Ten Ren Tea

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81
drank King's 103 by Ten Ren Tea
42 tasting notes

Amazing tea. I still have to specify the smells and aromas of this tea but when I had this tea it was absolutely amazing and the huigan was so intense, It was almost like I’ve just swallowed caramel and honey!

Flavors: Caramel, Honey, Sweet

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 0 min, 15 sec 4 g 2 OZ / 70 ML

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75
drank King's 103 by Ten Ren Tea
152 tasting notes

This is the 4th grade King’s oolong tea offered by Ten Ren, and I believe this is the lowest grade of the “green” variety of ginseng oolong which they offer. There is also a “dark” (darker roast) variety. I purchased a 5.3-ounce package for $19.99 at T&T Ginseng here in Las Vegas. It brews up an orange-tinged yellow color and has a slightly musty but not unpleasant smell. The taste is dominated by the licorice and it lends a pleasant aftertaste. The oolong seems to be a typical green oolong flavor with medium body, but not much character from the oolong is noticeable. You also get some hints of spice from the ginseng, I think. Despite this, I find this tea to be very enjoyable and would like to try some of the higher grades as well as the dark version of this oolong. The low grade on this is clear, with a good number of stems and broken leaf being present. Ten Ren’s packaging is excessive, with a cardboard box enclosing a tin which encloses the tea in foil packaging. I would rather not be paying for all of this packaging, not to mention the environmental impact. Ten Ren does offer 1-lb bag of these teas on their website, but I’m not sure this tea is such a great value at $61/lb. I would definitely be interested in trying some other brands in this style of tea.

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 3 min, 0 sec 2 g 8 OZ / 236 ML

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OK, experts, are TenRen and TenFu cousins? Stepbrothers? Identical twins? A friend whose husband travels shared a little two-teaspoon sample packet with print so small it was nearly indecipherable. Anyway, my bifocals are pretty sure the label said TenFu, but the logo was almost indistinguishable from TenRen and the lovely, long blonde leaves look just like the ones in this picture. Everything else was in Chinese.

Tea itself: Superb. Sweet wheat bread. Will resteep this last spoonful as many times as possible before it becomes dishwater.

ashmanra

Neat! Sounds nice, but I have no idea on the ren vs fu thing,

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79
drank Osmanthus Green by Ten Ren Tea
1759 tasting notes

My last few cups of this have been finicky. It seems too cold/hot water and over/understeeping make a big difference so I really need to watch for that sweet spot. That kinda sucks, considering I initially bought this as a convenience tea! Today, I finally got it right again. Not sure if its a sipdown or not, I may have one more bag kickin around. Either way, I’ll miss it! Need to find me another supply of osmanthus green. The oolong version I have at work isn’t very strong on the osmanthus

Fjellrev

Stupid convenience tea isn’t being so convenient now, is it?

Indigobloom

Nope!! That’s what I get for having high expectations of a green heh

Fjellrev

Haha I feel like I’m in the same boat, and that’s why I think I got tired of them and stopped buying them because it can be difficult to consistently steep them to my liking.

Indigobloom

Right?! except in my office we have the hot water heater that doesn’t go up to boiling. Which leaves me with rather few options. I’m kinda enjoying the challenge of finding teas that fit (and yet still frustrated, I guess it depends on mood lol)

Fjellrev

Ah yeah, that is quite the challenge. We have a Keurig at work that only dispenses hot water at a fixed temperature too so it can really limit a person.

Indigobloom

Oooh. Boiling? and does it taste ok. Hot water can atleast cool down a bit, which is what I do now (bring to boil and wait a minute or two for greens)

Fjellrev

I don’t even know for sure, but I wouldn’t say boiling. Maybe like 95°C? But either way, I do what you do anyway, just wait for a certain amount of time, even at home, and guess when to infuse certain teas.

Indigobloom

Yep. I have a temp control but it’s too big for my kitchen now and my family doesn’t care for it, so I’m saving it. No sense in wearing out the machine til I need it :P

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79
drank Osmanthus Green by Ten Ren Tea
1759 tasting notes

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79
drank Osmanthus Green by Ten Ren Tea
1759 tasting notes

I bought this because I needed a bagged tea that would be nice for the afternoon when I haven’t got time to worry about filling/washing steeping things. So I wasn’t expecting super high quality. But ya know what… I am quite pleasantly surprised. Seriously! Nice!
The balance is great, it’s pretty smooth, and I didn’t get any throat scritches. Love it!
I may raise the rating even more. This is biased me talking of course, the lover of osmanthus!!

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85

This tea, bought from the asian grocery store is pretty good. It is made by Ten Ren Tea which is the reason. The only picture I could find was of tea bags but mine is loose leaf, sold in bags of individual sized packets. The flavor of the green tea is dominent over the chrysanthemum. The Jujube and other ingredients are there too. I think the ingredient list was slightly different from what I found online. It came presweetened with rock sugar so there was no need to add any. So far this is the best find from the Asian market in Hempstead.

I brewed one packet of ingredients in 10 oz boiling water for 4 min.

