Bok

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drank Spring 2022 Dayuling by Bok
1725 tasting notes

Sipdown this morning, backlog from last night. I slop fu’d it, using the rest of the leaves to plow through it. I rinsed it for 30, and it was super floral and buttery. Second steep, I got stuck using the batroom, and it ended tasting like buttered and steamed green beans, spinach, and flowers. Good, but too dense. I flash steeped it the rest of the time at least eight more times, and had more variety of flavor. Orchid, pineapple, butter, jasmine, lettuce, hints of fruit, and more greenness. Very good in the middle. I’m really glad I got to try this one. It’s mid to higher tier compared to other Dayuling’s I’ve had.

Leafhopper

Glad you enjoyed this! I’d be interested to hear what your favourite DYL is. The one you gave me from Wang would be among the top contenders for me.

ashmanra

Slop Fu. I like it!

Daylon R Thomas

I stole the term from Andrew aka Liquidproust when he was on here. So far, my favorites are a cross between Wang’s, Trident’s, and Berylleb Tea King on Ebay. Granted, I’m also ranking in terms of affordability of what I’ve had so far.

Daylon R Thomas

Berryleb also changed their site on ebay, and I’ve had a hard time refinding it.

Marshall Weber

Oooo reading this is making me excited to try Wang’s DYL! Glad you like it.

I can’t even find Bok online. Where do you find the company?

Daylon R Thomas

Leafhopper found it on another webpage where they talk to tea sellers and makers directly. I’m trying to remember their name. I had a account for a little bit. Very knowledgeable and went over my head a little bit.

Daylon R Thomas

Bok is TeaForum, and she also trades with Ethan Kurland (mispelled) on there.

Leafhopper

Daylon, interesting that Berylleb would have one of your favourite DYL. I thought it was mostly a puerh seller. I might have to check it out.

Yes, Bok and Ethan are both available on TeaForum. Ethan also has an email address and ships in smaller quantities.

Daylon R Thomas

They’re not just Pu-Erh, not used to be. There were some good oolongs like the Lishan, DYL, and a Dong Ding

Leafhopper

Berylleb doesn’t come up on Google, so maybe they’ve changed their name. Let me know if you find them again.

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drank Spring 2022 Dayuling by Bok
1725 tasting notes

Tumbler styled the actual 2022 version, and it’s not as complex as the fresher 2023 crop, but it’s got more fruitiness than I expected. Pineapple popped in and out for sure with the usual fresh spinach feeling you get from most high mountain oolongs-AKA green tea for snobs, but I got more florals I like too. I almost hit my finger on plumeria, but not quite. Jasmine and orchid did appear in rebrew number 2 and 3 of this quasi-grandpa western style. I just let the 4 grams sit in my thermo with 190 F hot water and refilled it with hot water.

I will see I got more citrus than pineapple personally. It swung between orange and lemon for me. It’s not the top Dayuling I’ve had, but it’s one I’d easily rank higher compared to some of the oolongs I’ve had as of late. The flavors did change along as it cooled and brewed, so there’s more to it that I got to enjoy despite lazy styling it. I think I’ve got a little bit left of it for maybe one or two gong fu sessions.

Flavors: Butter, Creamy, Floral, Freshly Cut Grass, Grass, Green, Jasmine, Lemon, Lemon Zest, Orchid, Pineapple, Plumeria

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drank Spring 2022 Dayuling by Bok
1725 tasting notes

Thank you Leafhopper! I got the box, and I’m stoked at everything. This will stave me off other tea impulse buys for a while. I tried the 2023 and not the 2022 yet. I did it western, but really liked it. Had a grassy pineapple poundcake feel to it. Later steeps had heavy magnolia and then some lychee in steep 3 as it cool down. Loved it. I will do note for it on its own, but I will do it here so I can come back to it. Cheers!

Leafhopper

I’m glad you got the box! Yes, grassy pineapple poundcake is about right for the 2023 DYL. I need to make a note for this before I finish it.

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93
drank Spring 2022 Dayuling by Bok
439 tasting notes

This is one of the last 150 g bags of oolong I got from Bok last year. I also recently ordered a bunch of 2023 oolongs, and I’m already behind in drinking them! This Dayuling was the most expensive of the 2022 oolongs, though it was a lot more affordable than DYL from other vendors. I steeped 6 g of leaf in a 120 ml porcelain pot at 195F for 25, 20, 25, 30, 30, 30, 45, 60, 90, 120, and 240 seconds, plus some uncounted steeps.

