Green Terrace Teas

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Recent Tasting Notes

My Green Terrace Tea samples arrived today and I was so excited to come home and try this out. It is really a nice cup of tea. It’s velvety smooth with a delicious honey sweetness and a nice bit of malt. There is also a little touch of dried fruit, like raisins, to give this just a little but more depth. Yum! Thank you to the wonderful people at Green Terrace Teas for sending this my way :)

Cheri

All of the reviews people have written for this tea make it sound delicious.

Lariel of Lórien

Glad I picked this one, now it would only get here.

VariaTEA

It is quite nice and certainly worth a try.

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90

After an incredibly busy day I am finally at home and sipping on a cup of tea. Hallelujah! Even though it’s fairly late for caffeine I’m feeling like I need the boost, so I settled on a black tea, and I’m pleased as punch to have picked this one out of my “drink this first” bowl o’ teas. The taste continues to remind me of honeyed oat bread with hints of stone fruit slipping in here and there. I like the subtle natural sweetness of this tea. As the tea cools the sweetness really highlights the oat-like notes. So. Very. Yummy.

Bumping my rating up a bit. I’m a fan of this one.

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 3 min, 0 sec 2 tsp 8 OZ / 236 ML

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90

This tea reminds me of honey oat bread. The sweetness is stronger than I was expecting, but in the most delightful way. There is a sweet, deep honey flavor without it being cloyingly sweet or artificial tasting. There is also a hint of oat and spice that give this tea a wonderful burst of flavor at the end of the sip. There were hints of other sweetness – raisin and stone fruits – but the honey note is the star.

This is a tea I’d love to serve at my next tea party. I can see this being a real crowd pleaser and adaptable to many palates. Although I did not add sugar to my cup I can see it holding sugar well. I think milk would cover up a lot of the flavors in this tea.

Thank you Green Terrace Teas for the chance to sample this tea!

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 2 min, 0 sec 1 tsp 6 OZ / 177 ML

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85
drank Gui Fei Oolong by Green Terrace Teas
479 tasting notes

The leaf has a darker fruitier smell than other green oolongs, though brewed it returns to the green and floral, slightly toasty scent (though I think I detect something like apple in there).

I brewed a western two minutes in a teacup, getting a honey yellow liquid; it’s smooth, and I’m mainly getting cream and apple. Not as buttery as some oolongs, although it’s still got that similar mouth-feel to it. Toastier notes when I breathe out, with a touch of honey. It’s really nice to just roll around on your tongue, and I can see myself definitely buying more of this to enjoy.

All three samples came very nicely packaged in labeled vacuum-sealed bags. Long ago I invested in a box of tiny clamps from the office supplies aisle to keep track of my tea samples (I’ve only got the three now, but when I went on a sample-buying spree through Teavivre…).

Since I didn’t rinse it beforehand, the leaves opened up a lot more during the second steep (also 2 minutes). Sticking my nose in there for that sweet appley smell. Taste is definitely stronger; I’d almost have kept the second steep to 1:30, maybe (but it’s not bitter); the apple’s gone completely. Toasty butter, maybe a bit of cream, definite floral notes.

Third steep was definitely a little sharp, very floral.

Preparation
180 °F / 82 °C 2 min, 0 sec 1 tsp 6 OZ / 177 ML

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85
drank Gui Fei Oolong by Green Terrace Teas
479 tasting notes

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85

I’m more used to the green end of the oolong spectrum, so it’s fun to try some on the black end of the spectrum. This one has a lot of honey notes, as well as a fruitiness. I agree with CameronB its like a raisin. There’s also a natural sweetness, which just solidifies the honey and raisin notes.

I’m also getting a bread-like note in this. And by the 4th steep the oolong takes on some green tea characteristics. It gets lighter and slightly vegetal. This is a great oolong to have if you want to get to experience some of both ends of the oolong spectrum with on tea.