Flavors: Sweet, Vegetal

Preparation
Boiling 4 min, 0 sec 5 tsp 10 OZ / 295 ML

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84
drank Tieh Kwan Yin Tea by Ten Ren Tea
1758 tasting notes

This tea and oolongs in particular have grown on me. It is a tasty but floral affair with the background notes of wood mushrooms often found in oolongs. I believe it to be unroasted but am not sure. The woman at Ten Ren Tea who sold it to me spoke little English so it was hard to ask questions. Ten Ren in Manhatten’s Chinatown is an impressive store with a couple of hundred teas and lots of teawares. It is better than their store in Flushing. This is one of their lower grades of Oolongs, They had one Oolong for about $500 per pound. If you are in Chinatown it is a store to visit.

I brewed this western style in an 16 oz teapot with 190 degree water and 3 tsp leaf for two minutes.

Flavors: Mushrooms

Preparation
190 °F / 87 °C 2 min, 0 sec 3 tsp 16 OZ / 473 ML
mj

The next time I’m in New York (I assume I will be at some point?), I will check it out for sure :)

apt

mj: Also check out Fang’s Gourmet, Tea Drunk, and Sun’s Organic Tea! I also heard that Ippodo is good and there’s also a pu’erh shop opening in Brooklyn.

AllanK

I have been to Fang’s, it is great, I didn’t like Sun’s, and I’m not familiar with Tea Drunk.

mj

Thanks apt! I’ll have to make a note of all those. No plans currently to visit NYC, but I’m sure I’ll be back in the future.

Allank, I follow Tea Drunk on instagram and it looks awesome! @teadrunk

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drank Guava Tea by Ten Ren Tea
3294 tasting notes

Sipdown # 72, again from Sil, who got it from Kaylee. Thanks girls!
I’m not sure how I feel about this one, it’s kind of medicinal tasting to me.

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57

Subtle flavour. Maybe it’s the food I ate earlier priming my taste buds, or maybe it’s steeped wrongly to my liking (fragrant and bitter), but something is not doing it for me today because I can barely feel it there. ’Tis a true shame, remembering how much I usually do enjoy it.

Moderation, moderation….

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 3 min, 0 sec

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57

Fragrant, bitter when oversteeped and evern slightly acidic.
No-nonsense, cleansing, not refreshing but quenching.

My mother’s favourite has been my basic staple for as long as I remember.
This is the tea that reminds me of home, of family.

Preparation
185 °F / 85 °C 4 min, 0 sec

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64
drank Guava Tea by Ten Ren Tea
15366 tasting notes

Another one from kaylee this one is a pretty delicious fruity tea. I think it might be best as a cold brew but as a hot brew it was a pretty nice guava fruit tea. It reminded me a little of the tea i had while in china.

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96

Ahhh. I am so very very excited about the fact that I got to leave work early today and don’t have to do any work tomorrow. I plan to try out some tea cocktail recipes tonight. I’ll let y’all know how it goes!

But to kick the evening off right, I shall begin with one of my all-time favorites. I had this with some cheese (Humboldt Fog) on toast. The jasmine aspect of the tea complemented the cheese well. As always, a comforting and delicious cup.

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96

Mmm. This goes beautifully with mildly spicy and garlicky sauteed bean sprouts with tofu. Just the right balance of green tea and jasmine with that ineffable flavor of Taiwanese greens that lingers drily in the mouth (see my previous tasting note for more detail – one day I’ll find the right words to describe this taste!). I’ve discovered that this is good for at least one resteep. Possibly two, but I don’t want to have that much green tea at this time of night.

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96

Mmmm. I picked this up in Taiwan and have mostly been hoarding it since my return. The leaves aren’t totally whole, but they are very coarsely cut. The dry bags are only half full in order to allow for room for the leaves to expand. And seriously, it’s kind of fun to watch the tea bag fill up as the leaves absorb water. For those of you who care, the bags are pouches rather than triangle bags, and I can’t tell what kind of material they’re made of – it’s not as obviously plastic as the triangle bags and looks fibrous, but is also pretty strong.

The brewed tea smells distinctly but not overwhelmingly of jasmine. The color is a lovely gold. But you probably want to hear about the taste, so here goes. The jasmine is definitely prominent here. Personally, I like it. The underlying tea is rather grassy, which complements and supports the jasmine beautifully. There’s a lovely, dry aftertaste that I encountered in most Taiwanese tea that I still haven’t been able to find the right words for. It’s sort of… metallic-smoky, in a good way. I realize that’s a totally useless description that makes no sense, but it’s the best I can come up with. If anyone has experience with this tea and can articulate a better description, please chime in!

Overall, this is a great go-to tea that’s easy to brew in a hurry, and will always be a personal favorite because it carries good memories of my trip.

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95
drank Spring Tea 2012 by Ten Ren Tea
11 tasting notes

This is a Taiwanese oolong. It is certainly a “Green Oolong” with a sweeter and flowery taste with a clear light liquor. The brew is very soothing and has a light aftertaste.

I brewed it with a yixing pot reserved for Oolong teas with brew times: 30s, 45s, 1m, 1:30m, 2m, 2:30m, 3m.

