Verdant Tea

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71

Sipdown 65 – 2024

Probably not something I need to purchase again. Slightly smoky. Tobacco, sesame, cinnamon.

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Backlog and Sip Down

I had this as an evening tea a few weeks ago. I’ve been backlogged on tea logs for a few weeks due to the shift change and various other life events. I barely remember this one, so thankfully I made notes.

Notes: Unsweetened chocolate, cocoa dust, & sunflower seeds.

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Sipdown

We have been drinking big pots of this tea hot, but today I took the last bit and on the final steep (number three this time) I gave it about 40 seconds and poured it over ice for lunch time.

It is extra roasty tasting now and that extra bit of flavor is probably good since I didn’t sweeten it all. It is a decent tea, but there isn’t anything here fight now that makes me put this on a wishlist. It is an older tea, though, and that may be affecting the flavor unless this is one of those oolongs that usually ages well,

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This tea was a gift from Nicole – many thanks!

This tea is no longer listed on the Verdant website, and the more recent Full Roast Wulong Revival says that the maker used a new process, so it would not be accurate to just use the description from the new one.

Dry leaf aroma is chocolate and the thing I can’t remember the name of..I think MadHatter knows. It is the smell of the art class in acrylic painting that I took as a child. I think sometimes people describe it as latex that makes it sound like a bad thing.

I was expecting this to be much darker and toastier, maybe even smoky, with full roast in the name. It is rich tasting even after all these years, so maybe this is a wulong that ages well.

I made three steeps by their parameters, using 5 grams of leaf per 200 ml boiling water. First steep was 10 seconds, second was 12 seconds, third was 14 seconds or so. The steeps were combined into a single pot and enjoyed with and after breakfast.

This is not at all smoky and full roast is a good description. It is a little reminiscent of the Tung Ting we buy from Tin Roof Teas. We will probably finish this one this weekend as it is one of Ashman’s favorite profiles.

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Sip Down

I started Tuesday morning with the Yunnan White Jasmine over a bowl of granola for breakfast. This was an odd combo of flavors, but the granola helped cut the bitterness of the tea. I may have used too hot water (205F) for the little bit of tea leftover. However, I hadn’t minded the bitterness whatsoever since the Jasmine was still providing some sweetness to the cup.

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Sip Down

I decided last night that I needed a cup of tea to get through the final hours of the weekend shift (thank goodness this is 4-6 weekends per year), and this happened to be on the top of the sip down pile. I know I over leafed the session, but there was only 7g left. I was too lazy to try to figure out the tea ware to tea ratio for the session, so in went all 7g into 120ml gaiwan.

Notes: The tea had a nice roasted seaweed flavor throughout. It was strong for the first 4-5 infusions before it began losing strength. I hadn’t noted anything else, but the tea lasted 11 infusions before I decided to head to bed. I’ll also note that my (tea) dreams were weird.

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Sipdown

Since I have botched the prep in the past, I was very careful the last two times I made this. Yesterday I had it at breakfast event though I said I would probably just use it for afternoons. It was so good, and even though the color of this one is pale and you think it has been a mistake to do only a ten second steep, it is so full of flavor.

With food, it was so silky and creamy that it was rather arresting. I stopped to appreciate the tea instead of just “washing down” breakfast. When the food is finished and you are just drinking the last of the tea, it comes off a little stronger and has a light briskness that is unnoticeable with food, but is precisely why it paired nicely.

A sad sipdown, and a someday re-purchase. Thank you, Nicole, for introducing me to this tea!

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This tea was in my package from Nicole. I was pretty excited to see it because there are quite a few of Verdant’s black teas that have been stellar over the years. This is from Spring 2020.

The aroma of the dry leaf in the package is filled with high notes – a little bready top with some rose over the classic tea scent. Sharp fruit, light. I was thinking this might not be a good breakfast choice and might be a little too sharp for my liking. (Spoiler – I was wrong.)

Then the steeping instructions – 5 grams leaf to 200 ml water for 10 sec. in boiling water. Seriously?

So I prepared it this way yesterday making two steeps to combine and giving the second steep a little extra time. The liquor seemed a little light for pairing with breakfast…

Surprise! The mouthfeel is creamy, in texture much like a good shu puerh that has been given a short steep, although not that flavor at all. The flavor is nicely nuanced and layered. I get a whiff of sweet potato like in Golden Monkey, a hint of fruitiness, and a hint of floral…oolong? And yes, turns out this varietal is more commonly used for oolong tea.

I had it again this morning and nearly botched everything. I guess I just wasn’t thinking. I started cooking the onion and red bell pepper in the skillet before realizing that I had not even brought in a duck egg. I had to run outside to the spare fridge and get the egg. Then I realized I didn’t have my frozen waffle things prepared, nor had I chosen a tea. I grabbed this one because it was nearest.