Preparation
190 °F / 87 °C 0 min, 45 sec 6 g 8 OZ / 236 ML
Cameron B.

Yum yum raisin tea! :P I’m glad you enjoyed it too. It seems everyone is really liking Green Terrace Teas so far!

Mandy

Yeah, the two I’ve tried so far have been quite good. They both had similar flavor profiles though, which I thought was funny, because it’s my first time having teas with such strong honey notes, haha.

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92
drank Honey Black Tea by Green Terrace Teas
1719 tasting notes

Finished this one off this morning. A very tasty sweet black that is extremely smooth.

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92
drank Honey Black Tea by Green Terrace Teas
1719 tasting notes

I’m too lazy to review something new today.
This one is open and I know it is excellent.
The end ;)

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92
drank Honey Black Tea by Green Terrace Teas
1719 tasting notes

I really like this one. Unfortunately for me, I just did a breathing treatment and it is covering up a lot of the wonderful subtle notes. Still really nice.

Had to laugh this morning. Got on Steepster and there were 67 spam entries. I noticed they were still being posted as I was viewing. So, I flagged the accounts and it wiped them. Immediately, one of the spammers signed right back up again with the same name and started over. Flagged them again. Hopefully they have given up for the day.

More pointless stories – Yesterday, we walked out the door as the late evening sun shone through under the clouds. The tree line lit up with yellows, golds, and orange. It was one of those WOW! moments. I thought awesome, I’ll take a picture. So I grabbed by phone. That’s when I realized that if a UFO landed in front of me and bigfoot ran out of the woods, I would have no proof because I don’t have a clue how to use this thing. I then couldn’t figure out how to get it back to phone mode. I am so last century.

Sami Kelsh

Oh man, boo spammers! What a bunch of poops. POOPS, I SAY.

As to the sunset, I’ve been a working photographer for like 10 years now (oh I feel old) and I can’t figure out how to make sunsets look nice with my relatively state-of-the-art phone. Don’t sweat it. ;)

Angrboda

Let me guess, our dear friends from Solahart? I haven’t seen any spam in days. I must be online at the wrong hours. You other lot are efficient.

gmathis

I have to beg my fifth graders’ pardons weekly when technology fails me. Which is why I don’t teach with it much. And do you know what? I have never had a kid tell me, “You know, we don’t watch enough videos in here.”

K S

Angrboda – between 4 and 6 AM eastern US time, our buddies are pretty active.

Gmathis – I used to love tech. I set up the computer systems in the office starting way back in the early days and was responsible for managing all the CAD systems up until I was put out to pasture 2 years ago, and I can’t use a camera on my phone. More importantly, I don’t really care I can’t figure it out.

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92
drank Honey Black Tea by Green Terrace Teas
1719 tasting notes

A lot of times I read a company’s description and wonder, “How did they come up with that?” Here I thought Green Terrace Teas was pretty spot on. The dry leaf smells of oats and honey. I used 3.5 g and steeped 1 minute with 190 F water. The wet leaf is like honey on raisin wheat bread. The taste is similar but adds a wine like note and malt. As it cooled I definitely picked up on the peach and plum in the aftertaste.

Cup two was the best of the four I prepared. The flavors were more pronounced. I also picked up a spicy note like maybe cinnamon apple? Honestly, I never could decide what it was. There is also a lot of caramel present.

Cup three was my least favorite. Too light. I added sweetener to coax flavor out of it. Light honey, mineral, earthy (as in woodsy). The last two were the most interesting as I wasn’t expecting them.

Cup four I steeped 3 minutes. It was still light but stronger than the third. I did add sweetener. This one was a mix of the previous cups. The honey was present from the first along with the spicy note of the second and the mineral/earthy notes of the third. In this cup I decided the earthy was actually more of a nutty touch.

I really enjoyed drink on this one this afternoon and look forward to trying my other samples.

