Tuesday, 7 February 2012

Golden Monkey



Golden Monkey
Type; Black, China, Fujian *Edit 4/2/12

Price;
£ 2.00 for 100 grams from Better Beverage Company.
Review; Surprisingly this tea is rather nice. What got me to buy it was the large quantities of tips that are distinctive in this black tea. Chinese black teas have this nice malty, caramel sweetness to them that is often missing in other blacks. For value, I find this tea hard to beat. Don’t get me wrong though, Better Beverage should be embarrassed about some of the teas they are selling. The Darjeeling? I doubt it. Also much of their tea is stored next to coffee, which may be why the black teas I’ve tried from there are much better than the greens. Better beverage like Anteaques sells tea, not packaging, however with less of a finesse and care than Anteaques does.
This Fujian black *edit 4/2/12 is a wonderful example of what can be had from black teas in this region. Described by a friend of mine as the aroma one gets when one walks into a clean stable, there is a horse musk in the air. Good colour in the brew, rich amber, that one should be mindful of not to let over-brew.
Enjoy!
-Tea Fan

Formosa (Oolong) ((Teaism))


Formosa
Type; Oolong, Taiwan, Un-roasted
Price;
£ 9.50 for 50 grams from Teaism.
Review; “Formosa” from Teaism, is suppose to be a Dong Ding, or a Milky Oolong, but is impossible to tell due to the lack of flavour. Honestly considering where this tea came from, I have to say this might have possibly been the biggest disappointment in teas I’ve had for a very long time. “This top-quality Formosa oolong has large wiry leaves. Use 2 tsp per 8 ounces of 190 filtered or bottled water. Steep 5-6 minutes. You can infuse several times”. No no no.
“Top-quality”? BS. No que no batman an oolong has large wiry leaves, kinda part of the definition of oolong tea leaves. Infuse several times? Nope hard pressed for the first. I’ve decided to do an experiment where I’m going to let it brew over night and see if more flavour magically appears. Oh, update, looking at the website, spring 2010. Right…might have gone stale except that this tea was purchased November 2011.
Don’t Enjoy!
-Tea Fan
As my flat mate said, “If Tetley made an oolong”