Oolong tea from Hon.yama, fall harvest, "Haru-meguri"

Tea type
Oolong Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Apricot, Astringent, Butter, Citrus, Cookie, Floral, Gardenias, Grass, Honeysuckle, Lilac, Lily, Orange, Peach, Spinach, Strawberry, Umami, Vegetal, Green, Green Beans, Snow Peas, Soybean, Thick, Alkaline, Baby Powder, Bitter, Cream, Drying, Escarole, Flowers, Fruity, Grain, Jam, Perfume, Sugar, Vanilla
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Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by derk
Average preparation
Boiling 0 min, 30 sec 3 g 2 oz / 73 ml

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3 Tasting Notes View all

  • “I feel guilty about these generous Thés du Japon samples from Derk. I wasn’t sure how to steep them when I received them and I’m equally clueless now, but instead of figuring it out, I accidentally...” Read full tasting note
  • “I went for it first because it was the Baozhong like one. Brewing it up, it struck me as being closer to a first flush darjeeling than a Taiwanese oolong. It had a thick body, beautiful leaves like...” Read full tasting note
  • “Final freebie from the order, thank you :) October 22, 2021 harvest I feel surrounded by flowers — lily, lilac, sweet pea, freesia, gardenia, honeysuckle. A very complex, aromatic tea with...” Read full tasting note

From Thés du Japon

With this oolong tea from Hon.yama, Aozuru-chaho Thés-du-Japon once again offers a tea from the Takahashi tea farm, which produces, among others, the famous Kôju oolong cultivar. In contrast to that cultivar, this is an autumn harvest and, more importantly, a Taiwanese cultivar. Its name cannot be disclosed, but connoisseurs might be able to figure it out.
This tea has a fairly intense floral fragrance that is intertwined with vanilla aromas and very mellow subtle cinnamon notes.
The infusion is just as aromatic on the palate and is fluid yet powerful with a very slight touch of astringency.
Later infusions bring more confectionery aromas that harmonize wonderfully with its floral base.
The aftertaste is also very delicious, both floral and fruity with strawberry notes.
Once again, this oolong from Hon.yama is a great and surprising success.

Type of tea : Semi-fermented tea (oolong tea)
Origin : Kozeto, Aoi ward, Shizuoka city, Shizuoka prefecture
Cultivar : Taiwanese cultivar
Harvest : october 22st, 2021, hand picked

Brewing suggestion

Quantity of leaves: 3g / 1 tsp Quantity of water : 50ml / 1/5 cup Water temperature : 100°C / 212°F Brewing time : 40s

About Thés du Japon View company

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3 Tasting Notes

439 tasting notes

I feel guilty about these generous Thés du Japon samples from Derk. I wasn’t sure how to steep them when I received them and I’m equally clueless now, but instead of figuring it out, I accidentally shuffled them into the tea museum. The box is out in the open now, so there should be more TDJ reviews soon.

I’m excited to finally try this floral green oolong from Japan! I steeped 3 g of leaf in 85 ml of 195F water for 25 seconds, then lowered the temperature to 190F for 15, 20, 25, 30, 40, 60, 90, 120, and 240 seconds.

The dry aroma is very floral and Baozhong-like: lilac, lily, sweet pea, gardenia, honeysuckle, and grass. The first steep has all these florals, plus strawberry, peach, citrus, cookies, and grass. It’s also quite astringent, though the peachy aftertaste is amazing. I lowered the temperature to 190F in subsequent steeps, which really brings out the butter, lilac, sweet pea, grass, and strawberry. The star here, however, is really that super-ripe, realistic peach, like one you’d have to eat over the kitchen sink. The next couple steeps are still very peachy and floral, with apricot, orange, spinach, umami, and strawberry. The fruit is a little less pronounced in the next few steeps, letting the florals back in. The tea peters out into grass, spinach, and faint florals soon afterwards.

If you don’t mind astringency, this is a beautiful tea. I was even more impressed by the fruit than by the florals, though both are lovely and indeed reminiscent of a Taiwanese oolong. (Did I mention the strawberry and peach?) The flavours are strong even after two years in storage. Lower temperatures tame the astringency somewhat. I hope these farmers keep experimenting with these Taiwanese-style oolongs because this one is an excellent start. Thanks again, Derk, for the chance to try this tea!