Preparation
190 °F / 87 °C 1 min, 0 sec 4 g 6 OZ / 177 ML
gmathis

Sounds great…not familiar with the company. Online vendor?

K S

They posted on the discussion board free samples for reviews but yes, online www.greenterraceteas.com

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88

Sipdown! (147)

Yummy, still love this one. It’s all honey, grains, and raisins! This is the tea that inspired me to try other oxidized oolongs. I probably won’t repurchase this one, at least not right away, just because I’ll most likely be trying other oolongs for a while yet. Thanks again to Green Terrace for the round of free samples! Your teas are quite lovely. :)

Preparation
190 °F / 87 °C 4 min, 0 sec 1 tsp 8 OZ / 236 ML
Blodeuyn

I need to stop reading your tasting notes. I want all of your teas! :)

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88

Another gong fu adventure today! I loved this tea when I tried it western style, and I figured oolongs are generally good candidates for gong fu brewing, right? I was in the mood for raisiny autumn loveliness. I used the same vessels as last time, two 10 ounce mugs, the first one with a lid for brewing, and the second for drinking out of. I used TeaVivre’s parameters for a similar tea, but altered the amount of tea based on TheTeaFairy’s suggestion of 1 gram of tea per 1 ounce water.

The method: 4g tea in 4oz water, 185 degrees F, 10s rinse/30/45/60/70/80/90/100s

Rinse (10s): very light flavor with pastry, honey, golden raisin. A promise of things to come! :D

Steep 1 (30s): light pastry with honey, hint of autumn leaves, raisin (not golden)

Steep 2 (45s): stronger pastry with toasted nuts and honeyed raisins, underlying roasty leaves

Steep 3 (60s): very raisiny with fig, honey becomes molasses, autumn leaves, roasted grain

Steep 4 (70s): very similar to steep 3

Steep 5 (80s): roasted grain changes back to pastry, golden raisin, honey (my favorite steep)

Steep 6 (90s): flavor becoming much lighter, pastry with lightly toasted almonds

Steep 7 (100s): too light, somewhat similar to rinse, reminds me of white tea with its hay notes

I had a lot of fun and I loved seeing the flavor of this change, and then change back to almost the same as the early steeps. Very interesting. And I enjoyed all the permutations in between! I really want to try more oxidized oolongs now, especially if they’re similar to this one.

One question, I noticed a few of the steeps had a little bit of underlying bitterness. Not enough to make them less enjoyable, but I just wondered why it was there. Any ideas or suggestions would be good! :D

Flavors: Autumn Leaf Pile, Fig, Grain, Hay, Honey, Molasses, Pastries, Raisins, Roasted Nuts

Preparation
185 °F / 85 °C 4 g 4 OZ / 118 ML
SarsyPie

Not sure about the bitterness, but I would be interested in a reply from someone more experienced, so I’ll watch and hope for a reply. So glad you had a successful gongfu session!!!!

boychik

I’m not an expert but was pretty successful with OB by Teavivre
http://store.thechineseteashop.com/mobile/category.aspx?id=23&404;http://store.thechineseteashop.com:80/Yixing_Teapots_s/23.htm=
My verdict: shorter steeps

boychik

http://steepster.com/boychik/posts/237585#comments
Ignore my previous link, I’m using iPhone . Stupid iphone

Cameron B.

Yeah, the instructions for their Oriental Beauty are the ones that I used. I think I have enough for another session, so maybe I’ll start shorter next time or something…

Cameron B.

Oh, okay. I will try those parameters next time. :)

TheTeaFairy

Very insightful review cameron :-)
I love OB, being a leaf hopper bitten tea. But there’s distinctive taste to it very hard to define that could be interpreted as bitterness. I love that taste, and it’s hard for me to understand if that,s what you got.
I can’t really give good advice on gongfu steepings cause I’m one who never counts. I just go with the smell and how i liked the previous steep. I suck at following instructions :-o

apt

that’s light for leaf! I would do 6-7g for 4oz.

green-terrace-teas

Cameron – thanks for another great review! If you are looking to explore other oxidized oolongs, we would also recommend trying Gui Fei Oolong, which has a similar taste profile to Eastern Beauty. You can read some tasting notes here: http://steepster.com/teas/green-terrace-teas/46710-gui-fei-oolong. Have a great day!

