pepson wrote: ↑Sat Jun 29, 2024 7:03 am
Hello tea lovers.
I found one really interesting tea that is a bit tricky. According a description it is "green" oolong, but....
Taste and aroma is combination of "green" oolong and first flush daarjeling. More FF Daarjeling than oolong.
"Tricky" is an "interesting" word here. Your post is interesting & stimulates my memory etc. Thanks.
Categorizing tea is tricky overall. Nepali & Darjeeling teas especially so. The white tea from Nepal that I drink & sell (Himalayan Snow) has the thin body of white tea always; yet, it will only truly seem a white tea if prepared to taste like one. One must not use very high temperatures and/or steeping times that are longer than 20 seconds for the flavors to be delicate. Flavor is still somewhat bold & complex for a white tea but are there gently enough when the parameters are right. (If one wants a drink very much like first & second flush black teas from the region, he can employ very hot water and/or long steeping times.)
I think lots of teas from Nepal offer multiple results to a great degree through variations of preparation.
Why I bother to search for white is for a thin feeling liquid (so think I will not use the word "soup" for the brew) & for no astringency (even if steeped in boiling water for so long bitterness finally appears).
Buying Nepali teas takes work or gambling because they vary so much season to season. I see you bought from Jun Chiyabari & quite some years ago I bought 8 1/2 kilograms of one particular black tea from Jun Chiyabari that was wonderful. I know that the same terroir, the same farmers, the same producers.... did not duplicate that season's tea for several years after. (I gave up sampling after that.)
One helpful characteristic of hard-to-catagorize Nepali tea is longevity. An opened pack doesn't seem to lose flavor over several months which is important to me because the flavors are not what I want more than a few times a month at this stage of my life. (Sometimes they are more than interesting to me, they are lovely.) Cheers