Nilgiri Glendale 1710

Tea type
White Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Apricot, Grass, Hay, Herbaceous, Honey, Stonefruit, Sugarcane
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Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Leafhopper
Average preparation
170 °F / 76 °C 0 min, 30 sec 5 oz / 135 ml

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2 Tasting Notes View all

  • “Sometimes the way a tea makes you feel and the way it tastes, the associations it evokes and the things you’re reading about or thinking about or listening to while sipping and the weather all...” Read full tasting note
    92
  • “This is the last tea in the Indian taster kit I picked up earlier this year. I’ve heard good things about the Glendale Estate, and honestly, it was this tea that convinced me to get the sampler....” Read full tasting note
    81

From Camellia Sinensis

Product description not available yet.

About Camellia Sinensis View company

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2 Tasting Notes

92
1548 tasting notes

Sometimes the way a tea makes you feel
and the way it tastes,
the associations it evokes
and the things you’re reading about or thinking about or listening to while sipping
and the weather

all align in a moment so harmonious that all you can muster for a note is

wow.

word: drink it grandpa, leaf it heavy, deal with the floaters. they’re all floaters.

Something I will be looking out for next season. Thanks so much, Leafhopper :)

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 5 OZ / 150 ML
Martin Bednář

That’s so cute tasting note… and so right!

Leafhopper

I love your poetic tasting note. To my knowledge, Camellia Sinensis didn’t have this tea in 2020 (it was a 2019 harvest). Maybe next year.

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81
415 tasting notes

This is the last tea in the Indian taster kit I picked up earlier this year. I’ve heard good things about the Glendale Estate, and honestly, it was this tea that convinced me to get the sampler. These gorgeous fuzzy white needles sold out quickly and the description is no longer on the website. I went with the steeping instructions for the Nilgiri white tea that’s currently available, though 167F seems a bit low to me. Nonetheless, I steeped three teaspoons of leaf in a 120 ml vessel at 167F for 30, 20, 40, 60, 90, 120, and 240 seconds, plus a few untimed steeps at the end of the session.

The aroma of the wet tea leaves is a mix of hay and stonefruit, possibly apricot. The first steep has notes of hay, banana, honey, linen, and herbs, with a sugarcane sweetness in the aftertaste. The liquor also tastes fuzzy, either from the trichomes or from the power of suggestion. In short, it’s a high-quality version of a generic white tea. Upping the temperature to 175F in the next couple steeps introduces a faint grassy note, but leaves the rest of the flavour profile pretty much unchanged. Subtle hints of apricot show up here and there, but I really have to look for them. The tea fades slowly, acquiring a sharper, more herbaceous astringency but changing very little.

I had perhaps too high expectations for this tea, and while it’s solid, I didn’t think it was remarkable or distinctive. Maybe I’m using the wrong instructions, or maybe it’s better Western steeped. I’ll continue to play with the 15 or so grams I have left.

Flavors: Apricot, Grass, Hay, Herbaceous, Honey, Stonefruit, Sugarcane

Preparation
165 °F / 73 °C 0 min, 30 sec 3 tsp 4 OZ / 120 ML

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