In all the frantic catching up and trying to make it so that all the food would be ready and hot together, I lost track of the steeping. That’s right, the mere ten seconds. But not by much. Second steep was another matter – forgotten a bit longer. I decided I might as well go for a third steep. Noticed that the kettle was set to 190F instead of 212F. At this point, who cares? Combined all three steeps in a pot.

This could be an example of forgiving for us all. The tea was as good as or better than yesterday. Creamy mouthfeel, no bitterness. Lots of oolong vibes. And it is four years old!

I enjoyed this the most when my plate was cleared and I was just sipping and watching the mockingbirds feed their young. This is a refined tea and not a builder’s breakfast tea. I would never add milk or sugar to this. I think it would ruin it, but everyone is different.

I think I will use the rest of this for light snacks or tea time where there is more focus on the tea, because it deserves the attention.

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83

Currently in the process of not buying any tea, whatsoever, until I sip down a good portion of my collection. The outside says 2020. Hopefully, it is not awful. We are doing a good twenty-second rinse to begin. Oh my ^^;… The rinse smells like dusty dust and straight-up dry dirt. Tastes like dry dirt too. Needs to be broken. I broke it apart with my fingers. Hot tea cake. A faint hint of usual oolong notes. Each steeping has revealed more notes. But I had to dump the first too. There’s only so much dirt I can handle. Apparently, I fulfilled that need as a child. I’ve lost count of my session. The dirt notes are now charcoal notes. The mineral notes of wet rocks and granite are also slowly making an appearance with each subsequent steeping.

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Sipdown 44 – 2024

Sipped through an entire 25g bag of this last week at work and now cannot remember a thing about it.

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68

I didn’t love this. There’s a minerality and noticeable charcoal roast, neither of which worked for me.

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Sipdown!

May Sipdown Prompt – a floral black tea

This tea was hoarded a little because it felt too fine to drink just any old time. I love most golden teas whether Yunnan or Fujian or elsewhere. The jasmine is well done – not blasting but not too subtle either.

This resteeps well. I used it at first for when I needed a really gentle pot of tea. This morning it was overleafed because there was too little left for a new session. It was well-suited to my breakfast and the extra strength was not bitter or harsh but simply more like a breakfast blend.

Delightful and would definitely repurchase with plans to drink it both ways as the situation and mood dictate.

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94

From a new Verdant order. Major props to Mrs. Li on this beautiful tea! An absolute treat. I’ve never had pre-Qing Ming Longjing before, so I have no similar comparators, but this certainly blows the other Longjing’s I’ve had out the water.

Medium-high sweetness that is beautiful. Mouthfeel is incredibly unique and chalky (in a good way). 1-2 mins of hui gan. Longevity is 4 golden infusions.

Apparently Mrs. Li has been at tea-making for 50 years. She has certainly perfected her craft. The #43 varietal was apparently bred specifically to bud earlier than classic Dragonwell varietals.

I’d say this was worth ~$1/g :).

Harvest: March, 2024
Cultivar: Longjing #43
Location: Longjing village, Zhejiang Province
Elevation: 300 m

Dry leaf: Artichoke.
Wet leaf: Artichoke, nutty.
Flavors: Artichoke, sweet, nutty, honey, chalk.

Flavors: Artichoke, Chalk, Honey, Nutty, Sweet

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 0 min, 15 sec
Leafhopper

Ooh, I’m jealous! I’m waiting for some pre-Ming Dragonwell from Seven Cups. I also have pre-Qingming Dragonwell from Teavivre and Treasure Green that I’m waiting to open until the Seven Cups order arrives. I’m going to do an epic green tea comparison tasting—but the wait is driving me bonkers!

Marshall Weber

Ohh dang I’ve seen the Seven Cups stuff before and now I’m jealous. Maybe I’ll drop the cash on that good stuff some day haha. I’ve never even heard of Treasure Green though. I can’t wait to see how those Longjings compare to each other though!

Leafhopper

Treasure Green is a company from Vancouver that offered the three Mingqian teas I was interested in: Longjing, Bi Luo Chun, and Anji Bai Cha. I haven’t heard much about them, but their 2024 Meng Ding Huang Cha, which I also bought, is pretty nice. The other contenders, including Verdant and Tong Xin She, didn’t offer Anji, and Bitterleaf doesn’t appear to be doing Longjing samples at all this year.

ashmanra

Ashman loves Teavivre’s pre-Qingming Dragonwell. We haven’t tried any others and haven’t had dragonwell in a while. I need to paw through my samples.

Leafhopper

Ashmanra, I had samples of their pre-Qingming Dragonwell several years ago, so I’m expecting good things. It will be interesting to see how it compares with pricier Longjing.

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Sipdown

This was such a mild sheng! I did a rinse and it was still so tightly formed that I did a second rinse and let it bask in the steam for a bit. The first steep was very mild, and my neighbor who was trying puerh for the first time said it was a bit weak for him. I let the second steep go longer and he liked that better, and the third steep still longer and stronger, and he really liked that. He said the initial aroma reminded him of suntan lotion that had been applied much earlier but it wasn’t cocoa butter smell. He didn’t think it tasted the same as the aroma he was picking up.

