Jing Mai Moonlight White

Tea type
White Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
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Caffeine
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Certification
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Edit tea info Last updated by CHAroma
Average preparation
185 °F / 85 °C 3 min, 0 sec

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8 Tasting Notes View all

  • “Happy to report that this retains a lot of character in subsequent steeps - it’s really too light for an a.m. tea, but I left the leaves overnight and brewed a rerun this morning. Has lost very...” Read full tasting note
    82
  • “Dry and before infusing this smells like cucumber skins – fresh, clean, airy, Ahhhh! After infusion it smells like sweet grass and sweet wood with floral notes! Taste is… not as sweet as I assumed...” Read full tasting note
    90
  • “Backlog: A very flavorful white tea … this is a tea that I’d recommend to someone who thinks they don’t like white tea because the flavor is too delicate. This tea might change their mind! Sweet,...” Read full tasting note
    87
  • “Such an interesting tea. I recently finished up a 12.5g pack, with another 12.5g pack set aside for aging as part of my white tea aging experiment. While this tea is white by process, it’s black by...” Read full tasting note
    89

From Life In Teacup

Production Year: 2010

Production Season: Autumn

Production Region: Yunnan, Jing Mai

Style: White Tea

Size: 1 oz. (28g)

Price per unit: $4.50

Product # 6iygbjm

Brewing method: 3-3.5g leaves in 4 oz. teapot, brewed with newly boiled (hottest possible) water. Around 1 minute for each of the initial infusions. You can aim at seven infusions or more. When using a larger teapot, increase the amount of the leaves OR the infusion time.

About Life In Teacup View company

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8 Tasting Notes

82
2891 tasting notes

Happy to report that this retains a lot of character in subsequent steeps - it’s really too light for an a.m. tea, but I left the leaves overnight and brewed a rerun this morning. Has lost very little of its velvety texture.

gmathis

Steep #3 kinda lost it … we were just down to a whisper of character. I need a cup that shouts.

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90
6768 tasting notes

Dry and before infusing this smells like cucumber skins – fresh, clean, airy, Ahhhh!
After infusion it smells like sweet grass and sweet wood with floral notes!

Taste is…
not as sweet as I assumed it would be! It has a masculine flavor to it…along with a roasty/toasty charcoal hint to it. But you can still tell it’s a white tea. This is very different but good! I like this!

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87
4843 tasting notes

Backlog:

A very flavorful white tea … this is a tea that I’d recommend to someone who thinks they don’t like white tea because the flavor is too delicate. This tea might change their mind!

Sweet, earthy, and vegetative … with the vegetal notes tasting a bit more like hay than grass or vegetables. There is a vague spice note to this tea as well, which I really enjoyed. Not really “spicy” but just a gentle warmth.

There’s a warm nutty taste to this cup too. A soft texture to the tea, very light and easy to drink. No bitterness with a moderate astringency. A really enjoyable cuppa.

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89
240 tasting notes

Such an interesting tea. I recently finished up a 12.5g pack, with another 12.5g pack set aside for aging as part of my white tea aging experiment. While this tea is white by process, it’s black by flavor. There’s such an incredible rich sweetness that comes naturally from this tea, like light maple syrup or agave nectar. Cooked stonefruit rounds out. What impresses me the most about this tea is it’s durability. Gong-fu style, I was able to produce rich tea for about 12 infusions!

teaddict

What kind of tea-to-water ratio did you use to get 12 infusions out of it? That’s very impressive for any white tea. I don’t think I’ve ever gotten as many without reaching light sweet water.

CHAroma

Agreed, tell us more!

TeaGull

I think it’s this tea in particular, that can do so many infusions. I used about 2.5g in 80mL.

teaddict

That’s a leaf/water ratio I’d use, so I agree, it must be the tea and not just really concentrated brewings.

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78
280 tasting notes

This is a very unique, interesting white tea.
Thanks Gingko, for the sample, I enjoyed it both times (I think it was two 3.5g bags)!

The liquor was a light brown somewhat gold color. Honestly, this tea really felt like a black tea, rather than a white tea. The color wasn’t light (green or yellow tinted), the wet leaves were dark brown (again, like a black tea after infusion; not as dark as houjicha or anything), and the first pot I had of this was slightly astringent and had some malty notes!

For the first time a few days ago, I went by the directions; boiled water for 3 minutes. This afternoon, however, for the 2nd bag, I tried slightly under boiling, probably between 190-200 or so, for the same amount of time.

The astringency and drying sensation from the first pot were gone. Instead, the honey-sweetness was much more pronounced! (This was present the first time, but far less obvious). This really reminds me of a less complex Yunnan Gold. It is from the same region, so I guess I shouldn’t be surprised by that.

For a white tea, this was very surprising – it wasn’t too light, flowery, buttery — the honey-sweetness was quite enjoyable, but I can’t remember there being much else to it. I think I would go for Life in Teacup’s Yunnan Golden Buds over this, but that’s just my personal preference!

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 3 min, 0 sec

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70
247 tasting notes

I didn’t follow the directions for steeping. I oversteep tea so often and I only had one sample. So, it’s quite possible that I’m tasting something very different from the others.

I couldn’t smell this tea when dry. I could only smell my teacup. 160/3 min. Now, I can smell it and it smells slightly vegetal. It’s got a lot of the black tea scent to it, the taste as well. It tastes like a golden yunnan and even looks like one with the golden brown color. I’m tasting something reminiscent of honey or cane sugar. It’s a strange kind of sweetness that is not very pronounced. There is no astringency to this tea at all, nor is it bitter. It’s just a pleasant late afternoon tea.

Preparation
160 °F / 71 °C 3 min, 0 sec

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72
863 tasting notes

This was one of the free samples I won from Life In Teacup’s Valentine’s contest…

This does not seem like a white tea at all. It brewed up a brownish color – really like a black tea. It smelled sort of like a cross between a black tea and a puerh- I got a hint of earthiness in the nose after it brewed, and the black tea scent that I’m very familiar with as that is one of my favorite tea types.

Tastewise, I’m thinking it reminds me of a black tea as well, with a small honeyish note. I don’t get white at all, but to be fair, I’m so inexperienced with white teas I may just be missing it.

Overall, though, this is a very pleasant and relaxing evening tea.

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 3 min, 0 sec

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