Oriental Beauty

Tea type
Oolong Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Cinnamon, Raisins, Rooibos, Maple, Plum, Spices, Wood, Honey, Autumn Leaf Pile, Floral, Hay, Molasses, Earth, Flowers
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Tea Pet
Average preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 3 min, 45 sec 4 g 27 oz / 801 ml

From Our Community

1 Image

2 Want it Want it

19 Own it Own it

  • +4

64 Tasting Notes View all

  • “I had a lovely cup of this today – i really need to try stacys other steeping parameters since i always brew it for 4 mins. I quite like this one (for an oolong) and find the more i drink it, the...” Read full tasting note
    86
  • “Lovely lovely lovely! Lovely to look upon, with all it’s various shades of color. Lovely to taste, with it’s honey apricot sweetness. I shared a pot of this with a student, & when he commented...” Read full tasting note
  • “Hello Steepster friends, it’s been a while… I had plans to go hiking with Doberman Dexter this morning. We woke up at dawn, just the way I like it (yes, I’m a night AND a morning person, not much...” Read full tasting note
    87
  • “Stacy was so generous to include this in my little sample bundle. Thank you kindly, Stacy! The scent of the dry leaf really took me by surprise. It reminded me of autumn, so I tried to break it...” Read full tasting note
    95

From Butiki Teas

Our Oriental Beauty is organic and utilizes the Chin Xin oolong varietal. Originating from Hungshan in the Anhui province of China, this oolong is crafted by tea master Shan Zhen Chen. Our Oriental Beauty is made from young shoots and is heavily fermented (60-70%), heavily withered (13-25%), and lightly roasted. This gorgeous tea contains leaves that vary in color, including: silver, gold, forest, auburn, cocoa, and charcoal colors. Rich honey notes linger and mingle with apricot, macadamia nut, and orchid notes. Some pastry-like notes are present and pairs well with the sweetness of this oolong, which provides a flavor somewhat reminiscent of funnel cake. We also recommend brewing this tea using 1 teaspoon of Oriental Beauty per 8oz of 180F degree water and steeping the tea for 6 minutes for a different brew.

Ingredients: Organic Chinese Oolong Tea

Recommended Brew Time: 4 minutes
Recommended Amount: 2 teaspoons of tea for 8oz of water
Recommended Temperature: 195 F degrees

For more information, please visit: www.butikiteas.com.

About Butiki Teas View company

Company description not available.

64 Tasting Notes

73
790 tasting notes

Yay for having tea waiting when I get home from vacation!

This tastes very much like a darjeeling to me. Bright, clean, snappy, mild hint of fruit. I had been anticipating a bit more heft, but that’s not a bad thing. No bitterness or astringency in this cup. I will need to try it several times more to see if I can suss out the other flavors.

Preparation
190 °F / 87 °C 3 min, 30 sec

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

79
709 tasting notes

I received this as another free sample with my recent Butiki order. I am a bit leery about the directions (boiling, 4 minutes) but I have faith in Stacy’s judgment. I am excited to try it, though I couldn’t get much aroma from the dry leaf. I don’t know if it’s my nose or the plastic bags, but all my samples were lacking a bit in dry aroma. That’s okay though, because they have been super tasty!

Four minutes in, the liquor isn’t nearly as dark as I had feared. I will admit that I used more water than recommended, but I’m okay with that because as mentioned before, I do seem to like my tea a little different than the norm. I hate bitterness. I’ve got a warm yellow liquor with a sweet aroma, reminding me of florals and sweet fruit (maybe peach/apricot)?

First sips are remarkable. Honey sweetness, floral notes, sweet stone fruit. Even better than the aroma. There is something at the end of the sip that is going a little flat for me but I THINK that is residue from brushing my teeth. It was over an hour ago, but this toothpaste just won’t die!

