You may be right. It was nearly all packaged in mandarin.
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Replying to @_awbery_ @Meaningness
Some of those teabag packages especially look like something I could buy at my local grocery in Taiwan. That said tea quality, even in bags, is much better here than in the West.
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Replying to @joogipupu @Meaningness
Yes, I remember enjoying the tea in China so much. I brought lots back with me, mostly used up now. I’m looking forward to trying the dragon well I came home with tonight. Do you have a favourite brand in Taiwan?
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Replying to @_awbery_ @Meaningness
Hard to name brands. But the best is so called local produce. Perhaps the most priced variety is high mountain Oolong tea. Taiwan is particularly an Oolong tea place. I even have now a ceramic tea set with small cups to drink it properly.
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Replying to @joogipupu @Meaningness
Oh lovely. Pls tweet a pic next time! I am particularly fond of Puerh. Although I brought some excellent ones back from China, the best I ever tasted I found in Chinatown in San Francisco.
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Replying to @_awbery_ @Meaningness
Puer is nice too. You can buy it here of course.
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Replying to @joogipupu @Meaningness
The most popular tea on Cheung Chau was local red tea - and it really was reddish in colour. Very nice. I guess it was probably a sort of Oolong though I’m not sure.
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Replying to @_awbery_ @Meaningness
Some Taiwanese tea culture, a popular bubble tea place near National Taiwan University campus.pic.twitter.com/jHjLGalsS9
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Replying to @joogipupu @_awbery_
I am usually the only male person, only non-Asian person, and only person over 25 at the bubble tea shop. If that’s your hand, I see that this is something we have in common!
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This boba place is also a disco. Yeah, I don’t understand that eitherpic.twitter.com/5hZ2VeKgER
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Replying to @Meaningness @_awbery_
Never seen that here. All bubble tea places are just holes in the wall. Must be the extreme dense Taiwanese urban living.
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