(d) "Dr [Andrew] Weil was 17 when he visited Japan in 1959 and discovered sencha and matcha."
(i)
(A) sencha 煎茶
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sencha
(B) history of tea in Japan
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_tea_in_Japan
(section 4 Modern Japanese green tea: In 1740, Sōen NAGATANI 永谷 宗円 developed Japanese sencha)
(ii) Why 煎?
The kanji in Japanese language has two meaning: besides the Chinese meaning (such as 煎餅), there is one that is not found in Chinese.
(A) sen 煎 【せん】 (n): "infusing (tea); infusion"
(B) sen-jiru 煎じる 【せんじる】 (v): "to boil; to infuse"
(e) "Restaurants, in turn, are responding both to the demand and to the competition: 'Everyone else has better tea, so I better up my game,' as he put it."
(i) The verb "better" (both vt and vi) itself does not need "up." See better
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/better
(ii) "up one's game" is a phrase, as in "to up one's game," "to raise one's game," or to
"step up one's game": "to improve one's quality"
en.wiktionary.org/wiki/step_up_one's_game
(f) "Mr Beckwith, an engaging, unpretentious and encyclopedic tea maven, presides over tea tastings in a spare, serene apartment and office in the Flatiron district. On one wall is an oak pharmacy chest with dozens of small drawers containing tea samples."
Google "pharmacy chest" and you will see many chest that looks like those in Chinese medicine shop in Taiwan or China. (Ignore "Medicine Chest Pharmacy" or "Medicine Chest Pharmacies." Those two are pharmacy stores--ie, proper names.)
(g) One recent morning, he set out the elements of a Chinese style of tea service known as gong fu cha 工夫茶: a slatted wooden tea tray to catch excess water and tea, a lidded dish called a gaiwan 蓋碗 for steeping, a pitcher to hold the steeped tea, and a few small porcelain teacups. * * * Mr Beckwith set out an oolong, a partly oxidized tea prized by enthusiasts for its complexity of flavors. Picking up the steeped leaves, he pointed to bite marks. They are made, he explained, by a small green insect called a leafhopper. The bites expose that part of the leaf to air, changing its chemistry and giving the resulting tea a distinctive sweetness that has traces of honey."
Oolong Tea with Bite marks.
(i) Tiffany Williams, Stories About My Favorite Oolong Teas. T Ching, May 29, 2012.
www.tching.com/2012/05/three-stories-oolong/
(ii) Oriental Beauty. Hojo Tea, undated.
hojotea.com/item_e/o01e.htm
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