80

Returning to this standard Dragon Well tea, now nearing 8 years in my tea cupboard, and today brewing as directed by the label: western style, 2g leaf in 8oz 175°F spring water (yes, I used a thermometer) for 2.5 min in a stainless micropore infusion basket. The first steeping produced a pale yellow liquor with the lovely umami/nutty fragrance we associate with Long Jing. (The wet leaf had not yet fully expanded, so I know it has more to give.) The flavor was a smooth floral mouthful of mineral and umami, filling the sinuses with a long-lingering aroma, as the flavors also lingered on the tongue. In the second infusion, the now relaxed olive-green leaf burst forth with floral fragrance and flavor in a golden broth that was both slightly bitter (in a good way) and astringent, as expected in a green tea. The umami nuttiness was intensified here and the aroma distinctive. As I continued to sip the cooling tea, it remained almost chewy in nature, and I got hints of sweetness. Flavors remained on the tongue for several minutes and this is a tea worthy of the time spent preparing it! I wished I was sipping with a friend this morning, as conversation would have elicited further enjoyment of the flavor and aroma on the palate. Long Jing is my favorite green tea. I hope you get to soon enjoy some!

Flavors: Astringent, Bitter, Floral, Mineral, Nutty, Sweet, Umami

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 2 min, 30 sec 2 g 8 OZ / 236 ML

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Life is too short to drink bad tea!
Pan-American: Left-coast reared (on Bigelow’s Constant Comment and Twinings’ Earl Grey) and right-coast educated, I’ve used this moniker & Email since the glory days of AOL in the 90’s, reflecting two of my lifelong loves—tea and ‘Trek.

Now a midwestern molecular biologist (right down to the stereotypical Hawaiian shirts), I’m finally broadening the scope of my sippage and getting into all sorts of Assamicas, from mainstream Assam CTCs to Taiwan blacks & TRES varietals, to varied Pu’erhs. With some other stuff tossed in for fun. I enjoy reading other folks’ tasting notes (thank you). I’ve lurked here from time to time and am now adding a few notes of my own to better appreciate the experience. Note that my sense of taste varies from the typical, for example I find stevia to be unsweet and bitter. My dislike of rooibos may be similarly rooted in genetics, which impacts perceptions of many flavors, from asparagus to stevia to cilantro.

I don’t work for a tea vendor, and I’m not a professional tea sommelier. And I don’t taste every nuance, hint of flavor or note of aroma, nor am I trained to describe those that I do detect. But I taste enough to have opinions, and do my best to be descriptive. Sensory preferences can shift from day to day and person to person, so numerical ratings are kinda bogus, especially between and among various people. But there are individual trends, and I try to reflect that. As reference points for my ratings, I give Lipton Black Tea bags “orange pekoe and pekoe, cut black” a score of 65 because it is widely available and profoundly consistent. I view it as just okay. I would give plain, hot, quality spring water a rating of 25, and I buy Crystal Geyser brand for brewing because my local well water is stinky and discolored, and my filtration & softening system leaves it salty and unpleasant. Tea should make the commercial Spring Water better, not worse, so a rating below 25 speaks for itself.

I am conversationally friendly but absolutely not here looking for dates or money, nor to sell anything. If I’ve started to follow you, I don’t mean to be creepy, it only means you posted something I liked reading, or it was about an interesting tea or event. And I’ve recently discovered that the Steepster system only notifies me of new posts written by people I follow. If you follow me, I won’t assume anything. If I do not follow you, it isn’t a snub—you’re still a good human being!
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Avatar:. Arrival in Athens, Greece, on vacation.

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Chicagoland-USA

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