Nonpareil Organic Long Jing
by Dragon Tea House- Tea type
- Green Tea
- Ingredients
- Not available
- Flavors
- Not available
- Sold in
- Loose Leaf
- Caffeine
- Not available
- Certification
- Organic
- Edit tea info Last updated by Dxniel
Average preparation
Currently unavailable
We don't know when or if this item will be available.
“I was told that they form when the tea is pan fried, and the hairs from the tea naturally clump together into these tiny balls, also indicating that the leaves used were young as they have more hair than older leaves.” From what I have read, yes, the presence of the white ‘fuzz’ is good; one Long Jing I recently purchased has it, and it is clearly a high quality tea.
Too bad you didn’t like this tea; personally, I really like Long Jing. Perhaps if you experiment with the brewing parameters you may get different results (green tea can easily get bitter if brewed too long, sometimes even if brewed for more than a minute).
Don’t get me wrong. I really like Long Jing tea myself as well, but just not this particular one. I didn’t brew it bitter. It is too savory and not as sweet and refreshing as the Long Jing tea’s that I do like.
Got it. I think I know what you mean by savory; it does seem like the earlier harvested green teas are typically lighter in flavor, but fresher and more complex, if that is what you are referring to, as in, if that is what you were expecting. I prefer that as well (over bolder flavors that tend to mask more delicate flavors).