Gunpowder Green

Tea type
Green Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Hay, Smoke, Broccoli, Char, Grass, Honey, Lemon, Mineral, Seaweed, Spinach, Straw, Vegetal, Wood, Roasted, Autumn Leaf Pile, Earth, Flowers
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Jason
Average preparation
185 °F / 85 °C 3 min, 0 sec 11 oz / 312 ml

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17 Tasting Notes View all

  • “Gunpowder tea is one of my favorite Chinese green teas – I wanted to try a sample of this even though I have a big bag of Red Blossom’s gunpowder at home. I am curious as to how big of a difference...” Read full tasting note
    88
  • “New apartment. First pot of tea with my roommate’s electric kettle. I probably shouldn’t have made green tea with it, only because i cannot control the temperature of the water. I think i ‘burnt’...” Read full tasting note
    89
  • “Gunpowder releases a definite aroma of burnt wood, definitely charred though lacking the piney smokiness of Lapsang Souchong. The medium bodied, light brown liquor carries through the notes of...” Read full tasting note
    70
  • “As someone without much experience with the gunpowder variety of green, I decided to play some Russian roulette and brew up a batch. After spinning the cylinder and smelling the brew, one word...” Read full tasting note
    58

From Harney & Sons

A basic green tea from China’s Zhejiang Province, Gunpowder is a good everyday green tea. The tea takes its name from the rolled leaf balls that are leaden in color. Like spent gunpowder, it has a slight smoky flavor.

About Harney & Sons View company

Since 1983 Harney & Sons has been the source for fine teas. We travel the globe to find the best teas and accept only the exceptional. We put our years of experience to work to bring you the best Single-Estate teas, and blends beyond compare.

17 Tasting Notes

88
2816 tasting notes

Gunpowder tea is one of my favorite Chinese green teas – I wanted to try a sample of this even though I have a big bag of Red Blossom’s gunpowder at home. I am curious as to how big of a difference there is between gunpowder teas.

I might have steeped this too long – accidentally… the tea is mellow, assertive, earthy & pungent. It is vegetal in a savory way (think roasted brussels sprouts). There’s a bit of bitterness present but I think it could use a little less steeping time so chalk that up to a user error…

I think it’s interesting that in Harney’s description that almost all gunpowder is made for export. When I was in a Chinese tea shop recently they told me that “Gunpowder is not a Chinese green tea”, which I thought was kind of odd. I mean, clearly it is from there but perhaps he meant the Chinese just do not drink much of it?

Second steep I did for only about 60-90 seconds and I definitely like it better this way. The aroma is mildy smoky and the tea is still assertive and vegetal but it also has a bit of sweetness in the finish instead of bitterness so I think I got it right!

I might get this again if I needed more gunpowder tea but I really liked the lemony gunpowder from Harney! I also recommend reading the entry H&S did on this tea if you want to learn some more nifty facts about how gunpowder tea is made. :)

Preparation
180 °F / 82 °C 2 min, 30 sec

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89
108 tasting notes

New apartment. First pot of tea with my roommate’s electric kettle. I probably shouldn’t have made green tea with it, only because i cannot control the temperature of the water. I think i ‘burnt’ this tea. But thankfully due to the smokiness of it, it didn’t taste completely off…

Preparation
Boiling 2 min, 0 sec
Indigobloom

I want a temp control kettle so badly…

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70
168 tasting notes

Gunpowder releases a definite aroma of burnt wood, definitely charred though lacking the piney smokiness of Lapsang Souchong. The medium bodied, light brown liquor carries through the notes of charred, grilled leeks.

For centuries, Gunpowder has served as the base for Arabian mint tea, sweetened with plenty of sugar. Its strong charred flavors taste wonderful with mint and citrus, but the tea is also delicious on its own.

Gunpowder is not a Qing Ming (spring tea); since it gets all its flavors from its processing methods, the tea does not require leaves with much inherent strength. It is made from tougher and less tender later-season leaves, foliage that has grown almost twice as long as leaves plucked in the earlier spring. The leaves are fixed and then fired for an extended period in a hot even until they become shiny and slightly burnt. The oven is designed like a Laundromat dryer, tumbling the leaves over and over in a hot metal cylinder.

Gunpowder is produced almost entirely for export. For many years one of the only green teas available in the United States, it has been produced for more than two hundred years near coastal trading ports like Ningbo and in its ancestral home of Zhejiang province The tea most likely gets its name from the shape of its leaves, so tightly rolled that they resemble the pellets soldiers once used as musket shot. With its balled form and heavy firing, Gunpowder is among the most stable teas for transport, ideal for export in the age before vacuum packaging and airplanes.

Today the tea is made in most provinces of China. Indeed, after the Qing Ming harvest, many tea farmers turn the rest of the year’s new leaves into Gunpowder. As a result there are many styles and many quality levels. The worst Gunpowder is bright yellow and acrid with smoky flavors; the best has charred but assuredly green, vegetal flavors.

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 3 min, 0 sec

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58
30 tasting notes

As someone without much experience with the gunpowder variety of green, I decided to play some Russian roulette and brew up a batch. After spinning the cylinder and smelling the brew, one word comes to mind: smoky! The scent reminds me of a freshly extinguished campfire. This is not a warm and cozy aroma! On the outset, this bold scent has me concerned. I don’t want my tea tasting like an ashtray.

