What Black Are You Drinking
I concur this tea is eye popping good. When prepared at 5-6g/ 100 ml - i had the impression of those cherry filled chocolate bon bons - of the highest quality - or of a piece of dark chocolate paired with a good manhattan. The chocolate is actually quite subtle - and the aftertaste is exceptionally refreshing and sweet with (rosy?) Florals. Mine is from 2021debunix wrote: ↑Sun Jan 28, 2024 3:00 pmQihong Songzhen from Likou, Qimun, Anhui, via Daxue Jiadao. so lovely.
I had only tried Keemun along time ago when I was exploring Teas for the first time because I could no longer get my usual SeaDyke Ti Kuan Yin, at the time I had no idea about things like burying temperature and time and quantity of tea to get what I liked, especially with teas that are prone to bitterness. so my first encounters with it or a disaster, and it ended up going to the worm bin for compost.
Even though I learned better, and I've had some wonderful experiences with things like Ruby black, and Jin Jun Mei, I was a little wary when Ki Won shared this during a gathering of LA tea lovers last spring. I needn't have worried, because it was a remarkably fine tea.
This weekend I opened up my first order from Daxue Jiadao, and I've enjoyed a couple of sessions with this Qimen already. I am naturally infusing it my way, which means low leaf and lots of water, and the result is lovely amber liquor that is delicate fruity, floral, a little malty, and delicious.
you can see clearly how tiny and delicate the leaves are... visually appealing as well as very tasty.
mmmmm.
as I am reading this, I am sipping the last bit of a sample of 2022 Nilgiri Highland Black from Ketlee. it is completely unfair to compare this sample, which was delayed in opening and then sat open for a while before I finished it off today. Kettle tea is tasty, but now your post is making me long for the Keemun. maybe I'll have some while I'm making a chocolate dessert tonight.
Thanks to a very generous TF member, ive been given the opportunity to tour the DJ offerings of thunderbolt. Here are the first two ive tried. More to come
This one is a white -(lumping it together in the black topic)
This one is a white -(lumping it together in the black topic)
Last edited by LeoFox on Sat Mar 02, 2024 7:27 am, edited 1 time in total.
@LeoFox, I've almost finished a 25 g pack of the Margaret's Hope Moonlight and am enjoying it, though you're right that the aromas are strong. I didn't get corn, but got some citrus and mango, kind of like a floral IPA. I'm steeping it at around 175F in 150 ml of water for 2.5/3.5/5/7 minutes. I'll have to look for the rose the next time I drink this tea.
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Wild Lapsang Souchong from Wuyi Origin: The flavor seems a blend of a few flavors, that I mind not being able to name because I am reviewing the tea. It is somewhat familiar to me though I cannot come up with a word for it. One can feel it is not wrong to connect this w/ what we think of as Lapsang Souchong's classic smoked taste; though that flavor is clearly not here directly & perhaps indirectly only mildly here. (I would not be surprised if others disagree w/ me on this.)
I like this tea very much. I imagine I will be enjoying this 1 or 2 X a week which =s excellence in my opinion.
Gaoshan bought this from Wuyi (& probably other members) so there is hope someone good at analysis of a tea's flavors may get posted eventually. This tea deserves it. I will add as I am halfway through drinking the second large cup of it, that like the white tea from Nepal which I also like very much & am drinking once or twice a week, this black tea won't suit everyone. As we know, some teas are far from suiting most drinkers even though they are special.
The second cup does introduce a medicinal note, camphor is the best word I can think of. So the 1st round is better than the 2nd, yet still enjoyable.
I like this tea very much. I imagine I will be enjoying this 1 or 2 X a week which =s excellence in my opinion.
Gaoshan bought this from Wuyi (& probably other members) so there is hope someone good at analysis of a tea's flavors may get posted eventually. This tea deserves it. I will add as I am halfway through drinking the second large cup of it, that like the white tea from Nepal which I also like very much & am drinking once or twice a week, this black tea won't suit everyone. As we know, some teas are far from suiting most drinkers even though they are special.
The second cup does introduce a medicinal note, camphor is the best word I can think of. So the 1st round is better than the 2nd, yet still enjoyable.
I haven't had this tea in a while so my memory isn't that clear, but I recall it being very floral and fruity, with lemon, citrus, and maybe some cherry. It did have that honey/mineral/sweet potato/forest floor thing that I associate with good lapsang, so maybe those are some of the flavours you associate with the smoked variety? I can't say I've ever tasted any smoke in this tea. I've also always gongfued it, so I may have gotten a different impression.Ethan Kurland wrote: ↑Wed Mar 06, 2024 1:08 amWild Lapsang Souchong from Wuyi Origin: The flavor seems a blend of a few flavors, that I mind not being able to name because I am reviewing the tea. It is somewhat familiar to me though I cannot come up with a word for it. One can feel it is not wrong to connect this w/ what we think of as Lapsang Souchong's classic smoked taste; though that flavor is clearly not here directly & perhaps indirectly only mildly here. (I would not be surprised if others disagree w/ me on this.)
I like this tea very much. I imagine I will be enjoying this 1 or 2 X a week which =s excellence in my opinion.
Gaoshan bought this from Wuyi (& probably other members) so there is hope someone good at analysis of a tea's flavors may get posted eventually. This tea deserves it. I will add as I am halfway through drinking the second large cup of it, that like the white tea from Nepal which I also like very much & am drinking once or twice a week, this black tea won't suit everyone. As we know, some teas are far from suiting most drinkers even though they are special.
The second cup does introduce a medicinal note, camphor is the best word I can think of. So the 1st round is better than the 2nd, yet still enjoyable.
Your note has made me want to open my 100 g bag of the 2023 harvest of this tea, but I have some hongcha I need to get to first, including yours!
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Do you taste a black tea that had been roasted or do you taste a roasted tea that happens to be a black tea?
In other words, is the taste of roast dominant?
Cheers