True Jasmine Green Tea is crafted with spring plucked, maofeng-style green tea and summer jasmine blooms from Hengxian, China, a region famous for its jasmine farms. We select lots each season that emphasize the balanced, milky sweetness of fresh jasmine – and since we’re friends with the farmers and on site during harvest, they’re happy to se the good stuff aside for us.
This tea is certified organic.
JASMINE BAI HAO hails from Guangxi province, China, a tea growing region known for heicha (“dark tea”). The province is also home to Heng county, famed for its jasmine flower production. Our project tea producer at Long Kou tea farm (an unusually skilled green tea maker) leverages the fertile soils of north-central Liuzhou and the high fragrance flowers from neighboring Heng in this annual production of our house jasmine. The base tea is harvested in early spring (pre-Qing Ming) at a loose 1:4 (1 bud:4 leaves) plucking standard, fixed, machine-disrupted into semi-pearls, and after the summer jasmine harvest, scented in 6 rounds.
Our take on this Fujian classic is produced in small lots with the intention of selling out by next harvest. Mingfu, the producer and our on-site liaison, takes his jasmine production very seriously—he’s as much a connoisseur of fine wine as tea, and understands the value of a well-rounded bouquet that elevates the base tea (rather than masks it). Unusual in scented tea, this lot is rich with cha qi—Mingfu’s low-intervention, middle-aged, da ye cultivar trees pack a punch.
To achieve a thorough but balanced scenting, hundreds of hand-plucked jasmine flowers mingle with the base tea overnight, are sorted and removed by hand, and the process repeated 6 times before being packed at origin. Pour water on and off immediately through the first half of a small format session, and keep large format steeps between 1-2 minutes—for both, use cooler water.
We source our green teas fresh each year at harvest. But like all green teas, this lot will begin to “stale” after 1 year. This process is greatly stunted by proper storage (our bulk bags are ziptop) and refrigeration.
notes — white flowers | riesling grapes | soft
nomenclature — bai (白)—"white" | hao (皓)—"tip"
style — rolled & scented bai hao (“white tips”)
cultivar — da ye (“big leaf”)
region —Liuzhou, Guangxi, China
locale — Long Kou tea farm (“Dragon’s Mouth”)
elevation — 400 meters
producer — Mingfu Lei
vintage — spring tea (‘20), summer jasmine flowers (’20)
STEEPING PARAMETERS
(use freshly boiled spring water)
modern
[300 ml+ vessel — BOLI, large teapot]
3 grams — 175°F (79°C) — 2 minutes
traditional
[150 ml- vessel — gaiwan, small teapot]
5 grams — 175°F (79°C) — 5 seconds
+10 seconds each additional steep
Saw them in Cleveland 2006 at a small venue called the Agora. I cried.