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88

I have so much tea to try right now, but I figured I should probably get through the teas I have that were provided in exchange for reviews. Don’t want to make anyone wait! Confession: I have never had an oxidized oolong before. However, I have great faith that I will enjoy this category of teas since they seem similar to some black teas. The dry leaf for this one is very beautiful. The leaves are large and dark, and they’re slightly twisted. They seem so light and fragile in comparison to black tea leaves. The scent is quite mild but sweet, with fruit and honey notes. I checked Green Terrace’s website for parameters, and I used the middle of both temperature and time.

The aroma reminds me of raisins, sweet but with deep and dark flavor. Maybe a bit of dried cherry too, along with some honey. This tea just says “autumn” to me. There’s something about the taste that reminds me of the autumn leaves, kind of woodsy but in a mild and slightly toasty way. It seems so full of dark dried fruits – raisins, cherries, dates, figs… Yum! And there’s a lovely burnt sugar note somewhere in there too.

Such a great experience for my first dark oolong! I have enough left to do some gong fu, so I’ll add this one to that list… Before boychik yells at me! ;)

Thanks again to Green Terrace Teas for providing this sample for review.

Flavors: Autumn Leaf Pile, Burnt Sugar, Dried Fruit, Raisins

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 3 min, 30 sec 3 tsp 8 OZ / 236 ML
Marzipan

I got so tea drunk on this yesterday. It was an amazing feeling.

Cameron B.

Hah, we’ll see if it makes me feel that way too. What were your steeping parameters for your gong fu session?

Marzipan

I did it at 195, steeps from 45 seconds and up. I sort of went by their website.

Cameron B.

Okay, thanks! I’ll be sure to look there. :)

Marzipan

It’s a little confusing because they have one page with all of their brewing instructions, instead of them being with each tea.

boychik

I hear ya;-)

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90

Mmm, honey. That’s the biggest note I notice here. The mouth feel is quite thin, but pleasant. I’m also getting a bread-like aroma, and together it’s like eating a piece of fresh warm bread smothered with honey in the morning. I dont know if it because of my method, but I’m not getting much fruit notes, just lots of sweet delicious honey. I was able to get 5 cups out of one serving.

Preparation
Boiling 1 min, 0 sec 6 g 8 OZ / 236 ML

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95

Happy lazy summer Sunday everyone, it has definitely been one of those for me. I have spent the majority of my day sitting at my computer working on various things or watching Babylon 5 with Ben. It is one of those days where just being a lump was an option, and I was ok with that.

Today’s tea is another from Green Terrace Teas, Honey Black Tea, a naturally sweet black tea from Nantou, Taiwan. Well, I certainly like black teas that have sweet notes, so let us have a little bit of tea! The aroma of these long, curly, leaves is indeed quite sweet and very rich! There are notes of honey, beet root, roasted peanuts, tobacco, and a touch of roses. I am not sure I have ever sniffed a dry leaf that was so complex and had all the aromas work together in harmony.

Into the gaiwan the leaves go for a brief steeping. The aroma of the now wet leaves is a sweet and rich blend of roasted peanuts, yams, molasses, and a tiny touch of spice at the finish. The liquid is intensely sweet with notes of cocoa butter, caramel, yams, and a touch of sweet cream. It smells quite decadent.

First steeping, well, that is certainly delicious! The taste starts out somewhat mild with roasted peanuts and a touch of spicebush. This fades into an explosion of rich caramel and molasses sweetness, this sweetness lingers for quite a while as a tasty aftertaste. The mouthfeel is very smooth and velvety.