The dry aroma is of pineapple, cookies, honeysuckle, orchid, and citrus. The first steep has notes of orchid, sweet pea, honeysuckle, cookies, and grass. The next steep adds pineapple, butter, and minerals. Steeps three and four have lovely pineapple, orange, and sometimes even peach notes along with the buttery florals. This tea remains very soft, and it’s sometimes a challenge to pick out individual flavours. Spinach and more minerality emerge in the next couple steeps, and the tea is a little drying. Subsequent steeps are primarily floral, returning to orchid, honeysuckle, and sweet pea with some grass, minerals, and spinach.

I enjoyed this tea enough to drink it almost every day for a month, but I thought the DYL from Wang was more unique. The fruity flavours are nice, but they dissipate quickly. They also tend to pop more in clay than in porcelain and when I lengthen my steep times a bit. It probably didn’t help that this tea is more than a year old, so it might have been better if I’d gotten around to it earlier.

Flavors: Butter, Citrus, Cookie, Floral, Grass, Honeysuckle, Mineral, Orange, Orchid, Peach, Pineapple, Soft, Spinach

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 6 g 4 OZ / 120 ML

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95
drank Lishan Hongcha by Bok
439 tasting notes

I bought this tea in my big spring 2022 haul from Bok, and drank it throughout most of the winter and spring. It’s wonderful, but the flavours are too well mixed and the tea too smooth to write a decent review. I wrote this when I was just finishing the bag, then lost it on my hard drive for a couple months, so here goes. I steeped 6 g of leaf in a 120 ml pot at 195F for 25, 20, 25, 30, 30, 30, 45, 60, 90, 120, and 240 seconds, plus some long, uncounted steeps.

The dry aroma is of honey, brown sugar, stewed cherries, cocoa, and wood. The first steep has notes of honey, stewed cherries, plums, cocoa, faint citrus, brown sugar, narcissus and other flowers, grass, and wood. This tea isn’t punchy like most other Taiwanese hongcha, but is soft and unassuming. A touch of astringency and some pleasant sourness pop up in steep two, along with more cherry, citrus, florals, spices (nutmeg?), and honey. The next couple steeps emphasize cocoa and rye bread notes, with the tea remaining smooth and hard to pin down. Steeps five and six are more woody, malty, drying, and grassy, though they still have a lot of fruit, honey, and florals. The next few steeps have notes of honey, malt, rye bread, wood, minerals, prunes, and grass. The tea stays sweet, smooth, and pleasant until it fades into honey water in the final long steeps.

I was told that this tea was made by someone who kept winning black tea competitions in Taiwan until he eventually retired, and this seems plausible. It doesn’t hit you in the face with bold flavours like some other Taiwanese hongcha (I miss you, Assam and Ruby 18 from What-Cha!), but all the elements are mixed harmoniously and the tea is a pleasure to drink. It doesn’t get bitter, even if it’s forgotten in the pot, and it’s both comfortable and elegant. It didn’t wow me as much as the spring 2022 Baozhong, but it also never disappointed. I missed it when it was gone and I’m ordering another bag this year.

Flavors: Bread, Brown Sugar, Cherry, Citrus, Cocoa, Drying, Floral, Grass, Honey, Malt, Mineral, Narcissus, Nutmeg, Pleasantly Sour, Plum, Prune, Rye, Smooth, Spices, Stewed Fruits, Wood

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 6 g 4 OZ / 120 ML
derk

I swear I’m not buying any more tea this year so I can go in with you next year!

Leafhopper

If I had a dollar for every time I said I wouldn’t buy more tea, I’d be able to buy even more tea than I already have! Maybe you have more willpower than me…

Having said that, it’s definitely worth getting tea from this vendor. Bok and Wang are my go-to oolong suppliers, with guest appearances from Floating Leaves, What-Cha, and Camellia Sinensis. (I’d love to add Tea Masters and Hojo to that list, but not this year!)

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98
drank Spring 2022 Baozhong by Bok
439 tasting notes

After enjoying a nice spring 2021 Lishan earlier this year, I purchased a whopping 825 g of Taiwanese tea from the same supplier. I’m swapping 75 g with another Steepster member, but the rest is all mine! If the other four teas I bought are as good as this Baozhong, I made the right decision. I steeped 6 g of leaf in a 150 ml clay teapot at 195F for 15, 20, 25, 30, 35, 40, 50, 60, 90, 120, and 240 seconds, plus many uncounted steeps.

