Yu Lu Yan Cha Black

Tea type
Black Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Chocolate, Cinnamon, Honey, Stonefruit, Cocoa, Honeysuckle, Malt, Mineral, Roasted, Wood, Ash, Sugar, Oak, Orange, Sweet Potatoes, Vanilla, Earth, Grain, Roasted Barley, Smoke, Smooth, Toasty, Sweet, Vegetal, Pastries, Yams, Cookie, Toasted, Cannabis, Rye, Butter, Bread, Dill, Flowers, Muscatel, Spices, Drying
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by CharlotteZero
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 1 min, 45 sec 5 g 11 oz / 318 ml

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From Verdant Tea

This incredible, limited offering tea has never before been tasted in China or the west. Our most trusted pu’er advisor, Wang Yanxin, knows that we like unique teas, and has an outstanding offer from us to finance any experimental projects that she wants to spearhead in the world of pu’er. Her first experiment has yielded a completely new kind of black tea that we think combines the best chocolatey notes of Laoshan Black with the crisp texture and honey aftertaste of Jin Jun Mei.

Wang Yanxin has a good farmer friend in Xinyang village, famous for its Xinyang Maojian green tea. Her friend was lamenting to her this autumn that her family would not have enough tea to sell this year. Xinyang Maojian uses buds only, and the spring season didn’t yield as many buds as usual. They picked plenty of bud and leaf clumps, and fresh young leaves, but had no incentive to process them as a green tea. Wang Yanxin had the idea of crafting a black tea. She bought the entire remainder of her friend’s harvest to help them out, ensuring that they have enough money to invest for next year’s crop.

Next, she had the fresh leaves air-shipped to her shop in Qingdao, and took them up to Laoshan. In Laoshan village, she and her friends started experimenting with roasting. They lost a lot of the crop before they got it just perfect, but eventually, this hand roasted black tea from Wang Yanxin found the perfect balance of chocolate notes, honey, and a perfect smoothness. Closest to a Jin Jun Mei in profile, this tea is great cause for excitement, showing that the world of tea is still young with room for innovation everywhere.

The name Yu Lu Yan Cha Black comes from the ancient names of Henan and Shandong province. Yu is Henan, and Lu is Hsandong. To commemorate this landmark cooperative tea producing effort, Yu Lu is added to the tea name. Yan is the first part of Wang Yanxin’s name to honor her innovation in creating this new tea.

We are pleased to offer the 20 pounds of this harvest that Wang Yanxin perfected, and pleased to finance the experiment through buying up the results. If this tea is enjoyed as much as we enjoyed tasted it with Wang Yanxin, then we will surely convince her to partner with her friend in Henan for a spring harvest.

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235 Tasting Notes

98
64 tasting notes

Wow.

This tea is my new obsession. I must applaud Wang Yanxin for this one and thank Verdant Tea for somehow managing to take this tea away from her. Anyone with the ingenuity to create such a wonderful masterpiece is a tea wizard. With a complexity rivaling many oolongs, a melt-in-your-mouth texture, and deep, rich aromatics, I can say right now that this is an instant favorite of mine.

I don’t even know where to begin describing it. While tasting, I wrote down the names of a plethora of teas I’m familiar with that this one reminded me of in one aspect or another: A dry leaf appearance like Verdant’s Zhu Rong with less gold, aromas of chocolaty goodness like Laoshan black, at times a body similar to a shui xian or mi lan xiang, a liquor with a coloration somewhere between a dian hong and Zhu Rong, hints of orange citrus notes like a huang zhi xiang. This tea is a Frankenstein’s monster of all my beloved teas combined.

Brewing parameters: 100mL gaiwan, ~1/3 full dry leaf, near-boiling water

The dry leaves present a calming aroma of pure tea, heavy malt, and deep chocolaty notes. I can catch undertones of the charcoal roasting, and it adds nicely to the overall scent. After a quick wash, I excitedly took a sniff of the wet leaves, wondering whether they were hiding something. A rich aroma of chocolate, roasted coffee beans, and a slight fruity scent wafted up. It reminds me of this dark chocolate bread that a local bakery near my home town bakes. When it’s fresh, it has this really thick, cocoa-yeasty smell that just hangs in your nostrils much like this tea’s aroma does. I’ll take you through my gong fu session:

Wash (~1") with water cooled from boiling.

Steep 1 (2"): The malty flavor in this steep is really prominent and melds with a pure tea taste to create a full-bodied brew. Underneath, tones of chocolate, hickory? spices, and coffee come into play. There is also this faint tartness that causes a bit of astringency, but also a slippery mouthfeel that becomes very quenching. Right from the start I felt a strong cha qi from this steep.

