Huang Jin Gui (Golden Osmanthus) Oolong Traditional Green Style

Tea type
Oolong Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Chestnut, Floral, Green, Milk, Nectar, Nutty, Osmanthus
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Gingko (manager of Life in Teacup)
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 45 sec

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6 Tasting Notes View all

  • “Leaves are dark green, they smell raster fresh grassy. Tea is very light yellow. Also smells grassy. Surprise, surprise, it tastes very grassy! It’s quite delicious. First sip seamed a bit watery...” Read full tasting note
    84
  • “While it may hit the tongue sharply and distinctly grassy, the green citrus flavor of this tea transforms into a mouthful of sweetness almost like chewing on barely roasted nuts.” Read full tasting note
    71
  • “Hmm. This tea smelled intriguingly nutty, but it tasted very weak. When I tried steeping it longer, it got distressingly bitter without getting any more flavorful. Probably I made it too weak —...” Read full tasting note
    71
  • “Sipdown no. 191. A sample, and the last Life in Teacup oolong sample. (Sniff.) At least they went out with a bang. The leaves smelled grassy green in the packet but did some amazing things after...” Read full tasting note
    91

From Life In Teacup

Golden Osmanthus Oolong (Huang Jin Gui) is named after sweet osmanthus, a flower that is fragrant and sweet. This oolong offers a floral fragrance and the tea has a light golden color when brewed. Fragrance of all our oolong products is the natural taste from the tea, without any additives.

The tea sold here was produced in spring season of 2009.

This tea was processed with traditional method. Unlike modern style light oxidized oolong, this tea doesn’t require fridge-storage. Room temperature without direct exposure to strong light will be perfect for storing this tea (sealed in pack) for up to 2 years.

About Life In Teacup View company

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6 Tasting Notes

84
227 tasting notes

Leaves are dark green, they smell raster fresh grassy.

Tea is very light yellow. Also smells grassy.
Surprise, surprise, it tastes very grassy! It’s quite delicious. First sip seamed a bit watery but I changed my mind with the second one. It’s just as smooth as it should be. It only has a hint of nutty taste, mostly grassy tho. More green that oolongy.

(sipping further)

Leaves a really nice aftertaste in my mouth. Mhm, I like this one…

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 45 sec

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71
144 tasting notes

While it may hit the tongue sharply and distinctly grassy, the green citrus flavor of this tea transforms into a mouthful of sweetness almost like chewing on barely roasted nuts.

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71
216 tasting notes

Hmm. This tea smelled intriguingly nutty, but it tasted very weak. When I tried steeping it longer, it got distressingly bitter without getting any more flavorful. Probably I made it too weak — I’m still figuring out the best way to judge proportions. I will definitely try it again, because a tea which tasted the way this smelled would be fantastic.

(Backlogged from Saturday.)

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 30 sec

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91
2036 tasting notes

Sipdown no. 191. A sample, and the last Life in Teacup oolong sample. (Sniff.)

At least they went out with a bang. The leaves smelled grassy green in the packet but did some amazing things after steeping. I steeped this in the gaiwan starting with 15 seconds and increasing in 5 second increments.

1. Pale yellow tea with a milky, floral scent. Flavor is light, more floral/grassy than vegetal, something that initially presents with a slightly bitter edge but quickly smooths into a sort of green nutty flavor like chestnuts.

The cup smells very fragrant, a distinctive floral smell. I’m guessing this is why it is called osmanthus.

2. Same color, similar aroma but deeper. Flavor is fascinating. Starts as green floral and ends as green nuts. Along the way it morphs into various things too fleeting to pin down and describe. Really wonderful and, dare I say, fun.

By the end of the second steep, the leaves have almost tripled in volume.

3. Greener color. Nectar in the aroma! Nuttiness is forefront in the flavor now with floral afterwards, but the nuttiness returns in the aftertaste, light and raw and reminds me of Brazil nuts.

4. Greener again, nectar has become milder. Flavor similar to 3.

5. Similar to 4 but the nuttiness is now milder and the floral aroma/flavor is much more noticeable.

Aftertaste is sweet and fresh for a while after drinking.

Just delicious.

Flavors: Chestnut, Floral, Green, Milk, Nectar, Nutty, Osmanthus

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65
45 tasting notes

Oolong tea with slight hint of raspberry. More smell then taste.

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84
294 tasting notes

Backlog

I drank this grandpa style as my last tea of the night last night. The leaves grew big big big and filled up the whole cup (one of my favorite things about oolongs). The aroma was slightly roasty and gently floral. Flavor was a nice balanced floral, not to strong for someone like me who isn’t the biggest floral fan, but still evident enough to notice right off. There was also a smooth vegetal, almost grassy like note mid sip, and then the end was all fleshy nuts, like how I imagine chestnuts taste. Almost chewy, and lingered nice and long. The cup lasted several top off before I hit the sack, staying tasty the whole time. It’s always a nice surprise to find a more floral oolong that I actually enjoy!

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