Rice tea: Difference between revisions
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'''Rice tea''' is a specialty of Northern Thailand. In Thailand, it's called "''Cha Hom Khao Mai''" (literally: Tea with scent of new rice). | |||
'''Rice tea''' is a specialty of Northern Thailand. In Thailand, it'called "''Cha Hom Khao Mai''" (literally: Tea with scent of new rice). | |||
Rice tea is similar in taste to that of [[Genmaicha]] but is produced fundamentally different. For Genmaicha green tea is steamed and mixed with roasted rice. This was done in order to stretch the formerly expensive tea. Thai rice tea however, flavored with a wild growing herb which resembles the taste of jasmine rice. The [[green tea]] is roasted Chinese style instead steamed like Japanese green tea. Often, the tea is rolled like [[Oolong]] to small beads. | Rice tea is similar in taste to that of [[Genmaicha]] but is produced fundamentally different. For Genmaicha green tea is steamed and mixed with roasted rice. This was done in order to stretch the formerly expensive tea. Thai rice tea however, flavored with a wild growing herb which resembles the taste of jasmine rice. The [[green tea]] is roasted Chinese style instead steamed like Japanese green tea. Often, the tea is rolled like [[Oolong]] to small beads. | ||
[[Category: green tea]] | [[Category: green tea]] | ||
Latest revision as of 19:45, 8 November 2024
Rice tea is a specialty of Northern Thailand. In Thailand, it's called "Cha Hom Khao Mai" (literally: Tea with scent of new rice).
Rice tea is similar in taste to that of Genmaicha but is produced fundamentally different. For Genmaicha green tea is steamed and mixed with roasted rice. This was done in order to stretch the formerly expensive tea. Thai rice tea however, flavored with a wild growing herb which resembles the taste of jasmine rice. The green tea is roasted Chinese style instead steamed like Japanese green tea. Often, the tea is rolled like Oolong to small beads.