Wu Yi Yan Cha Fo Shou Buddha Hands Oolong

Tea type
Oolong Tea
Ingredients
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Flavors
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Caffeine
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Edit tea info Last updated by Gingko (manager of Life in Teacup)
Average preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec

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  • “Rated … points, not for the vendor, but for the maker, who manually controlled every single step in the processing of this tea, who also wrote a book about more than 70 varietals of Wuyi Yan Cha. I...” Read full tasting note

From Life In Teacup

Wu Yi Fo Shou (Buddha Hands), also called Jin Fo (Golden Buddha) or Xue Li, is one of the most famous Wuyi varietal. It is from the same tea cultivar as for Southern Fujian Fo Shou. This tea is made by Wuyi tea expert Luo Shengcai. It’s heavily roasted and has rested for a year and developed a smooth and rich flavor.

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1 Tasting Note

Rated … points, not for the vendor, but for the maker, who manually controlled every single step in the processing of this tea, who also wrote a book about more than 70 varietals of Wuyi Yan Cha. I considered myself very lucky to have got this tea, and feel inadequate about describing it.

It is always hard to describe a good Wuyi Yan Cha. In my experience, a good Wuyi is often intertwining of youth and advanced age. The best tea leaves are from trees of 20 years or older, newer leaves and larger leaves mixed to a ratio that serves for the optimal flavor profile. The newly roasted Wuyi bears “breaths of fire” and should be “rested” for at least a few months before being used. When it rests for a year or more, the “fire” has faded and the taste becomes milder and smoother. At this time, the tea is like a perspicacious, senior man, with essence of age and vitality of youth.

About this specific Wuyi tea – it was made in 2008 and has rested since then in sealed condition. The first a several infusions yields a lighter fruity taste before the typical warm Wuyi flavor reaches your throat. After each sip, there is slight sweetness and fruity aroma lingering around. Within a few infusions, sweet aftertaste appears. One may not even realize existence of this sweet aftertaste, unless taking some plain water and finding the water tastes slightly sweet. Whether or not being consciously realized by drinker, this sweet aftertaste helps add flavor to each next infusion.

I would typically have 12 infusions or more in each tea session (with less leaf used and longer infusions, one may do fewer infusions than this). At the end of the day, I would love to soak the spent leaves in cold water. Then it becomes my first cup of tea the next day.

No matter how many infusions are applied, eventually the spent leaves always look so alive and in shape. I believe it’s a quality from the aged tea tree, young spring leaves, artisan roasting and patient resting all together.

7g leaves in 4oz. water

(I apologize if these notes look wordy. I am taking a writing class and having myself trained into describing every detail with a lot of words…)

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec
Cofftea

“and having myself trained into describing every detail with a lot of words”… That’s not a bad thing! Keep ’em coming!=D

takgoti

This log was awesome. Seriously.

Eric Walter

“intertwining of youth and advanced age” <—- middle aged? love the log.

Gingko (manager of Life in Teacup)

Thanks guys for the encouragement. I will try to write better and use more proper words. About the youth and age, I wasn’t organized enough and forgot to elaborate in writing. What I actually mean is, the leaves are young (grown in the season of harvest) but the tea bush is old. Besides, heavy roasting induces the unique taste of “old bush”, but resting time allows the fire taste to fade so the “old bush” taste will mingle well with the lighter fragrance in the tea.

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