Celebrate Chinese New Year With Feasts and Teas

Celebrate Chinese New Year With Feasts and Teas

We still dwell within the Year of the Rat. But on February 12, the first day of Chinese New Year, the rodent skitters aside for a lumbering herbivore. And then we enter the Year of the Ox.

The Chinese zodiac contains a dozen animals. The cycle begins every 12 years, with the rat. So this year of the ox is the second year in the cycle.

If not for the tricky rat, the trusty ox would be No. 1. The story says the Jade Emperor invited the animals to a party, and their arrival times determined their order in the zodiac. The ox was about to get to the party first, but the rat persuaded the ox to give him a ride on his back. Just as they arrived at the Emperor’s palace, the rat leapt from the ox and entered first.

Just like a rat!

Chinese New Year celebration dragon
Chinese New Year involves plenty of dragon-filled parades.

What is Chinese New Year?

Lunar New Year lasts 15 days, stretching from New Year’s Eve (February 11) up until the Lantern Festival (February 26). The term Lunar New Year most accurately describes the calendar many Asian countries follow — it’s not just a Chinese thing. But as the Chinese population is so historic and large in the United States, people began calling it Chinese New Year long ago, and it has stuck.

In China, of course, it’s just called New Year.

The lunisolar calendar seems complicated, as the dates change every year. Part of it is straightforward — the calendar reflects the moon’s 12 full cycles (and explains why the Chinese zodiac has 12 animals). But to stay somewhat close to the Gregorian calendar, which reflects the time it takes for Earth to orbit the sun, a month gets periodically added to the lunisolar calendar.

New Year is an enormous celebration across China, and in Chinese communities around the world.

Just as our “holiday season,” stretching from Thanksgiving through New Year’s Day, is a time for family gatherings, feasting, gift-giving and decorating, so is Lunar New Year for those who celebrate it.

Good luck coins and red for Chinese New Year
Chinese New Year celebrates family, prosperity and longevity.

Fish, long noodles, red envelopes and tea

Chinese New Year involves taboos and superstitions. For example, people are supposed to avoid taking medicine, to not sweep or take out garbage and to reject the washing of clothes or hair — and that’s just a few of the taboos.

But people also pursue different activities for Chinese New Year, including giving money in red envelopes, and eating lucky foods such as fish, and especially carp.

And of course everybody drinks tea! 

China’s tea culture is vast and varied — people drink different teas in side-by-side villages, and the country’s many regions support multiple different tea styles and traditions.

As there really is no such thing as a tea for Chinese New Year, we  revolve our offerings around the practical places where the two-week celebration and tea intersect, such as digestion and happiness.

Jasmine blossoms
Jasmine Oolong tea involves fresh-harvested jasmine blossoms.

Drink: Jasmine Oolong

Feasting plays a central role for Chinese New Year. Fish. Longevity noodles. Dumplings, glutinous rice cakes and spring rolls. The food is one of the stars.

As a result, indigestion too often barges into the party. One tea that mitigates indigestion while also complementing many Chinese foods? Jasmine oolong.

This lightly oxidized green tea offers health and digestion benefits of its own. But with this tea, artisans spend as many as seven consecutive evenings plucking fresh jasmine blossoms from plants and mixing them with the green tea. The result? A beautiful tea combining both the flavors and digestion-aiding advantages of tea and jasmine blossoms. People across China regularly drink this tea after meals.

A pink rose
Rose Pu-erh tea incorporates fermented pu-erh tea from Yunnan Proviince and rose petals.

Drink: Organic Rose Pu-erh

Fermentation captured the zeitgeist during the 2010s, with fermentation guru Sandor Katz becoming a mini-celebrity and fermentation workshops and university programs getting launched. In many ways it became even more buzzy during COVID, as people turned to sourdough bread baking, beer making and other fermentation projects to enrich their homebound lives.

The interest revolves around two things: flavor and health. Fermentation can improve both.

Which brings us to pu-erh, one of two kinds of tea that undergo fermentation. The other fermented style is called “dark tea.”

Chinese people drink pu-erh for its earthy, complex flavor and its myriad health-promoting properties, including boosting digestive fitness. Tea aficionados collect pu-erh — tea producers form the fermented tea into cakes, which improve with age. Some pu-erhs are decades old, and delicious.

We think our Organic Rose Pu-Erh is a perfect Chinese New Year accompaniment. The pu-erh improves flavor and post-prandial digestion. And the rose adds wonderful floral notes the tea, while also boosting the body’s ability to digest.

Elderly people playing chess
Drink enough Immortal Tea and you too might be playing chess outside, and winning, in your retirement.

Drink: Immortal Tea

Chinese New Year celebrates everything about family and prosperity. Naturally, happiness and longevity figure into the traditions and parties. We all want both, yes?

Eating “longevity noodles” — long noodles, which represent a long life — is assumed. Foods like fish, which represent abundance and thus happiness, also figure into many New Year feasts.

Given the emphasis on happiness and longevity, our Immortal Tea is a perfect complement to Chinese New Year meals and events. This tea stimulates the mind and heart, sparking feelings of bliss and pleasure among sippers. Many Chinese people believe its ingredients also promote overall health and long life.

Two herbs, ginseng and Jiaogulan, serve as Immortal Tea’s foundation. 

