Hong Mao Feng

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Black Tea
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Edit tea info Last updated by Angrboda
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  • “Here’s another one from my recent Tea Palace order. My first order from them, but certainly not my last! However… Hong Mao Feng? As we know it’s so called because they use the buds and they curl up...” Read full tasting note
    87

From Tea Palace

Hong Mao Feng is made of only whole leaf buds harvested in early spring and has a naturally curled leaf similar to Mao Feng green tea. It has a smooth yet robust flavor and typical Keemun full-bodied taste.

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1 Tasting Note

87
1353 tasting notes

Here’s another one from my recent Tea Palace order. My first order from them, but certainly not my last!

However… Hong Mao Feng?

As we know it’s so called because they use the buds and they curl up in the same way that mao feng green tea does, but hong mao feng is a black tea.

So when I get a tin of large curly leaves, many of which are sort of silvery and/or dark green and which smells distinctly floral, I get a little bit concerned. Especially when I know that the shop actually also carries mao feng green.

I decided to put my trust in TP, however, and brew it like I would any other black tea. This gave me a light yellow cup with almost no aroma at all. What is there is sort of peach-y. A very delicate mineral flavour with touches of grass and a warning hint of bitterness when swallowed.

A far cry from the description of a smooth yet robust flavour and typical Keemun full-bodied taste.

I think, by accident, they’ve sent me a tin of mao feng green, mislabeled as hong mao feng. I shouldn’t have sprung for the large tin what with it being a limited edition product and all then.

It seems drinkable enough, though, so I can’t be bothered to start making too much of a fuss about something that was probably an honest mistake. I can easily see how it could have happened with the similarity of the names. I’ve emailed the company and asked if I should return it. They didn’t want it back, so I’ll just drink it, but they are going to send me a replacement. I had an email reply only a couple of hours after I sent mine in.

(On the bright side, if I’m correct that it’s mao feng green, I’ve actually received a much more expensive product than I’ve paid for. Shame I’m not more into green tea then!)

It is now a few days later, and Tea Palace have sent me a replacement and a profuse apology. They didn’t want the mistake tea back, so I’ve got a big tin of that as well. From my corrospondence with them I sort of got the impression that I’m correct in having received the mao feng green the first time, so that’s what I’ve decided that is.

Now this is more like it. I could tell as soon as I saw the leaves, and it also brews up nice and dark. No nasty surprises here. It does indeed smell grainy and keemun-y too. Imagine that. Keemun that isn’t keemun!

It’s a good strong tea, this. It has a strong cocoa-y note at first and then all the grain-y notes underneath. There’s malty sweet notes in here as well, which in combination with the cocoa notes make it a rather sweet cup.

It doesn’t have keemun’s natural almost-smoky flavour, though, but I’m fine with that. It’s a very good cup of tea, this, and I’m glad I a) sprang for the 100g tin and b) decided to make a fuss about the green tea mistake after all.

adagio breeze

I could take some of the green mao feng off your hands if you’d like to swap!

Angrboda

This could easily be arranged. You can have the whole tin if you like. I don’t dislike it at all, but I’m also not likely to manage to drink very much of it while it’s still any good.

Mercuryhime

They both sound lovely! Hong means red (red tea to Chinese is black to English speakers), btw. Glad you got what you wanted in the end!

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