No. 523 Berlin 2011 (formerly Saint Petersburg)

Tea type
Black Oolong Blend
Ingredients
Black Tea, Oolong Tea
Flavors
Not available
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Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Organic
Edit tea info Last updated by Martin Bednář
Average preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 3 min, 0 sec 5 g

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2 Tasting Notes View all

  • “Thanks Martin for sending this my way! The P&T website says 7 teas make up this blend. The flavour is relatively smooth, no astringency, and light-bodied. There are very subtle hints of floral...” Read full tasting note
  • “I had last 10 grams remaining, as I sent some across the pond because I just didn’t cared too much for this tea. From those 10 grams I used 5 grams today and steeped in the pot and… I think I just...” Read full tasting note
    85

From Paper & Tea

Renowned tea merchant Helwig Hooss created this highly sophisticated black tea blend of seven varieties half-century ago and it became an all-time customer favourite. His nephew, our founder Jens, was inspired to recreate the original recipe for you as a tribute to the establishment of Paper & Tea in 2011.

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2 Tasting Notes

1404 tasting notes

Thanks Martin for sending this my way!

The P&T website says 7 teas make up this blend. The flavour is relatively smooth, no astringency, and light-bodied. There are very subtle hints of floral and an even more subtle sweetness in the background. The second steep is remarkably similar to the first, which is a point in its favour. This tea is nice, but not as special as I had anticipated.

Martin Bednář

You’re welcome. I had much higher hopes for this tea. When I was in their shop in Leipzig, I took a sniff and I knew I wanted it. But then, when prepared, it just went into dismal abyss.

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85
2075 tasting notes

I had last 10 grams remaining, as I sent some across the pond because I just didn’t cared too much for this tea. From those 10 grams I used 5 grams today and steeped in the pot and… I think I just found the best steeping method for this tea!

I tried gongfu, western in a strainer or fillable paper tea bag, but it has been always somehow meh. But method I tried today changed my impressions by a lot.

Smooth, forest honey tasting, with kind of floral impressions, that’s basically how first steep is like. That translates later to the malty notes; along with hints of caramel and stewed fruits, with longer mouthfeel.

Second steep is like the later notes of the first one, with some kind of spicy notes that black tea sometimes produces; and it has been highly enjoyable, warming and cozy.

I assume that the steeping temperature, which was 90°C and steeping time (3 minutes) in a big basket strainer is the key for this tea. The tea pot is said to have volume of 1000 ml, but I actually never measured it myself. The oolong leaves needs to expand well and maybe they were a little bit more prominent in the bottom of the tin. When steeped it was a wonderful two-coloured combo in the strainer.

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 3 min, 0 sec 5 g

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