Bai Hao Oolong

Tea type
Oolong Tea
Ingredients
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Flavors
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Caffeine
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Certification
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Edit tea info Last updated by Geoffrey Norman
Average preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 4 min, 0 sec

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From TeaVert

Oolong is truly the most complicated tea to manufacture. In the world of gourmet tea, no other tea amazes and fascinates as much as this one. In the Far East, she is known as the Champagne Oolong. Bai Hao is not only extraordinary by flavor, but also for the way it is made.

According to a Chinese legend a farmer left his tea garden because he was too preoccupied with a different business. His tea garden was left unattended, and while he was gone his garden was attacked by a large number of green flies called leafhoppers. When leafhoppers chew on those juicy tea buds, they deposit a tiny amount of saliva. This oolong tea has the highest level of oxidation, which transforms the saliva and tea chemicals into honey-sweet fruity flavors. Nevertheless, the farmer processed the tea leaves as he could not afford to lose his tea harvest.
Bai Hao became so fashionable that at that time, 33 lbs. of this tea were equivalent to the price of a house in Taiwan.

The name “Oriental Beauty” came from Queen Victoria. When she tasted it for the first time, she was astounded by its beauty and taste.
Bai Hao was awarded the Silver medal in the World Food Exposition held in England around 1960.

Making Bai Hao oolong tea takes a lot of skill. It is a very tedious work to only select and pluck the leaves attacked by green flies which appear during June to July. Not only does the tea garden have to be maintained without using pesticides, but it also needs a lot of good luck to get this tiny insect down. The farmer has to keep his tea garden as natural as possible with the hope that green flies will return each year.

This specific choice was selected from a garden in the Fujian Province of China and it won the Gold Medal in the Hangzhou International tea competition, and the Silver medal at Shizuoka, Japan.

Description

Bai Hao is one of most renowned oolong teas and has natural fruity aromas with notes of peaches that produce a sweet and spring honey tasting bright-reddish orange tea liquor.

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4 Tasting Notes

94
6768 tasting notes

LOVE this…but sending the rest to Susan :)

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90
4843 tasting notes

sigh what a lovely Oolong. I agree with Geoffrey, this tastes a lot like a Formosa Oolong.

Such a smooth, rich flavor. Wonderful sweetness. Nice peach tones in the background.

I’m off to write a review of this beauty!

Shinobi_cha

Delete less than a minute ago

I’ve been meaning to ask someone who knows for a while…how does one type italics? (I figure it is similar to bold, which I accidentally figured out)

LiberTEAS

Use underscore _ before and after the word you want in italics. :)

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83
348 tasting notes

The vendor site claims this is a tea from Fujian Province, but “Bai Hao” (or White Hair) Oolong actually stems from Taiwan. And on taste, I’m more apt to believe this is a Formosan oolong. It brews a bright gold liquor with a first flush pekoe-ish nose. The taste is definitely more reminiscent of Taiwanese oolongs I’ve had, reminding me quite a bit of Superior Taifu with its grape-like notes and crisp foretaste. An enjoyable cup…wherever the heck its from.

Full Review: http://www.teaviews.com/2011/02/07/review-teavert-bai-hao-oolong/

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 4 min, 0 sec

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