Tea type
Black Tea
Ingredients
Black Tea
Flavors
Dark Wood, Malt, Metallic, Wood, Astringent, Cherry, Floral, Grain, Molasses, Raisins, Roasted Barley, Tannin, Bitter, Bread, Cherry Wood, Mango, Orchid, Passion Fruit, Rose, Round, Smooth, Wheat
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by derk
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 3 min, 45 sec 4 g 11 oz / 328 ml

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4 Tasting Notes View all

  • “Trying to focus on other things than I should, and that includes this tea. Can’t focus at all today and tomorrow an exam from Mathematics I and honestly… I have no idea. Thanks to derk and White...” Read full tasting note
    68
  • “I’ve had a handful of Thai oolongs, but I believe this is my first Thai black tea. Thanks, Derk and White Antlers! Though the leaves look long and twisty enough to gongfu, I followed Derk’s...” Read full tasting note
    71
  • “Spring 2019 harvest. Dry leaf has a wild look, large dark and craggly leaves interspersed with gold to beige glimmers of fuzzy leaf. They smell of wet grain, specifically malted barley mash for...” Read full tasting note
    68
  • “Very quick fly-by note, with thanks to derk … my first experience with a Thai tea, I think. Mild and subtle; the flavor reminded me most of unsweet molasses. I was going to try the final steep...” Read full tasting note

From Whispering Pines Tea Company

One of my Taiwanese connections recently took a trip to Thailand to venture into an old-growth tea forest and process some of the tea in classic Taiwanese style. The resulting tea is very unique, with a rich woodiness and briskness that reminds me of the best Indian teas! The cha qi is really beautiful and calming. This is highly recommended if only to experience a clear rendition of the unique terroir of Thailand! Limited, possibly seasonal rotation.

About Whispering Pines Tea Company View company

Whispering Pines Tea Company is dedicated to bringing you the most original, pure, beautiful tea blends. We use only the highest quality ingredients available to create additive-free teas teas inspired by the pristine wilderness of Northern Michigan. Our main focus is on customer satisfaction and quality.

4 Tasting Notes

68
1960 tasting notes

Trying to focus on other things than I should, and that includes this tea. Can’t focus at all today and tomorrow an exam from Mathematics I and honestly… I have no idea. Thanks to derk and White Antlers for small pouch of 3 grams.

But as I am here, and writing this tasting note, I will write it down and hopefully will do again something more important like THAT studying.

I am not a fan of this tea too. It is somehow mixed woody + strongly malty, with hints of metallic or similar taste. I did again two steeps, 3 minutes long and 5 minutes long. Both western.

The first steep was indeed very strong in malty notes. A bit of fruity too, somehow woody. derk says it’s cherry wood, well, it could be that. The mouthfeel was okay, but overall somehow, unbalanced towards the malts.

The second steep was milder in malts. The woody notes stayed pretty much same, and thus it is a bit different but still pretty much strong in quite unfamiliar notes.

Overall, I find those cups too heavy for my stomach. They are bold, and I am lacking the light notes which are common (at least in small quantity) in many other black teas. It’s just not my favourite, but again, let me borrow words from derk“Whether that’s due to the leaf not coming from ‘ancient’ trees, the processing, or my relative lack of familiarity with Thai terroir, I’m not sure.”

I agree; certainly I don’t have much experience in Thai blacks. Especially in loose leaf. I need to focus on this region for sure. It is a very interresting black tea, but I guess it’s too heavy for me. That’s actually interesting, as I prefer malty and full bodied teas, but for some reason I can’t explain well, this is a very different than others I have tried yet.

Flavors: Dark Wood, Malt, Metallic, Wood

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 4 min, 0 sec 3 g 10 OZ / 300 ML
White Antlers

When I drink Thai blacks, I treat them the way Thai restaurants do; lots of dairy and sugar. The ones I’ve had tend to be very bold.

Leafhopper

I tend to avoid breakfast-type teas, so I wasn’t surprised that this was not my favourite. I have an awkward 1.5 or so grams left and am thinking of cold steeping it. Good luck on your exam tomorrow!

White Antlers

Leafhopper It’s going to be an in your face black cold steeped, too. If you use dairy and sweetener in your teas, this one will go down a lot easier with both.