As I get further in the cup, it tastes like someone put a spoon of honey in my tea when i wasn’t looking. That much sweetness is remarkable for an unadulterated tea. I get the sense of astringency lurking underneath it all, but it isn’t developing, just skulking in the shadows.

I have had one other Oriental Beauty, I think, but I don’t remember anything about it so I can’t compare how to does with others of it’s type. As a stand-alone though, this tea is remarkable! I prefer my teas to be a bit more complex and roasty, but this is definitely a nice tea. If you are an oolong drinker, check this one out. If you’re a black tea drinker like me, it would probably be more of an occasional drink. Yummy though!!

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

70
2238 tasting notes

I’ve tried this once before, as a sample with one of my past orders. My memories of it were good, so I picked up another bag as part of the “I Love Leafhoppers” sampler a little while back. It’s been a bit neglected in my cupboard, so I brought it to work with me today so that it gets some attention. To say sorry, I’ve made it my first cup of the day!

It’s as good as I remembered. I followed the recommended parameters, and gave 2 tsp of leaf 5 minutes in water cooled just slightly (about 195). The resulting liquor is golden brown, and smells lightly fruity. This fruitiness translates into a juiciness in the initial sip — that’s one of the things I’ve loved most about the leafhopper teas I’ve tried so far. It’s quite spicy, in a cinnamon kind of way, and there’s a doughnutty kind of taste lurking around in the background. Which means, I guess, that the overall taste reminds me of cinnamon dusted doughnuts. The fresh kind, that you’ve just watched being cooked at a fair. Neglecting this one has definitely been my loss, but drinking it today has reminded me how delicious it actually is. I can see this being a morning staple for the next few weeks :)

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 5 min, 0 sec 2 tsp

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

85
1186 tasting notes

SIPDOWN! This came to me as a free sample from the lovely Stacy at Butiki :) I decided to try it tonight. The dry leaves have a very faint honey scent, but it’s very light. I used boiling water and the whole little sample pack in 8 ounces of water, I didn’t actually realize it was an oolong until reading the description! The tea liquor was a light golden yellow, with a sweet scent.

The flavor was quite nice, quite light actually. I got a light honey flavor with a bit of floral maybe, I’m not sure, this is my first oriental beauty so I don’t really know what it should taste like at all! It was mostly like a mild darker tea, almost like a black tea, but not quite. Sigh, I am not doing a good job of describing it, as I honestly wasn’t specifically looking for flavors, I just enjoyed drinking it lol. Well, I still have another steeping or two out of the leaves, I might save them for tomorrow though, I had some tieguanyin as well tonight and I am about at my caffeine limit lol.

Overall, a tasty little tea, but I would need to drink it a few more times to pick out some flavors. The sweetness was quite nice, but I prefer the Mi Xian Black (yes, I haven’t written a review for it on here yet I don’t think haha, but I did realllly enjoy it :D) for a sweeter tea. But this was tasty, and I would probably order a bit to try again, as I am intrigued to find more notes in the tea! I will rate it though, as it was quite enjoyable :) Thank you for the sample Stacy!!

Preparation
Boiling 4 min, 0 sec

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

523 tasting notes

I got a sample of this with my last Butiki Order. It’s pretty much exactly as described. smooth and sweet with fruity dessert notes. I’m enjoying my cup as an afternoon thunderstorm passes over. I sure do wish my cocker would stop running around like crazy and barking at random. . .she completely ruins the ambiance. lol. She runs around, checks all the windows, barks a whole lot, checks the windows again, jumps at me, then waits excited at the back sliding door (as if I would ever think of letting her out, I’ve made that mistake before and what a MESS it was!) My three Cavaliers are just lying about setting such a good example.

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 3 min, 30 sec

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

111 tasting notes

Received this as a sample in my order! :D

I accidentally made this rather potent. My measuring cup was in the wash, so I estimated eight ounces in my pot. (The pot’s a bit of an odd shape, which makes that hard) Turns out I gave it a little less than five. Good job me.

