WanderPeng
June 11, 2026
Brought my clients to a tea house in Hangzhou this afternoon. The owner brewed seven different teas for us — Longjing, Biluochun, the works. My Australian guests kept filling their cups to the top until I stopped them.\n\nIn Chinese tea culture, you never fill it all the way. That’s for noodles. Tea gets small refills. And you tap the table twice when someone pours — an old thank you gesture. Such small things, but they make the whole experience.\n\nIf you’re planning your first trip to China, a tea house visit is a must. I always book through **Trip.com** or **Booking.com** for local experiences — they’ve got great options in cities like Hangzhou, Shanghai, and Beijing. For flights, I’d recommend **Google Flights** to compare international routes from the U.S. or Europe straight into Shanghai Pudong (PVG) or Beijing Capital (PEK).\n\nAnd here’s a pro tip: when you’re at a tea house, remember the fill line. It’s about an inch from the rim — just enough for a few sips. That way the tea stays hot and the flavor lasts. The two-finger tap is easy too: just bend your index and middle fingers and tap them lightly on the table near your cup. It’s a quiet “thank you” that locals will appreciate.\n\nFor accommodation near tea houses in Hangzhou, check out **Airbnb** for a stay in the Longjing village area — you’ll wake up to tea fields. Or use **Trip.com** for hotels near West Lake, where most tea houses are clustered.\n\nCurrency wise, a tea session like this runs about $20–$30 USD per person (roughly ¥140–¥210 RMB). Well worth it for the experience and the stories you’ll take home.\n\nSo next time you’re in China, skip the rushed tourist spots. Find a local tea house, let the owner guide you through a tasting, and practice those small gestures. Trust me, it’ll be the highlight of your trip.

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Food tip for this week: if you see a restaurant with a plastic curtain at the door, plastic stools, and a crowd of locals eating with their heads down — go in. That's where the good stuff is. Not the place with English menus and laminated photos. I've eaten at ¥800-a-person banquets that I forgot the next day, and I've had ¥12 bowls of noodles from a street stall that I still think about years later. Trust the plastic stools.

Jun 18· food · traveltip

My 6-year-old watched my dad do his morning tea ceremony yesterday and asked: "Mama, why does Grandpa pour out the first round?" I explained: the first steep wakes up the leaves. It rinses off dust from months of storage. It warms the pot and the cups. And honestly — it is just what we have always done. She watched my dad with new eyes. Ten seconds later: "So Grandpa knows everything about tea?" My dad, without looking up: "No. I just know this one thing well. And that is enough." That is the most Chinese answer I have ever heard. Humble, honest, and completely unimpressed by the question.

Jun 17· chineseculture · tea

A client from New York asked me what I do when I get stressed. I told her: I read the Tao Te Ching. She looked at me funny — she was expecting "yoga" or "a glass of wine" maybe. But I've been reading it for over a decade now. Someone gave me a copy years ago, and it stuck. There's a line I think about a lot when work gets overwhelming: "The best way to fill a cup is to empty it first." (I'm paraphrasing — the original is more elegant.) I'm not saying you need to read ancient Chinese philosophy to enjoy China. But if you visit a Taoist temple — like Qingyang Palace in Chengdu or the temples on Qingcheng Mountain — sit quietly for a few minutes before pulling out your phone. Read the inscriptions on the pillars. Watch the incense smoke rise. You don't need to understand every character to feel what the space is trying to say. Most tourists photograph the building and leave. The ones who stay a little longer are the ones who remember it differently.

Jun 17· taoism · chineseculture

My son asked me last week: "Mama, why do Chinese people eat with chopsticks?" I didn't have a good answer. So I asked my uncle, who's been a chef for 40 years. He said: "Because we cut everything in the kitchen. No knives on the table. The chopsticks are for picking up what's already ready." And that's actually a great way to understand Chinese food culture. Western cooking leaves the knife to the diner. Chinese cooking does all the work for you — meat sliced thin, vegetables bite-sized, everything ready to pick up and eat. The chopstick is just the tool that delivers it. The real skill isn't chopsticks — it's the rice bowl. Hold it close to your mouth and push food in. That's how locals eat. Keeping the bowl on the table and leaning down? That's what kids do (and my four-year-old still does it, sauce on his chin, every single meal). If you can handle chopsticks well enough to pick up a single peanut, you're better than most tourists. If you can pick up a slippery mushroom? You've graduated.

Jun 17· chineseculture · food