The aroma of the second steeping is so strong, there are intense notes of molasses, roasted peanuts, caramel, and raw honey. I like that I can smell my teacup from the other side of my desk, it makes waiting for it to cool enough to drink a pleasant experience. The taste is just as rich as the aroma, with strong notes of molasses, cocoa, and spicebush. The finish is honey sweet that leaves a nice lingering sweet aftertaste between sips.

For the third and final steep, the aroma is still pretty rich and sweet, with strong notes of yams and caramel, there is a mild finish of spicebush, giving the aroma warm quality. The taste, while not as intense as the previous steep, is still very sweet and rich. There are notes of cocoa, yams, and molasses. As before the aftertaste is one of honey that lingers. This tea is really quite fantastically sweet, it lives up to its name perfectly.

For photos and blog: http://ramblingbutterflythoughts.blogspot.com/2014/07/green-terrace-teas-honey-black-tea-tea.html

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91

This is my first time trying a Four Seasons oolong, so yet again, I’m very excited by these samples from Green Terrace Teas. They are vacuum packed in gold foil pouches that are lovely and keep the tea very well stored.

Brewing this Gongfu style in a gaiwan, after an initial rinse, the aroma of the leaves is very rich with scents of honey, custard, cinnamon and apples. It smells a bit like a pecan pie or apple pie or some other delicious pastry. It is heavenly. The taste is mild and sweet with the same qualities.

The second steeping tastes lightly floral with hints of toasted pecans and cream. It has a wonderful warm and mild flavor, quite balanced with the floral and nutty tones on opposing ends of the taste spectrum. By the third steeping, the flavor is more floral, but it is very easy on the tongue and not overly strong. It is still also very creamy and mildly sweet. The lingering aftertaste is very nice. Four steepings in the floral qualities emerge a bit more, still underscored by a caramel-like sweetness. Fifth steeping is less floral and more of the sweet honey and nutty flavors with a bit of caramel apple, becoming once again very mellow. I think this tea is at its best in the early and late steepings when the floral notes are more subdued.

I think this is a wonderful Four Seasons oolong and I recommend it. It has a very clean taste and a sweet and balanced flavor.

I brewed it for 15 seconds in a gaiwan, adding 15 seconds each time at 194F/90C with 4.5g of tea per 100ml of water.

Flavors: Apple, Caramel, Cinnamon, Creamy, Floral, Honey, Pecan

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 0 min, 15 sec 4 g 3 OZ / 100 ML

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88

This was the oolong that made me love both oolongs and Gong Fu. I loved the sample I got from Green Terrace and then reordered more, so it probably is going to be a staple.

I had a crappy conference call with the world’s crankiest old man client and it put me in a bad mood, so I shut down work a little early and looked for my zen in the bottom of a teapot. And, it worked! :)

This is starting to be my go to happy tea.

MzPriss

I will be trying mine soon…

Cameron B.

I love this tea! And it was very good when I did it gong fu style. :D

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88

I am either a very lazy tea drinker or very busy one, because I very rarely do gongfu style. Most often I make a big mug full and take it to my desk. But I felt to review this tea appropriately I should set aside some time for gongfu.

I need to get a bamboo tray but haven’t found one yet that speaks to me. I improvised with a large Fiestaware tray (how’s that for mixing cultures) with a cloth on it.

I enjoyed this tea very much, and the 90 minute gongfu session I had with it was both relaxing and rejuvenating. The leaves were dark, darker than in the picture. I prefer oxidized teas and Green Terrace had suggested this one. They were spot on. The first two infusions were caramel colored and fully flavored, almost like a very light black tea. The third through fifth were more golden amber, and with more delicate flavors. It probably could have gone through another infusion but I was pretty full of tea at that point and stopped. A very lovely tea, and a great oolong to try if you normally drink black teas, as I do.

boychik

I love your attitude: no tray no problem;)
I love the tray. Let us know the experience with the seller
About tea: OB famous for the peachy chestnuts notes. Did you detect any?

