Hand Picked Summer Tieguanyin

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 Bonnie
Average preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 1 min, 45 sec

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24 Tasting Notes View all

  • “This is my 400th Review on Steepster!!! First I want to thank Verdant for this sample that came with my last order. I saved it for this 400th review. (You like the red?!) This tea is from the...” Read full tasting note
    98
  • “This is a nice creamy one, with almonds & flowers in the flavor! My guitar player friend came over to rehearse today, for a concert we’re playing next week at Webster University. It will be all...” Read full tasting note
  • “Had a cup of this tonight while I finished up some homework. Again, I am struck by the beauty of the leaves. What started out as 2 small teaspoons of rolled leaves floated to the top of the...” Read full tasting note
    100
  • “I’ve had this for a while but haven’t rated it evidently. I’m not going to rate it now because I had a cup of coffee recently and my tastebuds are askew. What I will say is this seems like a...” Read full tasting note

From Verdant Tea

“An incredibly rich, creamy and summery Tieguanyin with Marigold florals and creamy almond aftertaste. . . .”
This is the first time we have been able to secure a summer harvest Tieguanyin from our friends in Anxi. The incredible thing about this tea is that it actually tastes like summer. The mouthfeel is like being enveloped by a warm mist in a sauna or in the forest in the way that the sweetness wraps around the whole tongue. Instead of exotic orchids, the floral elements feel sunny and familiar like marigold, daffodil, or poppies.

The feeling set is a lazy summer afternoon outside. The counterpoint to the warmth is a texture of chilled fresh cream, perhaps to mix in to just-picked berries. There is a velvety sensation paired with vegetal sweetness of french green beans that evokes the feeling and smell of young yellow-green grass that is still smooth and soft.

Just when you think that the early steepings are settling into a beautiful summer day, the tea turns in another direction and ups the complexity with buttery florals of saffron moving towards darker exotic fruit like goji berry or dried lychee. The base texture moves from chilled cream to rice pudding, simmered for hours into a thick sweet dessert. The aftertaste hints at slivered almonds and imported Italian Amaretti cookies covered in pearl sugar. Very late steepings see the development of dark amber incense aftertastes and redwood bark.

About Verdant Tea View company

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24 Tasting Notes

79
57 tasting notes

It’s been a brutal summer for my tea drinking habits. I simply don’t drink as much when it’s 95-100+ degrees out here, so I have to wait till night when there’s a slight chilly breeze going on to actually enjoy tea the way I like it. Anyways, when this tea was announced I immediately placed on order (me being a huge fan of TGY) and waited eagerly for my order. I did not try it until tonight simply because of the previous stated reasons. So here it is.

>Dry Leaf Apperance/Aroma
Small tightly curled deep jade green leaves with a very nice gentle aroma. not as aromatic as others.

>Brewing Method
Gong-fu style closely following verdant’s instructions, using a yixing pot dedicated to TGY.

>Liquid Appearance
Bright golden green.

>Taste/Aroma
My first cup had a somewhat muted floral aroma, with a unique fresh “sparkling” mouth feel and a slight gentle sweetness. Not as floral in taste as other TGY’s, but grassier/greener in a good way. The second cup became slightly more aromatic, taste remained mostly the same but crisper. The 3rd and 4th were also very similar. Texture became thicker and smoother with very defined crisp sweetness and clean mouth feel. My favorite steeps were the 5th and 6th, where the tea became thick, velvety smooth, and slightly juicy. The 7th and final steep I made was light in flavor, this TGY was all about mouth feel anyways, with texture remaining mostly the same.

Throughout my session, I never really felt a strong after taste, more of a lingering note. Verdant describes this similar to almond, but to me, that small note left me with an almost mineral sensation, similar to that of a wuyi. Very light and mostly noticeable in late steepings, but still there.

>Wet Leaf Appearance
Mix of broken and unbroken leaves, some stems, varying sizes of leaves.

>Overall
While not as good as its spring/autumn counterparts, this tea was quite interesting. What amazes me the most is how each picking season can create a vastly different experience in taste. Taste wise, this tea was mostly very light and concentrated more on mouth feel, which had a very unique texture compared to other TGY’s. I found it a bit lacking in the aftertaste and couldn’t really taste/feel most of the hints verdant describes about this tea.

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec

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96
289 tasting notes

I’ve been avoiding Oolongs lately. Not because I don’t want to drink them though!! Oolongs are my favorite. However, I have found that too much oolong upsets my tummy. Especially Tieguanyin or other floral Oolongs. It’s so VERY, VERY sad.
I’m taking the plunge today and steeping this out. I’m using my little yixing teapot that I use for floral green Oolongs. I’m really not sure about this little pot. I bought it ultra cheap. I can tell its cheaply made as the lid doesn’t fit well, but mostly I wanted a yixing to experience the seasoning aspect and the subsequent flavor differences. I just hope it’s not ‘fake’ yixing, which I didn’t realize existed until I bought a cheap pot. >_< Oh well.
This tea is wonderful. Floral, obviously, and green and creamy and full. I’m currently on the third steep. The leaves smell super complex at this point, almost savory. The taste has morphed a little- not quite as floral with some of that extra “savory” thrown in. Buttery. It absolutely coats my mouth; the aftertaste is pleasant.
Because of the tummy issue and a needy toddler, I doubt I will make it through 18 steepings, but I know I will do several!

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C

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1 tasting notes

Mmm. When I read Verdant’s brewing instructions, I was somewhat incredulous. 2 seconds? Most oolongs I drink need 15-30 seconds, at least. Much to my surprise and delight, the minute the leaves touched water, they exploded with an amazing fragrance. Maybe something like a gardenia garden during a warm rain? And an incredible smooth flavor, sweet, floral, is this even tea? On my fifth steep now, the aroma is still there, with a hint of coconut. The flavor, while not stronger, has more punch, as if to say, “yes, I am actually tea.” Normally, I’ll happily wear my tea leaves out, enjoying them too much to really make notes. But this tea deserves a good study. Thanks Steepster, for introducing me to Verdant. My poor wallet…

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C

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75
417 tasting notes

Thank you Kasumi no Chajin for swapping this sample with me.

I only had about 2g of this tea of this tea to taste with, so I decided to brew it for a minute each time in a gaiwan with about 2oz of water. I really wanted to get a sense of the full flavor profile of this tea. I found it had an odd sweetness that I didn’t think complemented the floral notes, and the mid/back-palate flavor reminded me of overcooked green vegetables. Although this hasn’t been my favorite tea I’ve tried, it was a really interesting experience- my first summer harvest Tieguanyin.

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 1 min, 0 sec

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