Spiderweb Oolong

Tea type
Oolong Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Astringent, Grapes, Orange, Red Wine
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Shanti Tea
Average preparation
190 °F / 87 °C 4 min, 0 sec

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8 Tasting Notes View all

  • “Naturally fruity – I LOVE this! Also LOVE this song http://youtu.be/6ZktNItwexo Thanks No Doubt! I only have enough for one more go with this tea…it’s really yummy folks!” Read full tasting note
    93
  • “This Oolong reminds me of a Darjeeling in several ways. It has that muscatel flavor, it is crisp and light, much like a Darjeeling, and it has a lovely wine-like finish of a Darjeeling. There is...” Read full tasting note
    85
  • “Backlogging. I actually drank this tea all week and it took me most of the week to get the words just right about it. I used up the entire sample over the course of five infusions. So bear with me...” Read full tasting note
    81
  • “From my It’s All About the Leaf review, available at: http://www.itsallabouttheleaf.com/1761/tea-review-shanti-tea-spiderweb-oolong/ Spider webs conjure up ethereal visions of delicate pale films...” Read full tasting note
    82

From Shanti Tea

A sweet and malty infusion with a hint of muscatel grape.

The thin and spidery black and gold leaves of this rare oolong tea from the Uva District of Sri Lanka unfurl into a sweet and malty, deep gold infusion with a hint of muscatel grape and a fruity aroma.

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8 Tasting Notes

93
6768 tasting notes

Naturally fruity – I LOVE this!
Also LOVE this song
http://youtu.be/6ZktNItwexo
Thanks No Doubt!
I only have enough for one more go with this tea…it’s really yummy folks!

KeenTeaThyme

Because of my fear of anything spider, this sounds a bit scary…but also delish too!

ScottTeaMan

This one sounds and looks very delicious.

TeaEqualsBliss

I’m afraid of Spiders, too, Keen! :)

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85
4843 tasting notes

This Oolong reminds me of a Darjeeling in several ways. It has that muscatel flavor, it is crisp and light, much like a Darjeeling, and it has a lovely wine-like finish of a Darjeeling. There is also a really lovely malt tone to this. Not a strong, overwhelming flavor, just a hint. Overall the cup is sweet, grape-like with beautiful muscatel notes, and a deep woodsy tone in the distance. I’m liking it very much… I’m on my sixth infusion!

ms.aineecbeland

When you say muscatel do you mean gunpowder like as opposed to milky Oolongs?

LiberTEAS

No. Muscatel refers to a flavor that is similar to the flavor of the muscat grape (which is used in wine). It is grape-y, somewhat musky, and with hints of spice. Muscatel flavor is often found in Darjeeling, but not so often found in an Oolong.

ms.aineecbeland

Interesting. Thanks!

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81
243 tasting notes

Backlogging.

I actually drank this tea all week and it took me most of the week to get the words just right about it. I used up the entire sample over the course of five infusions. So bear with me while I revisit my notes and describe each one.

To start, the leaves smell of faint oolong and a tiny bit of grape flavor. The grape is very difficult to detect, but I love grape and can find and look for it in a lot of things… The leaves are small, dark, curled very tightly, with the faint aroma.

The first infusion was five minutes, hot, no additives. The tea is sweet and malty, a delicious oolong with the slight wine taste finishing off the brew. I mustered two more infusions (5 minutes and 7 minutes respectively) with very similarly delicious results. This was day one.

Day two I added some sugar, hot infusion, five minutes. This was still good, but the natural sweetness of the tea itself and the added sweetness from the sugar made this infusion almost too sweet. Still good, but could be less sweet.

Day three, I put my tea in a travel mug and let it infuse with hot water, no additives the entire 45 minute car ride to work, taking little sips when there were stops along the route. The tea is much stronger now, not a gentle, definitely still oolong, but more malt then sweet when brewed this way. The wine aftertaste is completely gone. As an aesthetic note, this long of an infusion allowed the leaves to completely unfurl into long thick green oolong leaves…

Day four, attempting the 45 minute infusion again, but this time with 1/2 teaspoon of rock sugar. The sweetness is back, but I feel like it is kind of cheating, the natural sweetness is gone and overrun by malt, but the sugar brings some underlying flavor to life. Still no wine aftertaste.

Day five, my last bit of the tea, I decided to go back to basics and enjoy what it actually was, hot, no additives, five minute brew. After having experimented with the other ways I thought I could enjoy the tea, I now know, this was superior. An even balance of sweet and malty oolong, the slight hint of grape, with a crisp and clean flavor. Very well balanced, very delicious.

Enjoy!

Preparation
5 min, 0 sec

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82
411 tasting notes

From my It’s All About the Leaf review, available at: http://www.itsallabouttheleaf.com/1761/tea-review-shanti-tea-spiderweb-oolong/

Spider webs conjure up ethereal visions of delicate pale films of almost nothing. Wisps of white that disappear in the sunlight. Shanti’s Spiderweb oolong initially seems strangely misnamed. The leaves are short, black and twisted, but very tangible and more like spiders than their webs. My sample didn’t have much aroma dry, but once steeped, it almost smelled more like grapes than oolong. Or ice wine. Very sweet. Again, not a quality widely associated with spider webs.

Once brewed up, the liquor is a light tan. The tea doesn’t have much of the typical oolong flavor of other teas, but it’s got a pleasant lightly tannic flavor, and a lovely sweetness on the finish that reminds me again of grapes, or on subsequent steeps of sweet lemons. There’s also a malty overtone to the brew. It’s got a thin, tannic mouth-feel, and here’s where the spider web name is applicable. The tea’s flavor dissipates quickly, leaving just the hint of sweetness, and the knowledge that you’ve just had some nice tea.

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90
60 tasting notes

A co-worker showed me this Oolong. She gave me enough to prepare four cups worth. All I can say is, WHERE did it all go? It’s a really nice, and actually light oolong despite it’s oxidized look. All whom love oolong don’t know what they are missing out on. Try it.

Preparation
180 °F / 82 °C 3 min, 0 sec

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64
2036 tasting notes

Sipdown no. 131 of 2018 (no. 487 total).

It continued to be not a favorite in the cold brew phase. Most of the time cold brew improves teas I’m not wild about. This one stayed pretty much the same. Which is a reason I’m bumping down the rating.

Great name, but not for me.

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