He and his wife felt like they initially got asparagus flavor but they were frustrated to identify the familiar something that they couldn’t pin down, something that happens a lot when we first start drinking good tea and try to describe it. I told them the third steep onward seemed to me to have mineral flavor followed by menthol/minty/camphor and he said YES! That is the sunscreen part! They noticed how the menthol built up in ontensity the more the drank.

I gave them lots of samples to take home and sent the rest of this with them as well, so this is a sharedown!

Kelmishka

“Sharedown” — I love it!

ashmanra

I can not lie – I got that from CameronB! :D

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Backlog

I was preoccupied when having the session, but I was able to record notes.

Notes: alcohol, gentler than expected based on the ethanol vibes from the aroma. Not punchy or too heavy in the roast. A good tea for a tea newb.

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Sipdown

A decent oolong, but somewhat unremarkable if you are seeking lots of layers and nuance. Toasty and reminds me of Dong Ding. Wonderful with breakfast. I would definitely buy it again if I wanted something with a toasty profile.

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90

Ended up enjoying this so much I purchased some. Not the cheapest tea, so I’ve been enjoying it sparingly, but it’s just really lovely and brightens my mood. Highly perfumed, and smells absolutely incredible.

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90

Sipdown 25- 2024

This was a sample given to me in my last Verdant order, so barely a sipdown but I’m still counting it!
Really pleasantly surprised by this. I don’t know what I was expecting- I love floral scented teas, but I don’t think I’ve ever had a yellow tea before. This is absolutely fantastic. I brought a mini gongfu set to work and enjoyed it that way at my desk. I’m pretty sure I audibly ‘wowed’ when I first smelled this brewed. It’ s a field of fresh orchids. Incredibly fragrant and it translates really well into the flavor. While I got mostly the flavor of the orchids, the yellow tea provided a really gentle base- somewhere between a white tea and a mild green tea? It also held up to 7-8 steepings with little impact on the flavor.
Just an overall fantastic tea. I’ve already added more to my Verdant cart.

Flavors: Gardenias, Hay, Honey, Jasmine, Lily, Magnolia, Orchid

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Sipdown

I am sipping this tonight while working, but I failed the last sipdown due to missing lunch or break to give it a moment’s thought.

TGY is one of those teas which make me reminiscence since it was the first tea that set the tea journey rolling. However, there are some which are similar to that first tea (Monkey Picked from Teavana); which the fondness left after years of finding better oolong. I’ll note that Verdant had some promising TGY samples along the way, but this one isn’t one of the few that I loved. It’s too much like the Monkey Picked from long ago – seasonings, unknown (basil? bay leaves?), and not really meeting my palate’s quality control. I do understand the appealing aspects of this brew, but it’s not for me…

Leafhopper

My interest in tea also began with Monkey Picked Oolong from Teavana. It must be a common gateway tea. Good green TGY is hard to find.

MadHatterTeaReview

Truly is, this was alright, but I’ve learned to appreciate far more complicated oolongs. :/

Daylon R Thomas

Rishi’s tieguanyin was my gateway oolong with baozhong from lupicia

MadHatterTeaReview

I’ve not had their TGY, but oolong seems to be a good gateway tea.

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78
drank Qimen Maofeng by Verdant Tea
1896 tasting notes

Sipdown 35 – 2024

Never quite connected with this one. It was pretty good. I found the sesame flavor unique, but I didn’t ever love it.

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78
drank Qimen Maofeng by Verdant Tea
1896 tasting notes

This tea is so interesting! I’m getting a really strong sweet nuttiness- like sesame brittle or halva. There’s a deep fruity flavor on top of the nuttiness as well- like sugared fruits, or a candy coated apple. Pretty tasty!

Flavors: Brown Sugar, Candied Apple, Nutty, Sesame

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70

Sipdown

Drinking this before work. My body and mind are at a low social level today, so I’m trying to drink some teas to get ready to head out at 1:00.

Notes: Nutty and reminds me of sweet potato chips. There’s a weird aftertaste that I can’t quite pinpoint.

Flavors: Nutty, Sweet Potatoes

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84

One of the “Meet the Farmer” teas at Verdent in their $5 for 5 (5g) tea special. This is a lovely little Wuyi, I brewed it in a 100ml pot, but probably would go bigger next time. Seemed to like short steeps which helps keep the astringency at bay, but more sensitive to temp than I’d expect. If you nail it, it delivers, but if not, it’s solid.

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 0 min, 15 sec 5 g 3 OZ / 100 ML

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88

A delightful black tea for folks who may not traditionally love black tea. The tannins here are tame and make way for lovely fruity notes with honey and cream. I really enjoyed this one.

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 0 min, 15 sec 5 g 6 OZ / 180 ML

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