Flavors: Apricot, Astringent, Butter, Citrus, Cookie, Floral, Gardenias, Grass, Honeysuckle, Lilac, Lily, Orange, Peach, Spinach, Strawberry, Umami, Vegetal

Preparation
3 g 3 OZ / 85 ML
derk

You’re welcome. I was really surprised by the intensity of these Japanese oolong!

Leafhopper

I agree! I would have rated this in the nineties if not for the astringency.

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1725 tasting notes

I went for it first because it was the Baozhong like one. Brewing it up, it struck me as being closer to a first flush darjeeling than a Taiwanese oolong. It had a thick body, beautiful leaves like a Baozhong, and some florals that remind me of Jin Xuan and Baozhong, especially in texture, but the profile was heavier with umami for me. I kept on getting the same kind of notes that I get in Gyurkos and First Flushes, like a little bit of apricot and strawberry hints, but lots of greener ones like soy, edamame, cream, fresh grass, gardenia, and drying astringency. I had hard time getting past the 5th cup gong fu. I liked it, but it was a little bit astringent and almost too green for me.

Flavors: Apricot, Astringent, Gardenias, Green, Green Beans, Snow Peas, Soybean, Strawberry, Thick, Umami, Vegetal

derk

I either mislabeled this or accidentally slipped it into your package instead of Leafhopper’s. How much did I send you? I think it’s supposed to be Kojû cultivar oolong :$

Daylon R Thomas

5 grams only

Daylon R Thomas

I could have oversteeped it since I did it all at once using 4-5 oz, and did 25, 15, 30, 25, 30, 40. It’s hard to tell since the leaves of both cultivars look VERY similar. I will also see if the Kojun is in the stash you sent me. I think a requested for this one specifically. There were A LOT of florals in this one, but it was also on the astringent green side pushing it into umami for me in the aftertaste.

derk

The Haru-meguri was only a wee 6g sample sent by TDJ so what you drank here is probably Kojû. Pretty sure my session of Haru-meguri was more than one gram ;P Sorry if there was a mix-up! Gonna make a pot of Kojû right now to compare.

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1605 tasting notes

Final freebie from the order, thank you :)

October 22, 2021 harvest

I feel surrounded by flowers — lily, lilac, sweet pea, freesia, gardenia, honeysuckle. A very complex, aromatic tea with persistent retronasal action. I did brew this with boiling water as suggested, at least initially, and then dialed it down after the second infusion. The liquor is — I finally get what TDJ refers to as fluid. There’s a bit of weight to it in the mouth but it’s not necessarily thick or oily. It moves around. A little alkaline-umami with a floral bitterness, some drying astringency. In the gripping aftertaste is a fruity, morphing mix of strawberry glaze, sugary peach and vanilla-cream mixed with the heady floral bouquet. Got maybe 7 infusions with long-ish steeping times, last steep produce a pure floral perfume taste-aroma.

The leaf is beautiful. I haven’t seen leaf edges rimmed with oxidation in a while. I like it. And wish I had more to play. I never expected a tea with this strong of a floral bouquet to come out of Japan. Well done!

This is even more baozhong-like than the other oolong I tried — from Sashima, Kanaya-midori cultivar. The cultivar of this one is teased at in the description. It’s probably Qing Xin. Could be Four Seasons, could be Jin Xuan shrug

Flavors: Alkaline, Astringent, Baby Powder, Bitter, Cream, Drying, Escarole, Floral, Flowers, Fruity, Gardenias, Grain, Honeysuckle, Jam, Lilac, Lily, Peach, Perfume, Strawberry, Sugar, Umami, Vanilla

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 30 sec 3 g 2 OZ / 60 ML
LuckyMe

Sounds intriguing. How does this compare to Taiwanese oolongs? I had a Japanese oolong from Yuuki-Cha once that was also baozhong-like but a lot rougher around the edges.

derk

It’s a tad rough with the drying character and floral bitterness that presented when brewed with boiling as recommended. Keep in mind that I generally welcome bitterness, so if your tolerance is low, it may be prickly for you. Leafhopper will be getting a small sample, so maybe she can mitigate the bitterness by using lower temperature water? The oxidation level I thought was wonderful, allowing the flowers to be balanced by fruit in the aftertaste. All that said, if I had done a blind tasting, I’d never guess this wasn’t Taiwanese.

Leafhopper

Sounds like these TDJ oolongs are winners!

Leafhopper

Derk, I just saw your comment. I’ll remember to use 195F water to mitigate the bitterness, as I tend to enjoy milder teas.

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