“I’m not actually sure what year this is from but I’m pretty sure that it is 2014. I have a lot of teas at the moment so I am trying to drink my stash down to more manageable levels.” Read full tasting note
“I had an absolutely lovely gong fu session with Dinosara this afternoon- my first gong fu experience ever! We began with this tea, since she had been raving about it so much, and I found the...” Read full tasting note
“Last year’s early spring picking, completely unopened (#23). I think I had been waiting until I finally finished my 2013 pickings, which I did recently. I’m only a year behind on my pickings; guess...” Read full tasting note
“As Verdant suggested, I started with a rinse, then did several steeps, starting with 15’ and increasing by 15’ each time. The pale liquor was green and vegetal, the leaves just short of neon green....” Read full tasting note
On our last spring trip to China, we were lucky enough to meet Master Zhang, a native of Anxi and lifetime Tieguanyin farmer. In mid-April, the very earliest harvests were just being finished. We sat in Master Zhang’s family home and drank the early Spring harvest just three days after he finished it. The early spring Tieguanyin from Master Zhang’s 1000+ meter terraced mountain tea fields in Daping, Anxi has a fresh vibrant quality unlike any Tieguanyin we have tried before.
While most Tieguanyin is simply floral, this early spring harvest tastes bright, wild and engaging with juicy lychee & nutty almond, buttery saffron and full cream. The body of this tea is as creamy as can be, full and thick with vanilla notes. The creamy body lingers on the palate in the aftertaste.
The floral lilac notes of this Tieguanyin are balanced with notes of juicy fruit and citrus like candied guava, sweet tangerine or key lime and even blood orange pudding. In third and fourth steepings, the florals seem to blossom on the palate, leaving behind caramel sweetness and engaging hints of schisandra berry. Sipping this tea is uniquely refreshing and quenching, an exciting embodiment of this unique, early spring harvest, picked a full three weeks before the majority of the crop.
Master Zhang’s tea fields stretch across the side of a mountain that is almost always covered in mist. It is so high up that the day we visited, it was actually in a cloud. The spring water feeding the tea is pristine, crystal clear and sweet as sugar. You can pick leaves right off of Mr. Zhang’s tea plants and eat them fresh, revealing the sweet, pure chlorophyl-packed nature of his tea. Master Zhang and all the farmers in his hillside in Daping are committed to fully organic farming techniques. The fresh flavor of the tea shows off their hard work.
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