This Ti Kuan/Quan Yin has nice smoky top notes, as well as a rich mellow middle note. This tea does have floral base notes and a lingering floral aftertaste. Ti Kuan Yin drinkers must be comfortable with roasted/smoky notes. Not nearly as smoky as lapsang souchong, but imagine a very mild lapsang mixed with a nice floral chinese green tea. A good sipping tea.
Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C
2 min, 30 sec
Comments
Hi Steve,
This is Joy. I found you in steepster and found you are a great tea lover having tried a lot teas. Any interesting to try wuyi rock tea da hong pao king of tea, I think you may love the “charming rock tasting” (yanyun in chinese.). We are a chinese tea company with our own tea garden. based in Wuyi shan, the wuyi rock tea is one of our main tea.
Hi Steve,
This is Joy. I found you in steepster and found you are a great tea lover having tried a lot teas. Any interesting to try wuyi rock tea da hong pao king of tea, I think you may love the “charming rock tasting” (yanyun in chinese.). We are a chinese tea company with our own tea garden. based in Wuyi shan, the wuyi rock tea is one of our main tea.