Jinggu Camellia Taliensis Black Tea

Tea type
Black Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
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Loose Leaf
Caffeine
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Edit tea info Last updated by Togo
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2 Tasting Notes View all

  • “I love the size of the leaves, which gives this tea a rustic feel. This tea is very aromatic, with mostly dried fruits and some honey. It kinda feels like a shai hong to me. Sweet, thick and...” Read full tasting note
    85
  • “I did not want to create another sparsely reviewed harvest entry, but for those who are interested it was the 2020 harvest. Camellia Taliensis is not tea, but it is closely related to the...” Read full tasting note
    81

From Yunnan Sourcing

This is a one leaf to one bud style plucking of a Jinggu area (Ku Zhu Shan vicinity) Camellia Taliensis varietal. Camellia Taliensis is a native Jinggu tea varietal that features plump leaves and buds with a plethora of downy hairs.

When processed into black tea this unique varietal produces a very thick, sweet and malty tea with notes of fresh plum and sugarcane. Thick bodied tea soup and a long-lasting mouthfeel make this tea both pleasant and magnetic!

Region: Ku Zhu Shan area of Jinggu County (Yunnan)

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2 Tasting Notes

85
93 tasting notes

I love the size of the leaves, which gives this tea a rustic feel. This tea is very aromatic, with mostly dried fruits and some honey. It kinda feels like a shai hong to me. Sweet, thick and fruity, smooth and not very strong or tannin-heavy. Not really a breakfast black tea, but nice and characterful.

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81
226 tasting notes

I did not want to create another sparsely reviewed harvest entry, but for those who are interested it was the 2020 harvest.

Camellia Taliensis is not tea, but it is closely related to the all-to-familiar Camellia Sinensis. It grows in Yunnan and its leaves are still collected and processed to produce tea.

It is a very niche type of “tea” and the reason for it became clear as I was drinking it. The strongest point of Jinggu Camellia Taliensis is that when brewed it smells heavenly of rose and other flowers. The aroma is intense and builds the anticipation that never delivers: the dark tea soup tastes of vague, undifferentiated floral sweetness. It sorely lacks any harder backbone of malt, tannins or anything else. Very, very muted and underwhelming. I actually have trouble finishing my 50g bag as I never in the mood for what this tea delivers.

I still scored this tea in the 80s, but this is purely for its aroma.

ashmanra

Very interesting! Sorry it didn’t deliver for you.

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