Marzipan

I’m not the best at picking out flavors, I do think I got some peach, not chestnut I don’t think, but it don’t think I have ever had chestnuts (I’m not a big nut person).

The seller had a lot of good feedback.

Marzipan

Also I liked the little water catcher insert versus it just sitting on a layer of wood. I have read that they don’t last a long time if too much water is involved.

Mandy

I use a cookie sheet xD

Dinosara

Ooh, thanks for the link on that tray. I’ve been looking for one (casually) for a while, and that one is just what I am looking for.

Marzipan

You’re welcome!

MzPriss

For a long time, I just used a bowl on my marble table top and dumped water in and cleaned up my table top. Now I have this one:

http://shopmandalatea.com/tea-wares/tea-trays/bamboo-tea-desk-with-plastic-catchment-tray.html

and I LOVE it because its pretty and this is a good deal on it – it costs way more at Enjoying Tea (where I bought it before I saw Garret had a way better price :(

Marzipan

That’s really pretty!

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90

Sipdown! (153)

I’m undecided on this one! It does have a lovely honey flavor, especially in the aftertaste. However, there’s a little bit of floral and it’s leaving me with a soapy taste today. Mm but that lovely creamy honey! Delicious.

I still need to order a round of samples from Green Terrace with my free-shipping-for-samples code, as I really want to try their Li Shan Black. Obviously, it’ll be a little while since I’m on hiatus, but the code says it doesn’t expire so hooray! I may order another sample pack of this tea too, so I can make my mind up about it. :P

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 3 min, 0 sec 1 tsp 8 OZ / 236 ML
boychik

I like Li Shan Black more

apt

Lishan black was fantastic, probably the best Taiwanese black tea I’ve had.

Cameron B.

Yeah, I heard really good things about the Li Shan, plus I want to try their Gui Fei and possibly some more of this. :)

Plunkybug

Boo for soapy floral. I hate that.

apt

i do enjoy Gui Fei oolongs, I have a really good one from Eco-Cha. Gui Fei is one of my favorites to prepare grandpa-style.

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90

Thanks so much to Green Terrace Teas for the free sample! I’ve been excited to try this one since I saw Marzipan’s lovely note about it. :) I now wish I had requested the Li Shan black tea as well! Oh well. This is a Taiwanese black tea, and the only other one I’ve tried is flavored (very well flavored, thanks to Butiki!). This type of tea receives a lot of love around here, so I was keen to see what all the fuss was about. The leaves are black and spidery, perhaps a bit shorter than the other, and there are a few stems. They smell more like maple syrup than honey to me, which is not a complaint! There’s also a strange metallic scent that I think might be from the foil packaging? I did about 3 minutes at 200 degrees.

The aroma is definitely all honey now! There’s maybe a hint of malt and some fruit. Tasting this, I’m unsure how to describe the main flavor besides to say that it tastes like a very smooth and mellow black tea. It’s not malty or bready, maybe a touch of raisin? But in a very light way. There is a definite honey taste, and a tart fruitiness. It’s listed as “peach and plum” on the website and I must say I agree with that description. Tartness from the plum but also a nice juiciness from the peach. I added a touch of sugar to the second half of my cup and it seemed to bring out a floral note? Perhaps I’m crazy! The lovely honeyed fruit taste lingers pleasantly after I’m done sipping.

Overall, very delicious and a wonderful experience for my first (plain) Taiwanese black! Thanks so much to Green Terrace Teas for allowing us to sample their wares for the very low cost of a review! :) I would definitely purchase this tea.