The dry aroma is of lilac, orchid, honeydew melon, apricot, cookies, and egg custard. The first steep has saline, mineral, grassy, and egg custard notes, with lilac, orchid, butter, and honeydew melon. Where the tea really shines is in the lingering aftertaste, which features perfectly ripe apricot, pear, and dewy melon notes. The next steep introduces coriander, herbs, cookies, and something similar to menthol, plus more spring flowers and that same lovely aftertaste. Steep three adds even more florals like sweet pea and gardenia, plus honeydew, peach, apricot, and pear. The smell in the empty cup is wonderful! As the session goes on, salt, minerals, grass, butter, and florals continue to appear at the front of the sip, while the fruit blooms in the aroma and aftertaste, which can last for minutes. The fact that the fruit doesn’t show up as much in the tea itself is a little annoying, but that aftertaste makes up for it. The tea continues to be floral, saline, and sweet until the end of the session, with the honeydew, stonefruit, and pear in the aftertaste. I can also leave it overnight for one final steep without tasting any bitterness.

I’ve steeped this Baozhong in both clay and porcelain using temperatures from boiling to around 185F and various infusion times. Lower temperatures brought out more of the fruity notes, though boiling water never made the tea bitter. Clay seemed to produce slightly better results, though maybe that was due to the longer pouring time of my pot.

This is a fantastic Baozhong! I’ve rarely encountered such dewy, pronounced fruity notes in a tea, combined with such longevity and lack of bitterness. I wish more of these notes had shown up in the body of the sip instead of the aftertaste, but this is a minor quibble. This is one of my favourite teas of 2022 and I’m sad to say goodbye.

Flavors: Apricot, Butter, Cookie, Coriander, Custard, Egg, Floral, Gardenias, Grass, Herbaceous, Honeydew, Lilac, Melon, Menthol, Mineral, Orchid, Peach, Pear, Salt, Sweet

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 0 min, 15 sec 6 g 5 OZ / 150 ML
Daylon R Thomas

825 grams…wow…I know you already told me about it, but wow.

Leafhopper

Yeah, it was a big order. :) I’m sending 75 g to someone else and just finished another 75 g, so I’m down to 675 g. I have a feeling I’ll get through it fairly quickly.

Daylon R Thomas

I just sipped down quite a bit of my Taiwanese oolong too, and am about to finish the Jasmine Shanlinxi from Wang. I really want to get more and keep some for a future swap so you can get to try some of the ones I’ve been writing about. I’m also very tempted to try some of the Zhena Magic Hour tea. I don’t like the health nut marketing, but I used to really like Green Coconut Chai and Mint Tea. They’ve become more ambitious with blends and have a vanilla doublefolded pu-erh black blend with pomegranite and other flavoring that could be really interesting, along with so many others. They still lean towards Ti Kwan Yin for bases and blending for the oolongs, but have a Gaba and a Golden Monkey for other blends. I’m trying to figure out the best samples to get, but they are a minimum of $8 for roughly more than an oz.

Leafhopper

That Jasmine SLX sounds interesting, and they also have an Osmanthus Alishan. I tend to avoid scented teas because I don’t want to have anything mask the flavour of the base and I worry that they might use inferior leaf, but I don’t think this would be a problem with these guys. It would be interesting to try the Jasmine SLX if you end up getting it. I just opened a bag of spring 2021 Cui Feng, and wow, is it good! I get lots of citrus, pineapple, and maybe even stonefruit, plus cream, orchids, and other flowers. As with their other teas, it doesn’t get bitter with long steeps.

Those Zhena teas look interesting, though as you said, the health claims are a bit much. Maybe it’s a California thing. They do have some unique blends. I wonder how Tie Guan Yin works as a blending tea.

Daylon R Thomas

It’s a pretty common base. Fraser Teas in Michigan uses it for most of theirs, and it blends better with fruitier flavors than more vanilla ones imo. As for the Jasmine Shanlinxi…it’s easily one of my favorites since their regular Shanlinxi is the base. Cui Feng is always a win in my book too.

Leafhopper

Interesting to hear that TGY is often used for blending. It would be fun to try one of these teas sometime.

The final few steeps of the Cui Feng were a bit grassy, but overall, it was great! I’d say it was up there with the Shanlinxi Wild Garden. Of the five Wang teas I’ve tried, I’ve enjoyed this one, the DYL, and the SLX Wild Garden the most. I have many more to go!