Still, even though it’s quite a bit stronger than it was supposed to be, it’s still fairly sweet and is obviously sweeter when better balanced with the amount of water.

Enjoying how fruity this is. :) I’ll have to try a second infusion with the proper amount of water.

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 4 min, 0 sec
JustJames

my order should be here this week. including the caramel vanilla assam… can’t wait!

Chizakura

Ooh! :D Exciting! Hope you enjoy as much as I do

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

818 tasting notes

Sipdown! Reorganizing my tea cupboard always causes me to rediscover teas that I’ve had for awhile. This one just had one cup left, so I drank it! It’s freezing cold here, so I needed one more tea to warm me up!

This tastes a little fruity and definitely sweet and roasty. Yum. I’ve also realized it tastes just like the tea they serve at our favorite Chinese restaurant! Probably not Butiki’s but another version. ;) It’s nice to finally be able to place it!

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

77
618 tasting notes

We had our first snow of the season this morning! It was just a light dusting that quickly melted & the rain has taken over a little bit now, but still.. SNOW! I suppose I’m ready for the cold weather — more time to stay inside and drink tea.
The scent of this tea is sweet and mild. There is a slight earthy tone, but it doesn’t overwhelm the cup. There is also something savory in the background, but I can’t seem to put my finger on what it reminds me of.

Sipping… the first thing I notice are the woody, mineral notes. I definitely taste a bit of apricot — more like a dried apricot than apricot jam. There is a hint of sweet astringency at the tail end, but it’s rather nice. I almost wish that there could be more sweetness because I think it would take the cup to another level.

This is a nice tea, but a little too mild for my tastebuds.

Kaylee

Whoa. That is early snow!

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

612 tasting notes

My first Oriental Beauty (I have to admit, as an asian woman I find the name offputting, whether that makes sense or no). The leaf is as unique and lovely as you’d expect, full of different shades and shapes (I especially love the purple and red hues—reminds me of stripey hair colors cool radio lady rockers sported in the ‘90s, ha). Freshy brewed this smells quite sweet, just like warm, good-quality honey, yum. The first sip surprised me, almost in the other direction as last night’s in that I wasn’t expecting darjeeling qualities—that specific astringent fresh fruitiness and hint of wood—but they’re there—not nearly as strong as in a darjeeling but noticeable in a delicate, appealing way that melds with the floral honey element and just highlights the tasty sweetness of stone fruit like apricot. There’s wisps of that musky-floral thing orange blossom water’s got going on too, enough to make it feel special and dizzyingly sensual without going overboard into nauseating (so easy to do with orange blossom water, alas). Very nice balance and interplay without becoming intimidatingly intense or tiringly busy, a lot going on without sensory overload.

It’s interesting too to start to imagine what RachelJ was talking about a few months ago, the difference between old school brisker Formosa Oolong and these newer, more delicately nuanced oolongs that have some of the same flavors—stone fruit of course and honey—but are not what she was seeking for nostalgia’s sake. I’ll have to try an old FO sometime…

I really like this. To me and my personal growing up tea history, this fits as one of the most approachable oolongs I’ve tried, more like a cross between a bunch of other tea profiles (darjeeling, old fashioned Chinese black like you might get at a restaurant 10 or 20 years ago) with the stone fruit element known to classic oolongs. It’s very accessible—probably helps that it’s as sweet as it is.

Preparation
190 °F / 87 °C 4 min, 0 sec
Butiki Teas

I definitely can see why the name can be offensive.

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

2291 tasting notes

A surprise sample in an order. :)

Another tea I wouldn’t normally go for, that’s really really tasty. It’s rich, a little roasted, sweet, a little astringent.

IDK. I’ve lost the words for describing a tea.

Even as it cools it’s really nice. Doesn’t get too bitter or astringent. I’ll probably resteep this, but first I need a nap.

Chizakura

Looking forward to try this. :)

Login or sign up to leave a comment.