Upon sipping, I’m pleasantly surprised. This green has a fairly-strong, earthy taste. Subtlety-hidden is a honey-like hint. But that is quickly forgotten when a more smoky flavor comes barreling in. After a few cups, the blood is definitely rushing to the head. Be prepared, this is a tea that unquestionably has a strong caffeine content.

Harney and Sons describe this as a “a good everyday green tea”. I disagree. As an everyday green tea, I want something sweeter, softer, and less offending. Only some sort of adrenaline junkie would want this daily. Occasionally, for a smoky-mature jolt, this tea may work. I stumble out of this game of Russian roulette shaken, but alive to see another day.

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 3 min, 0 sec

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81
52 tasting notes

This was a good green tea. It was a little more “grassy” smelling and more vegetal than the Dragon Well green tea I was drinking yesterday. It also had little of the nutty taste that was present in the Dragon Well.

Preparation
180 °F / 82 °C 3 min, 0 sec

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80
10 tasting notes

One of the better gunpowder greens out there. Tightly rolled and smoky.

Flavors: Hay, Smoke

Preparation
185 °F / 85 °C 4 min, 0 sec 1 tsp 20 OZ / 591 ML

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80
1048 tasting notes

I’m still cleaning out the backlog. After this review, I should only have one or two others to post. I bought a big 8 ounce tin of this tea last year and finally managed to finish the last of it this morning. Over the past week or thereabouts, I have been experimenting with cold brewing this tea, and honestly, that did not turn out nearly as badly as anticipated. Still, I think I favor this as a hot brew. As Chinese gunpowder green teas go, this one was rock solid.

For this review session, I utilized a two step Western-style preparation. First, I steeped a full teaspoon of loose tea leaves in approximately 8 ounces of 175 F water for 2 minutes. I then resteeped the leaves for 3 minutes in the same amount of water.

Prior to infusion, the dry tea pellets emitted smoky, grassy aromas. The first infusion brought out hints of hay, straw, and citrus. In the mouth, I got a nice mix of hay, straw, grass, char, wood, smoke, roasted Brussels sprouts, seaweed, spinach, broccoli, cauliflower, Napa cabbage, and grilled lemon notes balanced by a touch of spring honey. The second infusion produced a more vegetal and slightly more honeyed bouquet. In the mouth, I picked up far stronger honey, grilled lemon, and seaweed notes to go with the expected notes of roasted Brussels sprouts, Napa cabbage, wood, smoke, char, hay, straw, grass, cauliflower, broccoli, and spinach. There was also a slight mineral presence in the mouth.

Overall, this was a nice tea. I know that gunpowder green tea is never going to be the highest quality or most complex tea in the world, but compared to many of the other gunpowder green teas I have had, this one had a lot going for it. It may not have been anything out of the ordinary, but this was the sort of tea that would be a consistent, reliable daily drinker for the sort of person who takes a cup or two of green tea each day.

Flavors: Broccoli, Char, Grass, Hay, Honey, Lemon, Mineral, Seaweed, Smoke, Spinach, Straw, Vegetal, Wood

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 2 min, 0 sec 1 tsp 8 OZ / 236 ML

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74
672 tasting notes

Got a sample of this to compare to NMTC’s gunpowder green. This actually tastes slightly like white tea, I guess because it has some hay notes. It’s more vegetal overall than the NMTC, which leans toward the earthy and mineral notes. Plus this is a lighter tea. The flavor is fine, but it doesn’t really register as gunpowder with me. I just expect them to be punchier than regular green. So as the heartier tea, the NMTC still wins for me.

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286 tasting notes

I drank this almost right after drinking the sencha. That was amistake. It did not go down well at first. But then I ate breakfast and tried another round. Much better tasting! From the name I was expecting smoke, but I got an earthy vegetable flavour, and no smoke. Maybe I should stop expecting gunpowder to have a smoky flavour.

It’s a good tea if you don’t drink it right after a sweet buttery tea. I’ll re-visit this one when it’s the first tea of the day, and provide a better review. Thanks for the sample, Cameron B!

Kirkoneill1988

I love this tea too. I usually get the stuff by twinings

Erik Dabel

Mmmmm gunpowder green is one of my favorites. Red Blossom also makes a great one. The name gunpowder comes from its shape, it’s rolled into small pellets resembling black powder. No smoke, just big taste!

scribbles

Aaahhh. Makes sense now :)

Kirkoneill1988

it tastes smokey to me :P and i like it

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83
52 tasting notes

Sadly its a sipdown, no more gunpowder in my little cupboard. I always have liked gunpowder but I don’t buy it much. This is a mild various with just a hint of smoke and wood, more vegetal, and sweet tastes. If you brew it longer you get more smoke but also more astringency! I’ll buy this again some day but hopefully I’ll find other gunpowders to sample first. I love watching the little balls explode so I tend to overbrew!

Flavors: Hay, Roasted, Smoke, Wood

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 3 min, 15 sec 1 tsp 10 OZ / 295 ML

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