Ceylon Forest Green

Tea type
Green Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
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Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Average preparation
170 °F / 76 °C 1 min, 15 sec

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5 Tasting Notes View all

  • “A nice Mouthwatering green tea! Lovely! Mellow and relaxing! Smells more chewier than any other green that I can remember smelling this way. A little buttery, a little roasted, a LOT of lovely...” Read full tasting note
    87
  • “If it didn’t say “Ceylon” on the label and if I didn’t see the dried leaves before steeping, I’d say this could almost – almost – be mistaken for an oolong if you were simply judging by aroma and...” Read full tasting note
    81
  • “(This sample was generously provided to me by Shanti Tea. Thank you Team Shanti.) Dry Leaf: Has a vegetal aroma. Wet Leaf: Has a warm vegetal aroma. Liquor: Is a amber color. Tatse: The broth is...” Read full tasting note
    85
  • “Thank you to TeaEqualsBliss for a chance to try this tea! This is really good. I am currently on my second infusion, and I like the second infusion better than the first. More of the fruit notes...” Read full tasting note

From Shanti Tea

Slightly vegetal, full-bodied with a mellow, distinctive aroma.

Reminiscent of a China green, with its vegetal taste, but with a greater degree of fermentation. This rare, rainforest grown tea is mellow yet full-bodied, serene, and uplifting.

About Shanti Tea View company

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5 Tasting Notes

87
6768 tasting notes

A nice Mouthwatering green tea! Lovely! Mellow and relaxing! Smells more chewier than any other green that I can remember smelling this way. A little buttery, a little roasted, a LOT of lovely flavor!

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81
54 tasting notes

If it didn’t say “Ceylon” on the label and if I didn’t see the dried leaves before steeping, I’d say this could almost – almost – be mistaken for an oolong if you were simply judging by aroma and initial sips alone. It’s delicious, but it’s subtle. It finishes the sip a bit more stridently than it starts. I’m smelling the same sweetness my palate’s come to know in various Tie Guan Yins. I can now comprehend how the more processed Ceylon teas get their reputation for notes of honey if this is how they “begin.” More akin to a China green or a weaker black tea as it goes down. Definitely a heavier mouthfeel than a sencha, regular green, or an oolong.
Intriguing! I may need to steep another pot or two to round out my full opinion, but great quality.

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85
60 tasting notes

(This sample was generously provided to me by Shanti Tea. Thank you Team Shanti.)
Dry Leaf: Has a vegetal aroma.
Wet Leaf: Has a warm vegetal aroma.
Liquor: Is a amber color.
Tatse: The broth is light and watery in the mouth. This tea has a vegetal flavor but there is a slight earthiness in the background. Also, if you steep this tea in shorter infusion time like 10-15 seconds the tea seems to be smoother. If you steep for a minute or longer this tea gets a bitter bite to it.
Overall Opinion: I give this tea a 85. This is an average green tea that will not blow you away in my humble opinion. You may have to play with steep time for desire taste. I prefer shorter infusions with this tea.

Preparation
170 °F / 76 °C 0 min, 15 sec

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4843 tasting notes

Thank you to TeaEqualsBliss for a chance to try this tea!

This is really good. I am currently on my second infusion, and I like the second infusion better than the first. More of the fruit notes present themselves in the second infusion. It is sweet with a savory note towards mid-sip, a pleasant toasty taste with hints of butter. The fruit notes here are quite delightful, like honey-drizzled apples. Yum!

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73
20 tasting notes

The liqueur is a light golden color. It smells soft and subtly sweet. There is a hint of being fermented a little bit extra long. The smells are subtle overall and not very strong. The taste is a lot like the smell but stronger. The first thing I notice is that it is subtly sweet riding in the middle tone while the deeper tones are more vegital and warm. It makes me think of a flower garden when I taste the first few notes of the drink. The tea finishes not on a warm note, but instead on a colder note drawing with it a little piece of the astringency.

Further notes are available at the link below.
http://teasnobbery.com/2010/11/05/tea-review-ceylon-forest-green-from-shanti-tea/

Preparation
170 °F / 76 °C 2 min, 0 sec

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