On a side note, I would like to suggest that steeping suggestions be added to the packaging just to make it easier for the customer. Even with a sample, it’s a nice touch and I feel like it wouldn’t be difficult to include. Thanks! :D

Flavors: Floral, Honey, Peach, Plum, Raisins, Smooth

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 3 min, 0 sec 1 tsp 8 OZ / 236 ML

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98

What a wonderful tea to have on a quiet Sunday morning. This tea is like the early morning mist in the mountain countryside that creeps in ; giving an awe inspiring view and then slowly slides back out as the bright early morning sun rises.

The beautiful dry leaves smell so sweet and mossy. I had to just enjoy the smell of them before brewing. Brewed at 195F for 1 min. Then I noticed they recommend shorter steeps. On my 2nd infusion I did only 40 sec.

What an amazing green tea. It was so sweet , buttery, & mossy. Just so fresh tasting. Both steeps were very light tasting. I loved it so much I kind of wanted more of the taste to come through; but maybe that’s what makes it so wonderful – the light taste. I definitely would consider buying this one.

Flavors: Butter, Moss, Sweet

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 1 min, 0 sec
TheTeaFairy

Love this tasting note :-)

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75

This is the second sample I received from Green Terrace Teas. I chose three oolong, as I feel I haven’t spent enough time with oolong and I do really adore them. This is my third time trying a Jin Xuan, and I already have a personal favorite Jin Xuan so I’m curious to see how this one will sit with me.

The first thing I notice is how subtle the scent of this tea is. After an initial rinse, there’s a very creamy aroma with notes of butter and vanilla. It almost smells like the crust on a creme brulee.

I’ve noticed many of my oolong becoming too flowery and heady a few Gongfu style steepings in, so I’ve cut down my initial start time on them to 15 seconds rather than 30. So far so good. The initial steeping of course is very light now and carries the subtelties of the tea. I’m getting very light notes of cream, toasted sugar, and butter. There’s a very mild floral aroma in the leaves, but it does not come through in the taste (yet).

This tea already differs quite significantly from my favorite Jin Xuan, which is called Jin Xuan Dong Ding because it is grown on Mt. Dong Ding. That variety has fruity notes common to Dong Ding oolong, I am guessing because of the terroir of the region, but the creamy notes of Jin Xuan come through as well since that is the varietal they are growing in that instance. This Jin Xuan from Green Terrace is very creamy, but does not have fruit aromas or flavors. I think it is closer to what Jin Xuan is typically known to be like.

The second steeping is similar to the first and still somewhat light. By the third steeping I am getting a more rich flavor, quite buttery with floral hints and a slightly vanilla aftertaste. Great hui gan. Four steepings in and it’s getting even more rich. I’m expecting at any moment for one of these steepings to fully unleash the creeping floral tones that I keep getting whiffs of, but much to my surprise it stays very creamy and soft while those floral hints stay in the background. It’s nice.

After a full five steepings, this tea is staying flavorful and is not getting particularly stronger or more floral or astringent. In my opinion that is a good thing for a tea that is meant to have a creamy, rich, mellow flavor. The flavor doesn’t really change much from one steeping to the next. It is pretty consistent, but builds on itself in richness.

I will call myself spoiled on the Jin Xuan Dong Ding I mentioned earlier. I really prefer its fruity-creamy blend of flavors. This Jin Xuan from Green Terrace is agreeable though, and I think those looking for a strictly milky, creamy tasting Jin Xuan will not be disappointed.

Flavors: Butter, Cream, Vanilla

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 0 min, 15 sec 4 g 3 OZ / 100 ML

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95

I have a sad confession, I am currently hiding from my bedroom. Since I spend all my time in my Tea Lair, I tend to ignore my bedroom and just interact with it when I am sleeping. Somehow, it has become a disaster (ok, not somehow, it is a combo of Ben working, it being too hot to do anything upstairs, and me hiding in the basement) and I need to clean it. I really don’t want to clean it, being a responsible adult is lame sometimes.

