Nepal Jun Chiyabari Himalayan Shiiba

Tea type
Black Tea
Ingredients
Black Tea
Flavors
Banana, Bread Dough, Caramel, Cream, Floral, Ginger, Hazelnut, Honey, Juicy, Lemon, Magnolia, Milky, Mineral, Passion Fruit, Peach, Pineapple, Plumeria, Silky, Soft, Spinach, Tangy, Tropical Fruit, Umami, Vanilla, Vegetal, White Grapes
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Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Martin Bednář
Average preparation
190 °F / 87 °C 0 min, 30 sec 5 g 5 oz / 138 ml

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2 Tasting Notes View all

  • “Semi-sipdown. I have now last 5 grams to be tried western; but this note will be about gongfu brewing. Parameters: 5g / 125 ml gaiwan / 90°C water / quick rinse Steeps: 7s, 15s, 20s, 33s, 45s, Even...” Read full tasting note
    98
  • “Much tamer than the Nepal Jun Chiyabari Himalayan Shiiba I had from another vendor several years ago. Lots to discover here. Magnolia nose. Within the soft texture is a mid-toned tropical...” Read full tasting note
    88

From Klasek Tea

A beautifully processed, regularly rolled, only slightly oxidised dry leaf of cool vanilla aroma with a pleasant component of pink flowers. A golden infusion of velvety smooth to slightly oily, honey-sweet flavours with a varied palette of heavier exotic flowers. The tea is reminiscent of a lightly oxidised oolong with a very fresh, sweet fruity and floral flavour with notes of exotic flowers and vanilla.
Preparation: we put 7 g of tea into a small teapot (200 – 250 ml) and pour with boiled water that was cooled down to 80°C. Let it steep for 2 minutes.

A limited edition of an exceptional tea from the Nepali garden of Jun Chiyabari. The tea plants from which this tea was processed come from the Japanese village of Shiiba, located in the mountainous region of Miyazaki Province (Kyushu Island). Only a very small quantity of this excellent tea is produced each year at Jun Chiyabari.

More information about tea HSH
Division: Nigalé
Elevation: 1850 m
Harvest: 15, 23, 26 March & 9, 21 April 2023
Cultivar: Jun Chiyabari Shiiba Yama Cha & Qing Xin
Processing: partial oxidation, withering, light rolling, drying.
About Jun Chiyabarai

Location
The tea garden in the eastern Himalayan region of Nepal is located in the hills around Hile in the Dhankuta district. This is North 27o 01’ East 087o 19’. The garden spreads within an elevation of 1600 – 2000 meters above sea level. This area is about 200 km east of Kathmandu; 55 km west of Ilam in Nepal and 65 km west of Darjeeling, India.

Cultivars / plants
In the tea garden itself, different quality tea cultivars were brought from Nepal and Darjeeling and as far away as Taiwan and Japan and planted out.
From Nepal came plants (cuttings and seeds) from the original seeds plants given by the Qing Emperors (1850’s-1860’s) to Nepal’s rulers. Locally available plants from Nepal Tea Board like AV2 were also planted.
From Darjeeling, they got cultivars like T1, T78 and Phoobshering 312, and many others. Also, valuable cuttings and seeds from China seeds plants were obtained through friends and well-wishers.
From Japan, common varieties like Yabukita and some unique tea plants growing wild in the forests in Miyazaki ken were planted. From Taiwan plants like Si Ji Chun and Chin Sin Oolong from Dong Ding in Nantou were brought and planted.
Very few tea gardens in the region have the type of tea plants as are those in Jun Chiyabari. Perhaps this diversity combined with the soil and climate, not to speak of the skills of the tea master, is what gives the teas a special character.

Manufacturing Season
The manufacturing season starts in March and continues until November. As is with the region, there are four harvest seasons: First, Second, Monsoon & Autumn Flush. The start and end of each Flush are totally climate-dependent.

About Klasek Tea View company

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2 Tasting Notes

98
1924 tasting notes

Semi-sipdown. I have now last 5 grams to be tried western; but this note will be about gongfu brewing.

