Ta Xua Mountain Mist

Tea type
Green Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Asparagus, Citrus, Mineral, Peach, Smoke, Spinach
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by TeaNecromancer
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  • “Out of the three green teas from Tea From Vietnam, I liked this one the most. It’s is thick floral green with smokey and citrus notes. Later on, bitter and floral notes. Odd as these days I’ve been...” Read full tasting note
  • “I took the most epic power nap yesterday, a 17 hour power nap! I think it was the blissfully cool air and cats that would not stop snuggling me that really caused this nap of epicness, it was as...” Read full tasting note

From Tea From Vietnam

Yunnan (China) is the main source of Pu’erth of the world, because most of ancient tea trees have ever existed, live in this region for thousand of years and their leaves are the main ingredient for producing pu’erth tea. But if you look at the map, you’ll see that Yunnan shares the border with Myanmar in the west, Laos in the south and Vietnam in the southeast. Which means the northwestern region of Vietnam share similar geographical conditions with Yunnan, and of course, the ancient tea trees also live in here.

The ancient tea trees love to grow in high elevated regions, and Ta Xua Mountains is that kind of place, it’s one of the highest mountains in northwestern Vietnam with the highest peak of 2.865m and locates only a few hundred of kilometres away from Yunnan. Ta Xua means ‘high mountain’ in the language of H’mong people, the main minority group that live in the mountains. There are approximately 400 to 500 elder tea trees that still existed in the region and all of them are protected by 7 minority groups that have lived with the tea trees for hundred of years . They called the tea made from elder tea trees with the name of “high mountain snow tea” not only due to the leaf appearance but they also believe that the leaves are covered by the mist droplets or snowflakes.

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2 Tasting Notes

1271 tasting notes

Out of the three green teas from Tea From Vietnam, I liked this one the most. It’s is thick floral green with smokey and citrus notes. Later on, bitter and floral notes. Odd as these days I’ve been more of an oolong and pu’er drinker and I find this green appeals to the sheng drinker in me.

Full review on Oolong Owl http://oolongowl.com/fish-hook-dragoncloud-and-mountain-mist-green-tea-tea-from-vietnam/

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921 tasting notes

I took the most epic power nap yesterday, a 17 hour power nap! I think it was the blissfully cool air and cats that would not stop snuggling me that really caused this nap of epicness, it was as refreshing as a mountain spring on a hot day. I broke out one of my sweaters today, a great fuzzy thing with a huge cowl (or a food trough as I call it since you know, crumbs) and a strange slit going up the back that means I always need an undershirt, because why is there a back vent? It is thick and fluffy meaning not a sweater for a hot day…and if it is cool enough you need this sweater you will not appreciate the draft. Mysterious clothing design is mysterious.

Today I am looking at Tea From Vietnam’s Ta Xua Mountain Mist, a Maocha from high in the Ta Xua Mountains of Northwest Vietnam. A region, it is pointed out in the description, that borders Yunnan, that grand producer of some of my favorite teas. Honestly if I had no idea where this tea was from, I would wonder if it was a Yunnan green tea, because it has that distinct terroir notes that I recognize from teas in that region, part of the fun part of nature not really paying attention to country borders and just following geology (and weather patterns of course.) The notes I pick up from the dry leaves are woody and smoky with distinct notes of peaches and a touch of spinach. It has the aroma of a distant mountain forest fire, clean mineral heavy spring water, and ripe peaches, one of those teas where the name matches the description indeed!

I decided to brew thing grandpa style, a way I am much enamored of using for green teas from Yunnan, so why not try it with its close neighbor? There is just something very appealing about taking old mountain grown trees and tossing their fluffy leaves into a bowl and adding water, watching as they slowly plump up and unfurl, and blowing them around the bowl as I sip around them. Doubly so while doing so on a sunny morning while lying in bed reading, seriously it is a fantastic thing. Tasting this tea starts off gentle, distant smoke and clean mineral spring water with a distant note of peach. The longer it steeps the more the sweet peach and smoke notes come out, along with a touch of citrus and vegetal notes of steamed spinach and asparagus. After many refills of my bowl (great staying power) it finally faded to gentle mineral notes and a touch of lingering sweetness.

For blog and photos: http://ramblingbutterflythoughts.blogspot.com/2015/09/tea-from-vietnam-ta-xua-mountain-mist.html

Flavors: Asparagus, Citrus, Mineral, Peach, Smoke, Spinach

Christina / BooksandTea

Man, that nap sounds awesome. This weekend was the first one that was cold enough for an extra layer, and it made me so happy to stay warm inside while it was cooler and crisper outside.

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