Steep 2 (3"): The pure tea flavor increases a bit, paired with an addition of honeyed sweetness. Both chocolate and spicy notes become stronger. The tartness also increases, and becomes more orange-like, or maybe tangerine? The body becomes fuller, and more rounded modeled by a very smooth and creamy mouthfeel, which continues on into the next steeps.

Steep 3 (4"): The spices and citrus notes blend together into this undertone of spiced oranges. There is an additional starchy note underneath that reminds me of the Golden Fleece’s sweet potato flavor, but less sweet and without that caramel-y texture. The most intriguing moment of this tea unfolds in this steep. A pure sugar flavor emerges out of nowhere, becoming very prominent in each additional sip. It produces this lightness on the tip of the tongue, forming a tickling/cooling sensation. In addition, the tartness of the orange notes combines with something like dark chocolate to create this “pulling” sensation and something that makes me imagine what chocolate-covered mandarin oranges would taste like. It’s not astringency, though. Maybe somewhere between that spicy mouthfeel and astringency. Kind of like that sensation after eating dark chocolate with nuts with an additional tartness. It’s difficult to describe, but it makes my mouth beg for another sip and I love it.

Steep 4 (5"): Where I typically write my mouthfeel/textural notes, I only have “THE BEST” written. Starchy and honey flavors increase, while malty notes become more subdued. Pure tea and chocolate flavors reign supreme, and that pure sugar taste/sensation remains very noticeable. In addition, a vanilla cream flavor emerges and ties everything into this nice, well-connected bundle of yumminess.

Steep 5 (7"): All tartness seems to drop out at this point, and all I’m left with are sweets and spices. The sugar taste seems to morph a bit here and become more like brown sugar.

Steep 6 (10"): A nice caramel flavor emerges here and blends very nicely with the new brown sugar flavors. Most other nuances remain constant and the starchy/potato-like flavor diminishes. The body is much lighter at this point, but the mouthfeel is so smooth it’s almost melty.

Steep 7 (13): The sugary sweetness fades out here, and is instead replaced by spiciness that is felt on the tongue. Interestingly, there is a fruity flavor on exhale that seems to hint that something new is coming.

Steep 8 (18"): Indeed, tiny hints of a dark fruit/berry flavor peaks out from the bottom of the flavor profile, blending with notes of vanilla cream chocolate, spices, and malt.

Steep 9 (25"): Basically the same as the last, with a lasting thick and spicy mouthfeel.

Steep 10 (35"): In descending order: malt, pure tea, peppery spice, honey, something between apple and raspberry, chocolate, and finally, vanilla cream.

Steep 11 (1’ 10"): Mostly the same as the last steep, but the flavor has faded severely.

This tea just makes me feel awesome. Very comforting, very warm.

Wait! The leaves! How could I forget? The wet leaves’ appearance is interesting. They are either deep black or a chocolate brown in coloration, and it seems these two colors are divided quite equally. Most of them are also very spindly. They’re rolled extremely tightly. Very few stems, but the size and shapes of the leaves are pretty variable.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C
Cody

Thanks for the kind words, Paul! There is just so much in the leaves to hunger for. I must say, most of the flavors that I found in this tea were things I had never expected to find in a black tea. Indeed, I’m not sure if I would have even wanted them in a black tea. Yet, this one warps your perception of what can and should be present in a certain type of tea. I’m very excited and hopeful to hear of new advancements with the Yu Lu Yan Cha in the future.

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90
143 tasting notes

Back logging…
This tea is a Chameleon. Every single steep changes; not in the normal way tea does either. The smell of the dry leaf and when wet for some reason reminds me of roasted salted nuts… not sure what kind though.

1st Steep: Malty smoke, sweet after taste, smells like roasted slated nuts, strong yet smooth.

2nd Steep: Malty, with a tingle left on the tongue. Not as smokey. Kinda of a powdered coco after taste.

Cooled down: More flavor coming through; more smokey cocoa. Slight creaminess. Smells like roasted nuts.

3rd Steep?: Weaker, light citrus taste, less malt, more brisk taste.

Not sure what happened to my notes on Word but I don’t know if that was the description for the 3rd or 4th steep…

It should be noted that the coco taste isn’t typical. It is kinda like roasted and slightly smoked coco beans; Not the kinda of smokey woody flavor, more sweet roasted smokey.

I almost feel like the early steepings are like a fine Assam and morphs into a really good Ceylon, but through out is done with a bit of Yunnan flare to it; I haven’t any of these strait so I can’t be sure. I can’t wait to see how this tea does Gong Fu style.