Leafhopper

White Antlers, I normally don’t use anything in my tea, but I’ll take this under advisement. :) I was kind of hoping I could dilute it enough for it to be okay.

White Antlers

Oh, sure. Diluting might be just the solution to make it palatable.

Leafhopper

Yeah, though that will get rid of the cherry flavour as well. Sigh. #FirstWorldProblems

Martin Bednář

It was certainly very bold tea. Probably I never experienced that strong (in flavours) tea yet. Kind of shame I hae used all the tea in one session. Maybe next time I have my hands on Thai tea :)

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71
440 tasting notes

I’ve had a handful of Thai oolongs, but I believe this is my first Thai black tea. Thanks, Derk and White Antlers! Though the leaves look long and twisty enough to gongfu, I followed Derk’s recommendation and steeped them Western, using roughly 3.5 g in a 355 ml mug at boiling for 3.5, 4.5, and 8 minutes.

The dry aroma is of sour cherry, grain, and malt. The first steep has notes of cherry, raisins, molasses, barley, malt, wood, and tannins. There’s a slight floral hint that I wouldn’t have picked out if Derk hadn’t mentioned it. This tea is a little astringent, which suggests that I should have gone with a three-minute steep. Subsequent steeps emphasize the molasses, malt, and wood.

Partly due to user error, this tea didn’t seem that interesting to me. I’m glad I got to try it, but I don’t think it is one of the more memorable offerings from Whispering Pines.

Flavors: Astringent, Cherry, Floral, Grain, Malt, Molasses, Raisins, Roasted Barley, Tannin, Wood

Preparation
Boiling 3 min, 30 sec 4 g 12 OZ / 355 ML
White Antlers

Nice to see tea making the rounds among friends. : )

Leafhopper

Absolutely! You’ve made a lot of tea people happy.

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68
1612 tasting notes

Spring 2019 harvest.

Dry leaf has a wild look, large dark and craggly leaves interspersed with gold to beige glimmers of fuzzy leaf. They smell of wet grain, specifically malted barley mash for sippers with beer-brewing experience. Warmed leaf smells of Grape Nuts cereal, molasses, black cherry and wood with rose and orchid florality. The steeped leaf reveals the heavy red oxidation.

Western steeps can be adjusted to create a slightly different flavor profile and body. Brewed with the recommended parameters (I think it was a half tablespoon to 8oz boiling, 3/5 minutes), I found the flavors and body rather mild and unobtrusive with smooth notes of brown bread, molasses and a hint of cherry. Using 1g:100mL made a full-bodied brew with a similar, though more pronounced taste. Cherry wood-malt aroma.

Gongfu brewing was honestly a waste. Some fruitier notes popped out in the first steep like passionfruit-mango. It quickly developed a brisk and tannic-bitter quality which it retained through another 5 infusions.

This tea did have the trademark cherry taste which I’ve experienced in every Thai oolong I’ve tried (which isn’t many). I’d call this an above average daily drinker black tea; it did lack what I would consider ‘gushu’ qualities, at least in comparison to Chinese teas. Whether that’s due to the leaf not coming from ‘ancient’ trees, the processing, or my relative lack of familiarity with Thai terroir, I’m not sure.

Flavors: Bitter, Bread, Cherry, Cherry Wood, Grain, Malt, Mango, Molasses, Orchid, Passion Fruit, Rose, Round, Smooth, Tannin, Wheat, Wood

gmathis

I really liked this one.

gmathis

I know you have some trouble accessing PM’s, so briefly, the mail came! DUN-a-weg to the locals.

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2981 tasting notes

Very quick fly-by note, with thanks to derk … my first experience with a Thai tea, I think. Mild and subtle; the flavor reminded me most of unsweet molasses. I was going to try the final steep iced, but oops - too late now! I chugged the last tumbler at my desk without realizing it!

derk

The highly oxidized Thai oolongs I’ve had have been syrupy, rich and sweet — certainly not mild and subtle. I’m very curious now. As soon as I finish my bag of The Ranger, I’ll be moving onto this Thai black.

gmathis

Good adjective, syrupy. That covers it pretty well.

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