 percent, at 1,508.44, while the Nasdaq composite index dropped 64.29, or 2.25 percent, to 2,794.83.

Terra-Cotta Warriors Pit Closed for Repair




A worker makes efforts inside the No.2 pit of the famed terra-cotta warriors excavated around the Mausoleum of Qinshihuang in Xi'an, northwest China's Shaanxi Province, Nov. 1, 2007. The pit is closed to visitors for almost six-month repairing starting from Thursday. [Photo: Xinhua]


Picture taken on Nov. 1, 2007, shows the No.2 pit of the famed terra-cotta warriors inside the Mausoleum of Qinshihuang in Xi'an, northwest China's Shaanxi Province, Nov. 1, 2007. The pit is closed to visitors for almost six-month repairing starting from Thursday. [Photo: Xinhua]



The No.2 pit of the famed terra-cotta warriors excavated around the Mausoleum of Qinshihuang, the First Emperor of China's Qin Dynasty (221 B.C.-206 B.C.), was closed to visitors for almost six months of repair work from Thursday.




A spokesman with Emperor Qin's Terra Cotta Warriors and Horses Museum said leaks had been found in places in the roof of the shedover the pit.




"When it rains, the water comes in although we have time and again asked experts to mend the leaks, so we decided to close the pit and repair the roof," said the spokesman.




However, the only part of the pit affected by the leaks was theunexcavated part.




More than 2,000 relics have been found in the No.2 pit. The warriors unearthed there have striking features, brightly painted,and are mounted on horses or kneeling like archers.




The shed over the No.2 pit was built in 1988 and the pit was opened to visitors in October 1994.




The spokesman said it would reopen before May next year. Duringthe repairs, all the relics unearthed will be transferred to the cultural relics exhibition hall of the Emperor Qin's Terra Cotta Warriors and Horses Museum.




Thirty-four items from an exhibition room near the No. 2 pit have already been removed to the exhibition hall of the museum, where they were on public display. They included a dozen sets of terra-cotta warriors and horses.




Relics that could not be removed from the pit were covered withbamboo mats, said Qian Jing, deputy curator of the museum.




The pit still contained four formations of warriors and horses,most of which were still beneath the soil, and only a small portion of the pit was excavated, said Qian.




The warriors being unearthed there were shattered.




"We have deliberately chosen to carry out the repairs during the November to April period which is a slack season for visitors,and I don't think the repairs will affect tourism much," said Qian.




Qian said the exhibition hall of the museum, where the 34 relics from the No.2 pit are on display, alongside a picture featuring the interior of the No.2 pit.




Wen Hongjun, from central China's Hunan Province, who was visiting the museum on Thursday, said he was a bit disappointed atthe closure of the No.2 pit. "I should have been informed of the closure, but it seemed to receive little publicity on the Internet."




Situated in Lintong, a county about 37 km north of Xi'an, capital of northwest China's Shaanxi Province, the imperial mausoleum was discovered by a group of farmers in 1974 as they were digging an irrigation well.




Archaeologists found 181 major tombs, including the famous terra-cotta warriors and horses pits and unearthed about 1,500 statues from the three surrounding pits. The warriors and horses were believed to have been buried with the emperor to guard him after his death.




The No.1 pit, which forms the three angles of a triangle is thebiggest, followed in size by the No.2 and No.3 pits.The mausoleum was included the World Heritage List of UNESCO in 1987.




Despite international interest in the underground palace, archaeologists suspended excavations in 2003 as they could not protect relics from environmental degradation. So far, only 1,500 terra-cotta warriors and horses have been unearthed, and almost 6,000 items are believed to still lie buried.














2007年10月26日星期五

Know a Chinese from His Name



Chinese names contain a spectrum of cultural information. It is one of the favorite topics the Chinese enjoy talking about. The process of exploring the meaning probably leads you to a close friendship.
The most common family names in China are li (李), zhang (张), and wang (王). There are now nearly 100 million Chinese with the same family name李. In Mainland China, women don't take their husbands' family names after marriage.
Chinese given names always follow their family names. People believe that the given names contain invisible fate and visible meaning in the choice of characters. Therefore, when elders name a newborn, they usually take several factors into consideration: astrology, birth date, a fortune-teller's advice, and the form, pronunciation, and meaning of the characters.

Some given names indicate the parents' good wishes and high expectations for their babies, like喜 xi (happiness), 贵 gui (preciousness), 聪 cong (cleverness), 丽 li (beauty); while some others convey the love of nature, such as,峰 feng (peak), 花 hua (flower), and so on.
In "A Life in Two Worlds," 姚明(Yao Ming) explains his name this way:
"My first name, Ming (明), means "light". To write it, you use two Chinese characters. The left one (日) means "the sun," and the right one (月) means "the moon". The two characters together mean light all the time, day and night.
My last name Yao (姚) doesn't mean anything in itself. It's just a last name like Jones. But the two characters making up of it, when looked at separately do mean something. The left part (女) means "woman," and the right part (兆) means "many," many, and many, like a billion, only more. So that means more than Wilt Chamberlain, right?"