Jasmine Dong Ting Bi Luo Chun Green Tea

Tea type
Green Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Jasmine, Perfume
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Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by DrowningMySorrows
Average preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 1 min, 15 sec 5 g 10 oz / 297 ml

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3 Tasting Notes View all

  • “I must be a sucker for jasmine tea, but, judging by other people’s reviews (both here and on YS’s website), I think we are on to something here. I like this even better than Mark T Wendell’s...” Read full tasting note
    97
  • “Picked this up with my YS spring greens as I needed an inexpensive daily drinker. Despite being a year old, it’s still perfumey and has fresh, clean jasmine flavor. I love the little jasmine...” Read full tasting note
    94
  • “Since I’ve been revisiting several of the green teas in my stash this week, I figured I should do this one too. I think it’s my favorite of all my jasmine greens. I’m not really sure why I prefer...” Read full tasting note

From Yunnan Sourcing

Yunnan Style Dong Ting Bi Luo Chun ultra-tippy green tea with premium jasmine flowers. Spring Harvest Pure Bud Bi Luo Chun steamed with Jasmine Flowers and then sealed together after drying. Incredibly balanced tea with just the perfect amount of jasmine flower taste and sweet umami green tea taste.

Entirely Yunnan tea from Yun Xian area in Lincang. Flowers are grown in Wen Shan area of southeast Yunnan.

April Tea Harvest and May Jasmine Flower Harvest

About Yunnan Sourcing View company

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3 Tasting Notes

97
154 tasting notes

I must be a sucker for jasmine tea, but, judging by other people’s reviews (both here and on YS’s website), I think we are on to something here. I like this even better than Mark T Wendell’s Flowery Jasmine that I raved about.

Funny thing is, I really wanted to dislike this tea. I had heard that the presence of jasmine blossoms in the dry leaf is usually an indicator of a lower-quality jasmine tea. Decided to give it a go anyways, because this was an opportunity to try a Yunnan-sourced green tea scented with jasmine, which I believe is a bit different than the typical sourcing of jasmine green teas. And if it is processed in the “bi luo chun” style, well that would be wonderful.

Looking at the dry leaves, there is indeed a good amount of jasmine blossoms present in the mix, but they don’t seem to weigh much comparatively. I’d be surprised if the blossoms accounted for even 50g in a 1 kg bag. So their presence would have a minimal effect as to diluting the tea leaves, which I believe is the typical reasoning for preferring the tea to be free of blossoms.

Brewing western style, I get great results brewing at 175° for 2 minutes, and a second steep at 3-4 minutes. If I want to go for three steeps, I might brew for 1 min, 3 min, and 5 min and it is spent.

The tea is perhaps not as “strong” as MTW’s Flowery Jasmine, in that it gives a slightly lighter color and more of the floral and fruity notes minus the earthier side. Also, a touch less of the tendency to grow bitter but definitely some bitter edge still is present. But it makes up for this lessened strength with the nuanced fruity apple/green grape sweet notes of the tea playing very nicely with the jasmine florals. Just a really lovely light and refreshing jasmine tea!

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 2 min, 0 sec 5 g 16 OZ / 473 ML

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94
676 tasting notes

Picked this up with my YS spring greens as I needed an inexpensive daily drinker. Despite being a year old, it’s still perfumey and has fresh, clean jasmine flavor. I love the little jasmine flowers that open up as if they’re blooming and dance around in the teacup.

Compared to Yunnan White Jasmine from Verdant, my all-time favorite jasmine tea, this is just as sublime but edges towards astringency when steeped too long. The white jasmine on the other hand remains smooth from first sip to last.

I think the white jasmine is better suited for grandpa style while this does best western steeped. Also, really nice cold brewed.

Flavors: Jasmine, Perfume

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94 tasting notes

Since I’ve been revisiting several of the green teas in my stash this week, I figured I should do this one too. I think it’s my favorite of all my jasmine greens. I’m not really sure why I prefer this one over the Fuding Yin Hao jasmine in drank a few days ago. This one smells and tastes a little sweeter to me…not sure if that’s from the leaf type or growing region or something else. Like the Fuding Yin Hao, this one is April 2019 harvest tea with May jasmine flowers.

I decided to use my smaller glass gongfu bottle, 175° water, 120-ish ml, steeps starting at 15-ish seconds, just an eyeballed amount of leaf because I’m lazy. When I don’t weigh the tea I try to aim for slightly less than I think I need and then add more if the flavor isn’t strong enough. I don’t like my greens overleafed and I have a long history of being rather heavy-handed with teas and spices so if it looks to me like it couldn’t possibly be enough it’s often just right :-P

I’m not sure what else there is to say about this tea. Like with many jasmines teas, I can really only identify jasmine in the flavor and aroma. They all just smell and taste like jasmine to me. I can tell if they’re different teas but I usually can’t describe what’s different about them very well.

Flavors: Jasmine

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 0 min, 15 sec 4 OZ / 120 ML

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