China is the hometown of tea, and tea culture has a long history. The charm of tea is endless. Many celebrities in ancient and modern times have become associated with tea and have fallen in love with it. Some of them made tea their friends, some expressed their feelings through tea, some expressed their feelings, or wrote poems about it. They left many interesting anecdotes about tea making and drinking, which became a very charming chapter in Chinese tea culture.
Lu Yu in the Tang Dynasty was good at making and tasting tea. He spent his whole life writing the "Tea Classic" and was revered as the "Tea Sage" by later generations. Lu Yu was very particular about getting water and making tea must be made with good quality wine. He divided boiling water into three stages: first boiling, second boiling, and third boiling. It is believed that the first and third boiling water are not advisable, and the second boiling water is the best, that is, when the edge of the pot dances like pearls and jade in a spring pool, it is taken.
Dongpo lay people love tea as much as a woman and a pot as much as a son. When he was relegated to Yixing, he often carried a purple sand pot with a lifting beam, recited poems, and lost his feelings for the landscape. He once left a famous saying, "The bamboo stove in the wind of the pine wind calls each other while carrying the pot." Later, people called this kind of pot "Dongpo Pot".
Mr. Lu Xun liked drinking tea very much. He often drank tea leisurely while conceiving and writing. He has unique insights into tea tasting: "Having good tea and being able to drink good tea is a blessing. First of all, you must practice kung fu, and secondly, the special feeling you get from practicing." Guo Moruo is not only an expert in tea tasting, but also has a deep understanding of the history of famous tea. The allusions are also very familiar. Everywhere he goes, he always regards tea tasting as one of the great pleasures in life. He once wrote a poem at Beiguo Restaurant in Guangzhou: "Drinking morning tea in Beiyuan feels like being at home. I go abroad in a flash and drink tea again when I come back." The writer Lao She was fond of tea during his lifetime. He once said: "Drinking tea itself is an art. "The play "Teahouse" he left behind, which is famous both at home and abroad, depicts the vast world and all living beings in the small space of a teahouse. Today, in memory of him, people have built the "Lao She Tea House" in Beijing, where tea lovers gather together for a long time.