Many people are familiar with ginseng, an adaptogen wild-harvested across parts of Asia and North America. People take ginseng for energy and its anti-inflammatory properties. 

Jiaogulan, a climbing herbaceous vine that is part of the cucumber family, is a lesser-known adaptogen, at least outside of China and parts of Southeast Asia.

Among people who traditionally used jiaogulan, especially within China’s Guizhou Province, it is known as the “immortality herb.” 

Like ginseng, jiaogulan offers a wealth of antioxidants. Among other things, people take the herb to lower cholesterol. 

This tea also includes peppermint, another strong digestion aid. 

Da Hong Pao, or “Big Red Robe” in Chinese, is the most famous Rock Oolong tea from Wu Yi Mountain, Fujian Province, China.

Drink: Da Hong Pao

It’s a gorgeous tea, an iteration of Camellia sinensis so prized that it compelled somebody in 2002 to spend $28,000 for just 20 grams of Da Hong Pao. The remaining original tea trees, on a cliff in the WuYi Nature Preserve, attract tourists en masse. When President Richard Nixon visited China in 1972, leaders presented him with the tea.

Today, Da Hong Pao is harvested from cuttings from those original cliffside trees. Our Da Hong Pao is superb and premium, but don’t worry: an ounce won’t cost more than a new laptop. A trio of venti caramel machiattos will cost about the same.

Da Hong Pao, translated as “Big Red Robe” in Chinese, is the most famous rock oolong from the revered WuYi Mountains in China’s Fujian Province. The terroir of its patch of the WuYi Mountains contributes towards is excellent flavor and aroma, as well as the tea-making process, which involves heavily roasting the tea over charcoal fires.

Its strong fragrance, roasted taste and pleasant, lingering sweetness pairs wonderfully with Chinese food. But it’s the symbolism that so perfectly matches it for Chinese New Year. 

The tea takes on a red hue after brewing, and red is the most popular color in China. It represents happiness, beauty, vitality, good luck, success and good fortune. As Chinese people celebrate all of the above during Chinese New Year, Big Red Robe tea is custom-made for the annual festival.

Sushi
Sushi at Japango in Boulder is special. And now the restaurant carries Ku Cha tea.

Now Find Ku Cha Teas at Japango in Boulder

As longtime and strong fans of Japango, a fantastic sushi restaurant on Pearl Street in Boulder, we are thrilled to announce that the restaurant now serves Ku Cha teas. If you are hunting for lunch or dinner ideas, we can’t recommend Japango enough. And now that it carries Ku Cha teas, you can pair the finest teas with the finest sushi!

If you would like to feature our teas in your restaurant, don’t hesitate to get in touch. And if you would like your favorite restaurant to offer Ku Cha tea, let the restaurant manager know. We trumpet our restaurant community, and are here to serve it with Colorado’s finest tea selection.

Subaru in a field
We love our Subarus in Colorado!

Subaru Delivers Ku Cha Teas + Tea Demo to Employees

Did you know that Ku Cha offers build-your-own gift boxes? Subaru of America’s Western Region, based in Glendale, this month purchased Ku Cha health- and wellness-oriented gift boxes for all of their employees. As part of the gift, Rong is offering employees a Zoom demonstration about how best to brew and serve traditional Chinese teas.

If you or your company has interest in offering Ku Cha gifts, complete with Zoom demonstrations starring Rong, please send us an email or give us a call. We would love to offer tea and tea savvy to the people you care about.

Noodles
Chinese New Year involves plenty of noodles. Two weeks of constant slurping!

Chinese New Year Calls for Noodles

Finally, a recipe to celebrate Chinese New Year at home. As people across the country and around the world eat long noodles during Chinese New Year for good luck — long noodles represent longevity — we offer a simple noodle recipe. Enjoy!

Sichuan Soy Sauce Noodles

Ingredients

  • 2/3 cup water
  • 5 tablespoons light brown sugar
  • 1/3 cup soy sauce
  • One 2-inch piece of fresh ginger crushed, plus two teaspoons finely chopped fresh ginger
  • 2-inch long piece of cinnamon stick
  • 2 star anise pods
  • 1/2 teaspoon fennel seeds, crushed
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons Sichuan peppercorns (in the Boulder area, you can find these at Asian Market, 2829 28th Street, and at Pacific Ocean Marketplace in Broomfield, 6600 W. 120th Ave.
  • 2 tablespoons peanut butter
  • 1 tablespoon toasted sesame oil, plus more for serving
  • 1 tablespoon unseasoned rice wine vinegar, plus more for serving
  • 2 garlic cloves, sliced
  • 1 pound fresh or dried thin egg noodles — cooked, drained and cooled
  • 1 bunch scallions, thinly sliced
  • Chile paste or hot sauce for serving

Directions

Combine water, brown sugar, soy sauce, crushed ginger, cinnamon stick, star anise, fennel seeds and 1 teaspoon of Sichuan peppercorns to water and bring to boil. Once boil is reached, bring heat to moderate and simmer for 20 minutes. Strain sauce through a sieve and discard the solids. 

Use a blender to puree the sauce with the peanut butter, 1 tablespoon of sesame oil, 1 tablespoon of vinegar, chopped ginger, garlic and the rest of the Sichuan peppercorns. In a large bowl, toss the noodles with the sauce and scallions. Serve with sesame oil, vinegar and chile paste on the side.

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