Parameters: 5g / 125 ml gaiwan / 90°C water / quick rinse
Steeps: 7s, 15s, 20s, 33s, 45s,

Even dry, this tea is burst of tropic fruits, florals, a little of green oolong. When rinsed, the aromas were even stronger, making me feel I am in a botanical garden greenhouse with all the tropical flowers around.

1st steep
Very smooth and round mouthfeel, a little oily, sweet and again full of the tropic flowers which later changes on the roof of the mouth to tropic fruits and some local ones; as derk notices… peaches, sweet and very ripe pineapples, mango, papaya. Later aftertaste of honey and creamy vanilla, almost custardy like. Mouthfeel lingers for very long even steeped this short.

2nd steep
Before adding water, I did very fast smell of the used leaves and boy they are so fruity! The fruits mentioned above, with a stronger floral note; intoxicating smell that brings me into some tropical islands. That’s weird, never been in those.
All above as in first steep, but double the strength. Heavy especially in the florals, I wish I could recognize them, but rose. Again… very long mouthfeel and amazing relaxing and calming capabilities.

3rd steep
Yes, it gets a little rougher. Not so honey-ish flavour, but instead there is light roasted, curled, green, oolong, maybe bug-bitten. It’s a little different sweetness.

4th steep
Intended 30 seconds steep, however I was made some error when doing countdown and…
It still gives me a lots of florals and less of the fruits, which isn’t a flaw. The vendor mentions the oolong notes, and I do agree with them. The fruits tends to be more citrusy, instead the tropical fruits, as mentioned in previous steeps. But not sour or anything, just peel of the citruses, it is pomelo and grapefruit (a really tiny bit of bitterness). Hints of vegetal notes in aftertaste (maybe it’s the oolong).

5th steep
How I wish having a bigger gaiwan to see all the leaves floating; well that means I would need also a glass gaiwan. They are so gorgeous. Derk is right!
The flavours are not so intensive anymore, however it still gives me good impressions, definitely not washed out. I could drink it all afternoon (oh well, I did).

This tea has a great qualites, lasts long, lots of interesting flavours, definitely worth every penny spent. Maybe I have missed out this year harevest, but if you come across Nepalese Shiiba, I can highly suggest getting it. Because it gives impressions of fruit tea, while it’s plain tea. Lasts long and it is also very versatile, as… I had similar impressions of that fruity line even when steeped western. I will write a separate note for that steeping method.
Later steeps are more oolongy, which can be welcomed by some tea drinkers and again, it shows me how not correct can be “labelling” teas of their type. This is offically labelled as a black tea… but in terms of flavours it definitelly isn’t, as you could read in this note. Of course, first two, three steeps are the best; but as I wrote… it keeps giving and while 5th steep was somehow weaker, it wasn’t done for sure. I will keep steeping — but I will end the note here. I assume that you know that you can steep many teas many times, but writing the impressions about every single steep is tiring and also boring.

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 5 g 4 OZ / 125 ML
derk

Thank you for sharing such a beautiful tea!

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88
1597 tasting notes

Much tamer than the Nepal Jun Chiyabari Himalayan Shiiba I had from another vendor several years ago. Lots to discover here. Magnolia nose. Within the soft texture is a mid-toned tropical jackfruit taste and a cool, quartz-like mineral element. Complex fruity aftertaste morphs with each steep, bringing out notes of peach, pineapple, banana, plumeria, lemon, cream, ginger, passionfruit and grapes.

This harvest reminds me of Nilgiri high mountain black teas. I think it has to do with how the density of flavors are expressed within the texture. Like those teas, the character of Himalayan Shiiba really shines in glass teaware.

Thank you Martin for another generous sample of Nepal Jun Chiyabari tea!

Flavors: Banana, Bread Dough, Caramel, Cream, Floral, Ginger, Hazelnut, Honey, Juicy, Lemon, Magnolia, Milky, Mineral, Passion Fruit, Peach, Pineapple, Plumeria, Silky, Soft, Spinach, Tangy, Tropical Fruit, Umami, Vanilla, Vegetal, White Grapes

Preparation
185 °F / 85 °C 0 min, 30 sec 5 g 5 OZ / 150 ML
Martin Bednář

My brother who had it once or twice said it is indeed a fruity tea. He was so puzzled when I said him it is plain tea :)
Definitely very fruity and mellow and I am actually considering getting another pouch once available.

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