Recently on Steepster, new company Green Terrace Teas offered samples of three of their teas in exchange for reviews. I of course jumped on it like it was the last Furby on Christmas Eve in 1998, of course when the nice little vacuum sealed packaged arrived trying to decide which one to try first was the hard part. I closed my eyes and picked at random, coming out with Shan Lin Xi Premium High Mountain Oolong, a Taiwanese Oolong grown high in the mountains (1,800 meters to be exact) of Nantou, Taiwan. After my initial glee at opening the vacuum package (the air rushing back in always amuses me immensely) it was time for sniffing. The aroma is a very fresh smelling blend of buttery, a tiny bit of sesame seed nuttiness, mountain vegetation, sweet orchids, and a bit of fresh cream. It smells rich and clean, I do not say that often but the aroma reminds me of clean mountain air, which I should mention is a smell that I greatly miss.

It is no real surprise that this tea is going into my gaiwan, after its initial dance with water the aroma is less nutty and almost all floral. There are notes of orchid and honeysuckle with a surprising finish of spicebush. The liquid, liberated from its soggy leaf friends, is quite sweet! There are notes of honey, sweet cream, a touch of floral and a finish of sesame seeds.

Time for the first steep, and what a light and delicate one it is! It starts out with a very smooth, buttery mouthfeel which matches the sweet creamy taste. This fades to alpine vegetation and then it is like a small explosion of flowers in my mouth. The finish is sweet flower nectar, orchids, and honeysuckle. As with most first steeps of oolongs, I look forward to seeing what kind of journey the leaves will take me on.

The aroma on the second steep is intense! There is such a strong floral presence that I feel like I have stuck my nose in bouquet of fresh flowers, there are notes of hyacinth, orchid, honeysuckle, and a tiny bit of spicebush. Starting with the mouthfeel (because that really does seem to be the first thing I notice when sipping) it is smooth, a mix between buttery and velvety, it fills up the mouth. The taste on this steep is quite rich, it starts with a strong alpine vegetation note, this transitions to a gentle sweetness and floral notes. After that there is a slightly mineral finish that reminds me of rainwater. The aftertaste is sweet, like honey, and lingers.

Third steeping time, the aroma is not as intense, but it is a little more varied. There are still strong notes of orchid, but now we have alpine vegetation and a bit of minerals. The aroma of this tea has a great ‘transportation’ effect, it very much so reminds me of being in the mountains in summer, sitting near a spring, enjoying the blooming flowers. The taste is smooth and buttery, with strong hints of green. It reminds me of fresh growing things. The finish is mineral and a touch of sweet. The mouthfeel this time starts out smooth and fades to a mild dryness at the finish.

For the fourth and final steep, things are winding down. The aroma is a delicate blend of flowers, sweet honey, and a light finish of mineral. The taste is has returned to delicate, it starts off sweet like flower nectar, this fades to alpine vegetation. The finish is back to sweet, but this time it is honey instead of nectar. This tea took me on a pleasant journey to the mountains during high summer, I am glad for the adventure.

For blog and photos: http://ramblingbutterflythoughts.blogspot.com/2014/07/green-terrace-teas-shan-lin-xi-premium.html

Flavors: Green, Honey, Mineral, Orchid

Kaylee

I love that you have a Tea Lair!

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94

I couldn’t wait to try some of my free samples from Green Terrace Teas. I never had a Four Seasons oolong before. Dry it smelled like Jin Xuan, very milk and sweet smelling. Brewed for 1 min at 195F. I didn’t brew in my yixing teapot as it’s so new and still sucking all the flavour out of my oolongs. I can’t give a proper review with that teapot until it starts giving back.

Brewed up it was buttery , sweet, smooth, and vegetal. I detected very light floral jasmine notes. An excellent oolong. Thank-you Green Terrace Teas for the free sample.

Flavors: Butter, Jasmine, Milk

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 1 min, 0 sec
Cheri

This is one of the samples I received as well. I’m excited to try them.

Lion

My first time with Four Seasons as well. I was not disappointed!

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