If you want to get me excited about a tea, put “stonefruit” in the description. The story of a guy reviving an old tea farm also won me over. This is the spring 2019 harvest. I somehow thought you could gongfu it, but the consensus on here is that it works better Western, so I steeped about 2.5 teaspoons in a 355 ml mug at 203F for 4, 6, and 10 minutes.
The dry leaf aroma is of soy sauce, plums, and raisins. The first steep indeed has a lot of stonefruit, such as apricots, raisins, and plums. There’s also caramel, roast nuts, dark wood, and a bit of that umami soy sauce flavour. As others have mentioned, there’s almost no astringency. The second steep has lighter raisin and stonefruit notes, dark wood, a little malt, and some tannins, and by the third steep, it’s just a generic mild black tea.
I’m not usually a huge fan of raisin notes in tea, but this one is still very tasty. I might try adding even more leaf to intensify the flavours, as I think my gigantic mug attenuated them a bit. Also, two steeps seems to be the limit. This is a solid tea that I’ll enjoy playing around with.
Flavors: Apricot, Caramel, Dark Wood, Malt, Plum, Raisins, Roast Nuts, Soy Sauce, Stonefruit, Tannin, Umami
Preparation
Comments
I think it was the combination of umami and sweetness that gave me that impression. Anyway, yeah, it was interesting!
Soy sauce. Interesting.
I think it was the combination of umami and sweetness that gave me that impression. Anyway, yeah, it was interesting!
I think it was the combination of umami and sweetness that gave me that impression. Anyway, yeah, it was interesting!