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87

Thank you so much to Anna for this delicious sample!

I have never sampled an Alishan Jinxuan before so I wasn’t sure what to expect; although, I knew it is a greener Oolong, and you can definitely see that. I wasn’t getting much aroma out of the bag, so I warmed my glass press and warm, creamy, toasty elements greeted me. The wet leaves were creamy, roasty, toasty goodness. The cup is a lighter yellow with similar, but milder notes in the cup.

The flavor is so smooth and creamy (buttery), with decent roasty, toasty notes enticing my palate. Very smooth-I am wondering if juicy is apprpriate here, even though there isn’t fruity flavors coming forth. On the back of my tongue, I did notice a definite herbaceous quality to this tea, that is secondary to the other qualities.

My second cup was more aromatic from the wet leaves (more creamy, roasty, toasty, & now vegetal) to the cup itself. The cup was more medium yellow, with a sweeter, more pronounced aroma. What a soothing & calming cup, with a balanced and most flavorful creamy texture. Roasty, toasty, and buttery, with vegetal notes marching forward. Yes, definitely herbaceous in nature, but not bitter. The most enjoyable of the three cups for me because of the balance between the toasty and vegetal notes. Steeped for 1.5 minutes around 195 degrees.

My last cup was still full and enjoyable, but the toasty, creamy qualities were fading fast while the greener, vegetal notes stole the show. While smooth, these characters seemed a little boastful, and I wasn’t quite ready for the turn of events! I was pleasantly surprised, but longed for the former flavors. I used boiling water for a 5 minute steep.

The next night I used the rest of my sample, which was more leaf than the previous night. I was hoping to, and managed to get four quality steeps. My steep times and temps were as follows: 1.5 min at 180, 1 min at 180. 1.5 min at 195, & 5 min with boiling water. To avoid getting repetitive, I’ll say that the qualities and desciptions were similar, but more pronounced, aromatic, and flavorful from leaf to cup to stomach! The 3rd cup is worth noting, because the roasty toasty, creamy notes hung on a little longer, before completely abating to the vegetal qualities of the last cup. I did seem to notice lighter fruity flavors on my palate (peaches, possibly peaches), in the 2nd & 3rd cups. Juicy is quite appropriate here for sure. :))

Overall, a very delicious Oolong I would like to taste alot more. I did enjoy the vegetal qualities in the latter cups as well. Thank you Alishan Jin Xuan, for a delicious tea experience, and a special Thank You to Anna! :))

Cupped: Tuesday-Thursday, March 27-29, 2012.

Reviewed: Friday, March 30, 2012.

Preparation
180 °F / 82 °C 1 min, 15 sec
Bonnie

Reading this I feel like Scooby Doo looking through the window of the butcher shop and salivating. Ahrrrrr (sadly)

TeaBrat

Great review!

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74

This tea was my first introduction to Oolong (in Chinatown, in San Francisco), and it was a “gateway tea” — it made me want to explore more Oolongs! While nowhere near the best or most interesting Oolong I’ve tried, I tend to keep this in the pantry. The light flavor is pleasant in the morning, and resteepings seem fairly consistent.

Preparation
180 °F / 82 °C 1 min, 30 sec

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86

Thanks for another delicious tea Anna :)). My tea experience did not coincide with the description of the tea, so this review will be continued. My luncheon cup was steeped as shown below. Dry leaf is very tippy, and smelled earthy to me. Wet leaves smelled earthy, and woody, and like roasted marshmallows, so there was a definite sweetness noted. Cup color was very dark brown-muddy brown, with an earthy sweetness in the nose. Flavor was very smooth, filling my palate with earthiness and mushrooms. I was wondering if the sweetness of wet leaf aroma would excite my taste buds, but if it was there I didn’t taste/sense it.

I forgot my leaves a little in my second cup and steeped for 4.5 min. Cup color was darker and sweet in the nose. Flavors were the same as my first cup, but deeper. I was surprised by the sweetness of the wet leaves, and I really enjoyed the earthy, liquid mushrooms in my cup! This tea is smooth and delicious, and I really don’t believe it can be oversteeped. This is tea I could drink quite often, not every day, but I don’t drink any tea every day.

Cupped: Tue, 11-22-11. Reviewed: Wed, 11-23-11.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 3 min, 45 sec

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89

The leaves here are uniformly dark and around 1/4 an inch in length. The aroma is extremely pungent and smells heavily of dark wood and campfire smoke.

The aroma from the spent leaves is decidedly weaker. I’d say less than half as strong, but clearly still camp firey. There’s light sweetness to the spent aroma which doesn’t carry through any of the infusions, though it’s also lingering in the aroma from the extra-dark amber liquor.

The smokey, fired, woody flavors some out nicely throughout the brew and across three or four steepings. Unlike lesser grade versions of this tea, there’s relatively little astringency and almost no dryness on the palate. Just a smooth, steady, consistent campfire flavor.

If you like smokey teas, you’ll love this Lapsong Souchong. You may also enjoy it if you like Pu’erhs.

Preparation
Boiling 5 min, 0 sec
looseTman

Have you tried their Organic Keemun?

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