Tea type
Oolong Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Floral, Honey, Roasted, Dried Fruit, Fig, Peach, Raisins
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Jason
Average preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 4 min, 15 sec 4 g 7 oz / 200 ml

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27 Tasting Notes View all

  • “The last of this for a while. We’re leaving for the holidays in less than a week and aside from the truly dear things like the pu-erh cake, I want to use up as much leaf as is reasonable so...” Read full tasting note
    88
  • “I think my tea died. Honestly, this tin is about two years old and it just tastes like meh. I have heard that some oolongs age well, like puerh, but this isn’t one of them. I don’t know if my...” Read full tasting note
  • “had a little cup of this on my lunch break. i really like oolongs. and one of the other reviewers mentioned this was kinda ‘flat’ tasting. which i agree. not the most interesting or poetic oolong...” Read full tasting note
  • “I bought a tin of this at the same time I bought the Numi Chocolate Pu-Erh. I’ve been sampling it ever since, wanting to love it and just not managing. Too floral for me, no peachy flavor at all. ...” Read full tasting note
    48

From The Republic of Tea

The Cup of Poetry – This hand-picked tea is prized for its large silver- tipped leaves and pure peach flavor. Grown in the hills of Taiwan, this tea makes a delightful cup. (May also be known as wulong tea).

About The Republic of Tea View company

The Republic of Tea is a progressive and socially conscious business recognized for being the leading purveyor of more than 200 premium teas and herbs, ready-to-drink iced teas and more. Founded in 1992, The Republic of Tea sparked a tea revolution in America with the purpose of enriching people’s lives through the experience of premium teas and a Sip by Sip Rather Than Gulp by Gulp lifestyle.

27 Tasting Notes

26 tasting notes

Pleasant enough but a bit one dimensional. It has a light sweet floral flavor backed by a touch of roast. It is only good for about 2 or 3 infusions, but probably would go further with a different leaf to water ratio.

Flavors: Floral, Honey, Roasted

Preparation
2 tsp 10 OZ / 300 ML

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87
306 tasting notes

There’a a major flaw with the marketing of this tea. It is called “Wuyi Oolong” but the ingredients say it is “Pure Silver- Tip Formosan Oolong leaves made from the WuYi tea varietal.” First, there is the issue that there is not just one varietal used for Wuyi oolongs, so I’m not sure what “the WuYi tea varietal” refers too. It must be a transplanted tea from China’s Wuyi region to Taiwan where it is grown and made into a Formosa style oolong. Okay, fair enough, but that is either some deceptive or uninformed marketing to call this tea “Wuyi Oolong”, as it is not what most tea drinkers know as a Wuyi Oolong, a class of oolong teas produced near Wuyi Rock in Fujian province China. As Wuyi oolongs can fetch a pretty penny, it would seem this tea from Republic of Tea is attempting to imitate that to exploit the wallets of less-informed tea drinkers who have heard the hype about Wuyi but have no idea how to tell a real Wuyi oolong from a Would-Be Wuyi. Don’t get me wrong, I’m not usually one to jump to accusations toward tea companies when the information seems inaccurate or misleading, but when it comes down to these mass-production type companies that sell their wares at overpriced places like Whole Foods, where the target demographic is often less informed than they are affluent and trend-chasing… I’m a bit more skeptical. Oye…. kind of rubs my fur the wrong way, but let’s get to the tea itself.

I had a bit of a dilemma figuring out the way to brew this, as Wuyi oolongs are usually brewed with very short infusions in the Gongfu style, and a lot of leaf, while the Formosa style oolong uses relatively less leaf and longer infusions, from most brewing recommendations I’ve seen. I tried it both ways and it definitely lends itself to the longer infusions, not short ones, so I brewed at 45 seconds, adding 15 each time. The leaves of this tea smell strongly of figs and berries. The scent is deep, dark, and fruity, very pleasant. The first infusion has a honeyed sweetness and the taste of dried fruit, hints of fig and golden raisins. The color is a gorgeous golden yellow and the mouthfeel is syrupy and thick. There is just a light flavor of peach, not nearly a “pure peach” flavor like Republic of Tea describes, but it is certainly fruity and sweet. There’s a hint of astringency, but it fades after a few infusions, and by the 4th or 5th it becomes even more mellow, sweet and fruity.

All things considered, I am surprised how much I enjoy this Would-Be Wuyi. For all the deceptive or inaccurate marketing and the steep price tag (compared to the rest of Republic of Tea’s line, this was the highest priced tea in the bulk bins at the store) it is still a pretty good tasting tea when all is said and done. The price is comparable to some authentic Wuyi oolongs though, so … I’ll let you be the judge on whether or not that’s worth it. At the time I’m writing this, they are charging $20 for 50g (1.75 oz). Sheesh.

Flavors: Dried Fruit, Fig, Honey, Peach, Raisins

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 0 min, 45 sec 4 g 3 OZ / 100 ML
TeaNecromancer

ouch that price! I remember when I first moved here and didn’t have a source for a good oolong, this was the only non-flavored oolong Whole Foods had, it was ok, but it was no Wuyi. In a way this tea (and Whole Foods lack of teas that I wanted) is what pushed me to start buying all my tea online.

Except when I am in PA and buy tons of tea from Wegmans :P

Lion

I really like the flavor of this tea, but yes, definitely no wuyi. It isn’t incredibly complex, just very sweet and honey-like and a lot od dried fruit flavor. It reminds me of Shang Tea’s White Tea Oolong. It tastes like it’s made from the Da Bai Hao varietal. I bought a small sample amount of this in bulk just to see what it was like, but I won’t be buying more. I will enjoy what I have and wait until I can get some real Wuyi oolong later.

TeaNecromancer

I think that was more or less my opinion, I enjoyed it but not enough to get more. You have a little Wuyi in the box of tea samples you are getting Friday ;)

Lion

Yeah! Yeah! Yeah! lion shuffle

TeaNecromancer

hehe, we need to settle on a time, does somewhere between 3-5 sound good on Friday? I have plans after 7 so we won’t be able to tea alllll night :P

Lion

Works for me. :3

TeaNecromancer

Cool, just give me a more exact time either today or tomorrow morning so I can have everything ready

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2 tasting notes

i steep this with blueberry bliss by teavana awesome!

Preparation
Boiling 5 min, 30 sec

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75
2 tasting notes

fully agree with the last two comments. Smooth and sweet.

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75
14 tasting notes

Excellent, light and floral oolong.

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75
10 tasting notes

Nice almost floral aroma almost reminiscent of a first flush Darjeeling. Rich honey flavor very smooth. I like this tea a lot.
Steeped at 195 until leaves began to sink. I bought this bulk from Central Market for around $110 / lb

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