Showing posts with label Taiwan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Taiwan. Show all posts

Monday, 14 May 2012

Taiwan Red Jade 2011


Name; Taiwan Red Jade 2011
Type; Black, Taiwan, Nantou, Sun Moon Lake
Price;
£ 20.50 for 50 grams from Jing.
http://jingtea.com/tea/type/black/taiwan-red-jade

“Taiwan Hong Yu Hong Cha


Exceptionally fresh black tea from Nantou in Taiwan. Red Jade Black Tea delivers the concentrated sweetness and depth of baked fruit with uplifting eucalyptus aroma.
Infuse: 1½ tbsp of boiling water for 3 minutes
Appearance: Large brown twists of leaf.
Infusion: Deep auburn-red with a faint green edge
Aroma: Fresh eucalyptus combines with rich notes of baked fruit.
Taste: Full bodied and rounded with rich notes of caramel and hint of mint.”

Review; Beware reader(s) we’re heading into unknown territory.  I must confess this is the first black tea from Taiwan that I have tasted.  The appearance is so light that at first I thought it might just be an oxidized oolong.  I went to a tea tasting the other night, and contrary to one the inexperienced staff, black tea is not the most common form of tea.  Taiwan specializes in Oolong, and Greens.  Not blacks.  These be dangerous waters were in.


Again from Jing.  And thankfully Jing does do 10g packets (but still makes a mint off of you/me the customer), £ 20.50 for 50 grams of tea??  This is rivaling the price of some very nice Darjeelings (and at least there I can pretend I am drinking the champagne of teas). 

The dry leaves have a beautiful long leaf twirled appearance to them.  Very elegant and I am happy to see survived the journey from Taiwan to England, and from England in the postal service.  The dry leaves have a nice aroma to them, and remind me of sultanas.  Not that muscatel note, but more of the sweet prunish nature.  As I put the leaves in the pot, my first aroma that comes to mind is an assam/maltyness.  I’m presuming this is what Jing calls caramel.  But to me is distinctly malty.  I also detect maraschino cherries next, and lastly as the tea verges on over-brewing I get that wintergreen essence that one gets from a Ceylon.  (I guess this is also similar to the Eucalyptus taste in ceylons so maybe I just haven’t chewed on enough eucalyptus trees.)

All in all, and I hate to say this before I taste it, but this Taiwanese tea is smelling exactly like a nice OP1 ceylon to me.  Which isn’t really a good thing for Taiwan especially when Jing is making customers pay 20 pounds for 50 grams. 
Tasting the tea, it’s a bit soft.  Mild.  None of the previous described aromas are dominant really.  No astringency, and little bitterness its more or less a pleasant tea.  Maybe there is a hint of nuttyness to it, which would lead to the terroir of Taiwan, but all in all this is actually disappointing. 

I hate to sound like a tea snob (who am I kidding, I love sounding like a tea snob), but if I wanted to pay this much for a tea, I’d save my money, and buy a nice Ceylon tea and still probably have 10 pounds left over. 

Enjoy or Don’t, guess it depends on how much you love Taiwan, or how much money is in your bank account.

Taiwan my advice?  Stick to what you do best, Oolongs.  The world needs more good oolongs.

-Tea Fan




Tuesday, 7 February 2012

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”