Leafhopper

Yes! :) I kind of intended to send some of it in swaps, but the temptation to finish it was too great. It was also starting to fade a bit by the end of the bag, so I think I made the right decision.

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drank Spring 2021 Lishan by Bok
1607 tasting notes

From Leafhopper, purchased from Tea Forum member Bok – thank you!

The dry leaf has the most natural creamy and sugary sweet aroma I’ve ever smelled in a high mountain oolong. It reminds me of a touch of pineapple blended with coconut cream. The floral aroma mixes very well displaying fleshy notes of tuberose and magnolia and a more airy orchid.

Warming the leaf brings out more of a sweet vegetal, nutty character with spinach, creamed corn and macadamia with a good dose of nutmeg and a hint of kale.

Both the taste and aroma are delicate yet entirely intoxicating. Instant calm. Grass, tuberose, pineapple, palm sugar (those Vietnamese pucks), coconut, macadamia, ginger lily, nutmeg, cream, an overall slight umami quality. Very smooth with both balanced acidity and astringency that leave the mouth watering. The tea goes down with ease, finishing minty cool and buttery clean. Soul-warming.

The leaf has good longevity and with my hand, seems to express itself with numerous peaks and valleys. It’s not a very forward tea and needs some coaxing to maintain an even display of character. Even though the warm fruity, nutty and spicy tropical aromas and tastes would appeal to many, this is a leaf that might be best appreciated by tea enthusiasts with perceptive palates. I would love to see what others think of it, though!

Flavors: Brown Sugar, Butter, Coconut, Cookie, Cream, Flowers, Ginger, Grass, Kale, Macadamia, Magnolia, Mint, Nutmeg, Orchid, Pineapple, Spinach, Sugar, Sweet, Sweet Corn, Tropical, Umami

Leafhopper

Yeah, this is a good tea! You probably got more from it than I did.

Daylon R Thomas

I really liked this one too. I finished it up pretty quickly, and found a lot of the same notes. I especially got mint, pineapple, and a little bit of peach myself.

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94
drank Spring 2021 Lishan by Bok
439 tasting notes

I bought this oolong from a member of TeaForum who also sold me my 150 ml Hongni-Zhuni teapot from the 1990s. I’ve been drinking it for over a month now and have almost finished my 150 g bag. I’ve found that it does better with slightly longer steeps in the Hongni-Zhuni pot, but I’m reviewing it in porcelain because that’s what most people have access to. I steeped 6 g of leaf in a 120 ml porcelain pot at 195F for 35, 30, 35, 40, 40, 40, 50, 60, 90, 120, and 240 seconds.

The dry aroma is of pineapple, orchids, and grass. The first steep has notes of pineapple, orchid, sweet pea, other florals, butter, coriander, spinach, and grass. The next steep adds kale and umami, but also mandarin orange and peach. The third steep reaches peak fruitiness, with pineapple, stonefruit, citrus, white sugar, cream corn, orchid, lilac, spinach, grass, and umami. This tea is greener than perhaps I’d like, though some of that is smoothed out when I steep it in my clay pot. In the fourth to sixth steeps, the pineapple and florals are pronounced and the tea is creamy and sweet. The tea becomes more green and floral as the session winds down, until it peters out around the twelfth steep.

There’s a lot to like about this oolong. I enjoy the pineapple, stonefruit, and florals, and the aroma of the leaves is wonderful. It loses a few points due to its greenness and relative lack of longevity. Longer (around one-minute) steeps in my clay pot bring out a savoury, umami quality that one TeaForum member compared to buttery lobster, and while I thought this was fun, I prefer to emphasize the fruitiness with shorter steeps. I’ve made this tea almost every day and still look forward to my remaining few sessions.

Flavors: Butter, Citrus, Coriander, Cream, Floral, Grass, Green, Kale, Lilac, Mandarin, Orchid, Peach, Pineapple, Spinach, Sugar, Sweet, Sweet Corn, Umami, Vegetal

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 6 g 4 OZ / 120 ML
Daylon R Thomas

I definitely got the pineapple, though there was something about this that made me imagine sugared snap peas.

Leafhopper

I can see how one would get snap peas from this tea! Feel free to let me know if you want to participate in the oolong group buy on the discussion board. I have to order the teas next week.

Daylon R Thomas

COOL! I likely will. Is the discussion board on steepster or the tea forum? I am pretty set on what I’ve got, but if it involves 2022 stuff and something of the stuff you sent me, I’m going to have to sample them sooner.

Leafhopper

It’s on Steepster. I’ll send you a message with the price list and more details.

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