Specifics

Leaf: 2 tsp
water: 8oz
Pot: Porcelain
Sweetener: A bit of light agave sometimes
Steeps: 1:35 and add 40’s from there on…

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 1 min, 45 sec

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142 tasting notes

Other reviewers have done such a terrific job on this tea that I feel bad – I have nothing to add to their notes and am simply noting for my own future reference that while this is a really delicious tea, I won’t buy it again since I don’t keep many black teas around and others from Mandala and Verdant will win out over this one. Still, I’m very much enjoying it this morning.

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72
111 tasting notes

Alrighty, so I’ve ripped open my Verdant box, hehe. :)

This tea is quite complex. It’s smoky, it’s malty, it’s bready, it’s slightly chocolately, it’s potatoey and it’s also … peppery Augh! DX Sorry. On my last couple Butiki orders I had a few blacks that were a bit peppery, which was fine. It was a new experience and I did like it. But then after that, everything else I was trying seemed to be peppery too. All the teas I decided to give a go from Teavivre are, and a few random teas I didn’t log that I tried in other places. So I’m really sick of peppery blacks. I like sweeter blacks, or even blacks like Ceylon that are a bit grassy, but I’ve had enough of pepper. xD; The last several days I’ve been working on drinking through my peppery Teavivre teas, so I’ve had my fill this week.

All the other flavors are quite nice, and aside from the peppery part, I must say this tea is very unique! :) I just wish I wasn’t turned off by that aspect. If I had this again several months from now when I haven’t had a bunch of peppery teas, I’d probably enjoy this more.

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 2 min, 0 sec

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96
122 tasting notes

In the mood to try something new and I need to dive into the Verdant samples I ordered. This one is described as chocolatey, which I can so go for. I tend to eat a lot of chocolate and sweets when the kids leave at the end of the day and I’m trying to cut back on that. Chocolatey tea will have to do!

It smells good — light aromas of chocolate and malt. It’s a lovely, light-colored brew. One of the things I don’t like about black tea is that boiling water is needed and I have to wait so long for it to cool down for me to try it! Haha, not a bad problem to have. The whole area around my desk smells like chocolate and roasted tea. Yum!

It is a mild and delicious tea. The chocolate-baked flavor reminds me of Laoshan Black but it’s a different tea. Like a distant cousin of Laoshan Black — in fact, if you are not completely sold on that one try Yu Lu Yan Cha Black. It may suit you a little better! Man, Verdant just doesn’t disappoint.

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85
149 tasting notes

I discovered a sample of this as I was rummaging through my tea trunk looking for a tea to drink. Gosh, I have so much tea…

I have to say, I always find Verdant’s black teas to be delicious, and this is no different. It’s like chocolate and sweet potato drizzled with honey with a hint of something kind of fruity near the end. Mmmm.

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74
49 tasting notes

First brew I blew because I oversteeped it. Was nearly impossible to drink. Too strong, too ‘dark’ tasting. Tried it again this morning for just two seconds steeped (had heated the cup up and put a little hot water on the leaves) and it tasted much better. Could make out all the flavors, but they’re hard to describe; something in the neighborhood of coffee/caramel/chocolate, but none of those in particular.

Preparation
Boiling
Bonnie

This is one of my favorite tea’s…and I think it’s something like potato fries and chocolate shake. I’ve had it gongfu and by the pot with cream then added sugar…both ways equally outstanding.

Wiz Tealeafa

Wow, sounds great! Just got a gong fu set at the office, so I’ll have plenty of opportunities to try it.

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391 tasting notes

So this is IT for my bag of Yu Lu Yan Cha Black that I’d bought last year from Verdant Tea. It’s been fun, I’m sad to see you go but excited since I totally bought a lot of tea from this year’s Black Friday sales! This tea iced or hot is good but I made less mistakes cold brewing than hot. At times, I think I steeped too long and it got a little bitter and hard to drink a lot of… but I like the dark, little chocolaty taste of it and it’s got a nice strong taste.

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45
149 tasting notes

Definitely not a re-peat tea for me. Its got a dark chocolate taste that is quite bitter. I also got a cigarette ash after-taste. Really not too much complexity or development of tones in my opinion. Maybe it improves after another infusion but I couldn’t finish the first.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 2 min, 0 sec

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97
6 tasting notes

Once again, I’m incapable of producing an elaborate set of comparisons, but I love this tea, which is rich without bitterness, slightly cocoa-ish. I steeped it once for two minutes, the second time for three, and that was it. I drank the entire bag steadily through, pausing for no other varieties of tea because I liked it so much.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 2 min, 0 sec

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