Chen Chi Xing

Tea type
Oolong Tea
Ingredients
Oolong
Flavors
Not available
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Loose Leaf
Caffeine
High
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Kaylee
Average preparation
Not available

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  • “Honestly, this is far from my favorite thing that I’ve tried out of the TTB. Not the worst, just… not as good as it should be. For starters, it’s annoying that there’s not a lot of practical...” Read full tasting note

From Hillside Tea

Chen Chi Xing represents Mountain Tea who began their tea journey in 1977 with a small tea shop in Taipei perfecting the art of brewing, tasting and serving tea to the public. Like many craftspeople, brewing and serving was only the beginning, they yearned for more which led them to seeking the perfect land for tea cultivation. In 1987, in the Wushe mountains of Nantou County, they planted their first tea gardens. They have grown to have two more gardens since the late 80’s and have become famous in Taiwan and around the world for the high elevation, high quality wulong tea production/processing. The stark transition between day and night temperatures and cloudy, moist environmental conditions provide a long, slow, and hydrating maturation period for the the leaves, packing them with concentrated nutrients that translate to rich, unique terrior.

About Hillside Tea View company

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1 Tasting Note

1295 tasting notes

Honestly, this is far from my favorite thing that I’ve tried out of the TTB. Not the worst, just… not as good as it should be.

For starters, it’s annoying that there’s not a lot of practical information about what type of oolong this is or how to brew it. Based on the available info, it seems to be a high elevation mountain tea from Nantou County, Taiwan. No brewing instructions/recommendations are provided by the company. The leaves are tightly rolled, very dark green, and smell sweet and floral rather than roasted. So I took an educated guess and brewed it like an alishan oolong. Unfortunately, in 3 hot steeps and a final attempt to make iced tea with the leaves before tossing them, the best I could do is identify that 195f is the best steeping temperature for this tea to avoid any bitterness. But it never quite delivered on the promise of either its pleasant smell or what a high mountain Taiwanese oolong should generally taste like. It was just sort of… generic. I can smell and taste other things today, so it’s thankfully not an early covid symptom, it’s just the tea – or else I never landed on the perfect steeping parameters to bring out the best in the leaf which is why it’s important to provide brewing suggestions!

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