This Sunday, Rieko and I went to a really fun festival - the Ōchamori-shiki at Saidai-ji Temple in Nara. The festival was basically a tea ceremony, but one like no other in Japan. In this festival, which is held every April and October, they use giant chawan (tea bowls) to serve the tea.
Not only were the tea bowls huge, but so were all of the utensils used in the tea ceremony. They had a enormous natsume filled with over a liter of matcha powder. They purified it with a ridiculously sized fukusa (square silk cloth). It was funny to watch the monk try to fold it perfectly given its unwieldy nature. The chasen (tea whisk) was massive! Instead of holding it sort of gracefully between his thumb and forefinger, the monk had to use his whole hand. And, the chashaku (tea scoop) was epic. Just imagine how much matcha he added with each scoop and a half. Sweet! Whisking the tea with the massive chasen had to be fun. The monk looked like he was enjoying himself, even though he really had to put some elbow grease in.
Since everything was so gigantic, each chawan held five servings of tea instead of just one. Due to the size and weight of the bowl plus the tea (roughly 7-8kg), the first few people to drink from each chawan needed to have their neighbors help them to hold the bowl while they took their sips. Thankfully, the sweets were normal size.
Looking back on this post, I guess I used a lot of "technical" tea terms... sorry! So, let me sum up the experience for you. I had a big ass cup o' tea prepared by a monk using comically oversized tea utensils. I loved it!
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
2 comments:
You said ass. Huh-huh.
Jenny went to a tea ceremony when we were in San Diego. The one you went to sounds like Jenny heaven!
It sounds like a lot of fun. I'm not sure that it would be Jenny heaven, though. Jenny heaven would have a milky black tea somehow prepared in an ornate tea ceremony (the shorter one, though, not the one that takes three to four hours) and a very forgiving host when I screwed up :-)
Post a Comment