For a spring project, I decided to compare three Mingqian teas: Bi Luo Chun, Longjing, and Anji Bai Cha. In total, I bought 340 g of green tea, which in hindsight is a lot of green tea. I seriously overestimated how much green tea I would be able and willing to drink, which is why this little experiment is still ongoing. For Part 2 of this three-part extravaganza, I bought four Longjings from Teavivre, Treasure Green, and Seven Cups.
Tea bush: Longjing #43
Location: Xinchang County, Shaoxing City, Zhejiang
Picking date: March 21, 2024
Price/g: US$1.04
As part of this project, I wanted to compare the heirloom Longjing variety with the more prolific Longjing No. 43, which is supposed to have a nuttier, less complex flavour profile. Seven Cups sells both of these teas. For the comparison session, I steeped 2.4 g of all four teas in 120 ml of 185F water, starting at 4 minutes. This produced very potent, not to say bitter, steeps! I later did a more typical session, steeping 3 g of leaf in 250 ml of 185F water starting at 4 minutes, refilling the cup as needed.
The dry aroma of these long, beautiful, mainly unbroken leaves is of chestnuts, butter, roasted grains, green beans, and spinach. The first steeps give me candied chestnuts, hazelnuts, roasted grains, green beans, and asparagus, with some woody bitterness. Did I mention these steeps are potent? Later steeps feature more candied chestnuts, along with beans, other veggies, and slightly bitter roast, with the final steeps being roasty, nutty, buttery, and vegetal.
Bowl style, the first few steeps have notes of roast, chestnut, hazelnut, grain, butter, asparagus, spinach, and faint florals. The tea has a strong vegetal backbone balanced by smooth, nutty, roasty flavours and no bitterness or astringency. The next few steeps give me green beans and a wonderfully round, nutty, buttery, roasted grain profile. The final steeps have notes of butter, nuts, green beans, and lettuce.
If you bowl steep this tea, it will reward you with a nicely roasted, sweet, nutty profile with pleasant beany notes and no bitterness to speak of. The flavours are well integrated enough that it’s hard to pick them apart, and there are absolutely no off notes. Overleafing this tea will yield less pleasant results. This Longjing is well made and deceptively simple.
Flavors: Asparagus, Butter, Chestnut, Floral, Grain, Green Beans, Hazelnut, Lettuce, Nutty, Roasted, Round, Smooth, Spinach, Vegetal, Wood
How nice! Sounds like a lovely tea gift, and a fun meeting of the Steepster-ites.
Poor Chadao kept trying to offer me the gaiwan to serve everyone at our table and I kept refusing because I’m a gaiwan Klutzy person! By the end of 15 or 16 tastings I was a bit tea buzzed. A good way to meet people and make an impression! Duh!
That’s awesome that you had a tea meet up! :D
Hi Bonnie, just read this post. I’m so glad you enjoyed it so much! I especially liked how you swirled the leaves during the second steep. In Chinese tea culture, using the gaiwan lid to let the leaves “dance” for you is supposed to allow them to be more “free” and release a better flavor. Like we talked about at the tea festival, it’s all about building a relationship with the tea. If you have more of this tea, you should try more steepings next time. I can usually get four or five, increasing the time by a minute starting with the third steep.
Oh my yes! My only relationships are with tea and invisible but real people on Steepster (except a trip to the tea shop or outing with a family member). In my imagination you are all handsome and lovely.
“beauty is that which is unrepeatable” so in truth, your imagination is correct ;)