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There is no superior tea, only what suits your taste!

Tea News · Jan 25, 2026

 We often tend to categorize things as good or bad.

For example, with seasons, we might ask: Is summer better or winter?

With shoes, we might ask: Are high heels better or flat shoes?


With tea, some might ask: Is green tea better or oolong tea?

Is Biluochun better or Tieguanyin better?

Is Pu'er better or oolong better?

Just as ten thousand readers have ten thousand Hamlets, people with different positions, identities, and experiences will have different views on things. In fact, there is no superior tea, only what suits your taste.


Although different types of tea have distinct flavors—some fresh and fragrant, some mellow and rich, some bitter with a sweet aftertaste—for tea lovers, any tea that tastes good to them personally is a superior product.

For the tea connoisseur, the taste of tea reflects the drinker's state of mind.

Someone who is restless or in low spirits while drinking tea may only taste the bitterness of the leaves;

A person in a joyful mood savoring tea will gently inhale the clear, mountain-mist-like fragrance, quietly watch the tea leaves unfurl and sink in the cup, and drink in a feeling—the happiness of sensing the tea's faint sweetness flow from the lips to the heart.


There is no superior tea, only what suits your taste.

When drinking tea, there's no need to deliberately pursue famous brands or teas. There is no end to tea; there is never a 'best,' only what you personally like is the best.

The environment arises from the mind, the mind moves with the tea!

Those who prefer strong tea, drink it strong;

Those who prefer it light, use fewer leaves.

The heart follows the flowing water away, the body relaxes with the wind and clouds.

The same cup of tea, drunk by different people, yields as many flavors. Just like tea, the quality of things varies from person to person. The same event, some see the negative side, while others maintain a positive attitude. For example, the half-glass of water on the table: a pessimist thinks there's only half left, while an optimist is grateful there's still half a glass.

There is no precious tea, only what suits your palate.

Events have no inherent good or bad; it is thought that makes them so. If you want to change the situation, you must first change your mindset. The value of objects, the quality of events, all lie within an individual's single thought.

 
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