Organic Taimu Maojian Green Tea

Tea type
Green Tea
Ingredients
Green Tea Leaves
Flavors
Not available
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Low
Certification
Organic
Edit tea info Last updated by TeaVivre
Average preparation
185 °F / 85 °C 1 min, 45 sec

Currently unavailable

We don't know when or if this item will be available.

From Our Community

1 Image

2 Want it Want it

2 Own it Own it

16 Tasting Notes View all

  • “I’ve been trying to drink more green tea these past few weeks because my allergies have been so bad! This is a light delicious cuppa (see previous notes). I like the nuttiness of this tea.” Read full tasting note
    91
  • “Had a cup of this tea with lunch. This is definitely one of my favorite greens from Teavivre. It’s so nutty and delicious! It’s amazing to me how my tastes have changed, because I’m pretty sure...” Read full tasting note
    80
  • “Mmmmm… this is delicious. I think this might be my favorite of the samples Teavivre has sent me. And of course it serves me right that this is currently out of stock since I took so long to get...” Read full tasting note
    93
  • “Backlogging, and based almost entirely on my notes Experience buying from Teavivre http://steepster.com/places/2857-teavivre-online— Age of leaf/date of brewing: advertised as spring 2011....” Read full tasting note
    74

From Teavivre

Origin: Fuding, Fujian, China

Ingredients: Made from one bud and one or two new leaves, rolled into tight, curled leaves

Taste: A sweet taste, with a subtle hint of chestnut

Brew: 1-2 teaspoons for 8oz of water. Brew at 194 ºF (90 ºC) for 1 to 2 minutes (exact time depends on your taste – a longer time will give the tea a stronger taste and color)

Health Benefits: Taimu Maojian green tea is a premium green tea, and so gives you all the great health benefits of any green tea. With an extremely high content of antioxidants, Maojian green tea will help reduce the instance of some forms of cancer, helps lower the risk of heart attacks and coronary diseases and helps fights the affects of aging and polution.

Certifications: The particular Organic White Peony (Bai MuDan) tea that TeaVivre is selling, is guaranteed to be organically grown and produced, independently verified to meet USDA, EU, JAS organic certifications.

About Teavivre View company

Company description not available.

16 Tasting Notes

86
141 tasting notes

I am head over heels in love with Chinese greens lately. Thanks TeaVivre for sending some delicious samples this way! I want to finish each green individually so I get a good idea of the taste and subtleties, since my taste buds have been slightly dulled by super strong coffee over the years.
This is my first Mao Jian as well, and it reminds me of the premium dragonwell I sampled recently from this company; more vegetal and less buttery. I have been enjoying several cups after work lately and it makes me feel cleansed. I would say this tea caps at four steeps. That was a stretch for me, but it seems like four was the max for some other people as well. I suppose it depends on your taste buds though.

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 0 min, 30 sec

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

92
69 tasting notes

Sample provided by TeaVivre, thank you!

I haven’t tried Mao Jian before and I was a taken aback by brewing instructions (90C water) and 36-month shelf life which is like a double for random green tea.
Dry leaves have a dark olive tone and are long and twisted with some white tips and mild toasted aroma. I quite experimented with this one (still have to try cold brew method though) and I find it to be sensitive to both steeping time and temperature.

TeaVivre’s brewing instruction for this tea:
" Just like all green teas, brew Taimu Maojian at approximately 194 ºF or 90ºC for 1 to 2 minutes. TeaVivre’s Maojian can be infused 6 or 7 times, and you should add about 25% to the brewing time and using slightly hotter water for each infusion."

When I first brewed it (followed the instructions) I used minimum 60 seconds for first steep and added 15 seconds to second steep. What I got was delicious first infusion with clear jade tone and similar profile as Bi Luo Chun: fresh, slightly vegetal with sturdy chestnut background and some pleasant astringency that quickly fades and turns into sweet finish.
Second infusion seem to keep all the previous characteristics with a big scoop of bitterness. It wasn’t the one that would wrinkle your face but still it makes one focus more on bitterness itself than on savoring nuttiness and sweetness that are included.
I kept on brewing it with 15 second increase per steep, and third infusion brought less bitterness than previous with accent on sweetness and nutty aftertaste. There was a significant drop of astringency as well. I also got some kind of tickling sensation on tongue.
Forth steep (105 seconds) is where I pulled the plug. Taste started wearing out to the point that I might not want to drink 5th infusion. It still retained some sweet and vegetal notes with fair nutty background. Tickling sensation on tongue is more notable than in 3rd infusion.

I think I got seldom results for my first try.

On second try I managed to make it right! First two 60 second steeps (and 90C water for all) brought out an even profile of first infusion in my previous attempt. I also noted some starchy dryness this time. As I moved toward third infusion I noticed how that nutty background reminds me of dry leaf of particular Long Jing I had recently. Sweetness lingers and lasts long after sipping. This tea reminds me somewhat of Bi Luo Chun, that I don’t particularly enjoy due to its astringency, but astringency of this Mao Jian fits perfectly to my taste.

Wet leaves have accented nutty profile and I could toss them in salad or something (it’s organic after all).

P.S.

I noticed that there’s only 200g left of this tea in TeaVivre’s stock. I immediately snatched 100g … only one more bag left…

Login or sign up to leave a comment.