Mr. Chen’s Organic Heritage Wenshan Bao Zhong Tea

Tea type
Oolong Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Almond, Apricot, Balanced, Broth, Creamy, Floral, Flowers, Garden Peas, Green Beans, Lilac, Lily, Marzipan, Mint, Nutty, Peach, Soft, Soybean, Spinach, Sugarcane, Thick, Umami, Vanilla, Viscous
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by derk
Average preparation
Not available

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  • “Winter 2023, Lot 1289 I still don’t have internet at my new place, so tapping and swiping tea notes has been a chore on a phone. This will be pretty short. 5g, short steeps in 100mL porcelain pot:...” Read full tasting note

From Taiwan Tea Crafts

As we reached the bottom half of November, we expected that the winter tea season was over but the phone rang. Yuwen’s voice immediately shifted to a higher volume when replying. Spoken Taiwanese at high volume often appears to the listener as if people are arguing ferociously but the frequent courtesy words spoken implied that it was possibly Mr. Chen that was calling. You see, Mr. Chen is 96 years old and entitled to all the respect that elders are due but it now needs to be delivered at a higher volume due to his venerable age. Mr. Chen quickly diverted all our questions about his health as we could sense that he was excited to discuss his new winter production that he had just made. We were surprised that he had such a late crop as Wenshan winter teas were all picked and made in October. He explained that he pruned his bushes late this summer and it took a bit more time to get a decent picking table to crop. After receiving samples of the three consecutive productions made in the second week of Nov., we opted to take all three as they were that good! After sorting the tea at our facility and removing the many tiny tea tree nuts and stems, the finished tea shows an inviting lustrous green colour that livens-up when water is poured. The leaves are even and smallish and deliver a flowing buttery foundation on top of which fresh buttered green bean and pastoral flower aromas linger nicely. This is not a brash “in your face” Wenshan Bao Zhong tea boosted by chemical fertilizers like many producers are proposing now, and that is exactly what makes it such an appealing choice. Mr. Chen does not use synthetic fertilizers in his garden and his leaves deliver the elegance of a well-balanced tea, like it used to be the case in bygone days. With the help of a quick low-temp baking by Yuwen to re-dry the tea and stabilize its aromas, this tea is now available to all as one of our most authentic of this winter 2023’s catalogue. For the love of Bao Zhong tea but also for the love of Taiwan, and Mr. Chen, you must experience this tea.

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1 Tasting Note

1610 tasting notes

Winter 2023, Lot 1289

I still don’t have internet at my new place, so tapping and swiping tea notes has been a chore on a phone. This will be pretty short.

5g, short steeps in 100mL porcelain pot: Delicious and fragrant, though fragrance not as pronounced as a spring tea. Balanced sweetness with tannins (used very hot water). Floral sweet pea overtone, fruity and nutty mid, and gently cooked spinach/fresh pea undertone. I wanna say the umami that ties in with the green notes is soybean and egg yolk (in the dry leaf it’s lamb fat) and the colloidal nature is like water spinach. Rather strong cooling/warming sensation in chest .

This morning’s 3g:300mL bowl tea with 190F water is a soothing and nutritive broth. The green undertone is more pronounced and like stewed green beans. None of the tannins found with short steeps and very hot water. Still a bouquet of sweet pea flowers. Fruity-nutty mid has turned more nutty but it’s more of a suggestion than day the nutty notes of a song ding. I do get some peach and mineral notes in a clean finish.

If this is truly organic, I am very surprised as many organic teas don’t have this kind of complexity or umami.

I said this would be short but the tea seems to have coerced me into writing more than intended. I hope to come back with another note before the sample is gone.

Flavors: Almond, Apricot, Balanced, Broth, Creamy, Floral, Flowers, Garden Peas, Green Beans, Lilac, Lily, Marzipan, Mint, Nutty, Peach, Soft, Soybean, Spinach, Sugarcane, Thick, Umami, Vanilla, Viscous

derk

Western steep is thick creamy heady white lilies.

Leafhopper

Yum! I love baozhong!

ashmanra

We love baozhong and what a huge difference there can be between wet leaf and steeped tea smell. This one sounds lovely!

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