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
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.
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!
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.
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.
Oh, sure. Diluting might be just the solution to make it palatable.
Yeah, though that will get rid of the cherry flavour as well. Sigh. #FirstWorldProblems
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 :)