Lung Ching Classic

Tea type
Green Tea
Ingredients
Green Tea
Flavors
Beany, Butter, Grass, Green Beans, Smooth, Vegetal
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Medium
Certification
Not available
Average preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 2 min, 15 sec 2 g 14 oz / 425 ml

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4 Tasting Notes View all

  • “I bought this tea recently to break my previously formed impression of all LongJing tea (I had had a particularly unpleasant experience with it from a different supplier – the reason presumably was...” Read full tasting note
    79
  • “TTB 2025 – This tea is nutty and savory. Many of the leaves were broken. It seems to be a lower grade than other Dragonwells I’ve had, but it’s also less expensive. For the price point, it’s...” Read full tasting note
    80
  • “Sampler Sipdown September! Getting closer to finishing off my T2 samplers… and I think this is at least the last Chinese green from the green tea sampler pack. I’m not expecting their Dragonwell to...” Read full tasting note
    83
  • “Fairly sure this is what I wolfed down 3 sample cuppies of at the T2 shop in Shoreditch; why I didn’t buy it, I can only guess I was being good knowing we’ve just moved house and resolutely do NOT...” Read full tasting note
    82

From T2

These long spear-shaped leaves from Hangzhou Province look less like Chinese tea and more like Japanese sencha. The tea is hand-fried in large woks to impart a distinctive flavour and aroma. A clear infusion with a slightly yellow hue produces a fresh and bright aroma with hints of chestnuts, green nutty flavours and a whisper of smoke on the finish. A smooth and refined brew.

Ingredients: Green tea

Brewing Guide: 1 tsp per cup, 1-3 mins, 80 C (175F)

About T2 View company

Company description not available.

4 Tasting Notes

79
8 tasting notes

I bought this tea recently to break my previously formed impression of all LongJing tea (I had had a particularly unpleasant experience with it from a different supplier – the reason presumably was that it had not been stored well at all.

This LongJing from T2 was much more pleasant.

The first tea session’s brew was a little weak (I had only put in 1 1/2 teaspoons for the 600ml pot) and had left it to steep for about 1min 20sec.
The second session I put in a full 2 (Chinese) teaspoons and brewed for ~1.5 minutes.
Although the overall outcome was better, I will try it again brewing to 2 minutes.

Both brews were with water that had been taken off the element as soon as bubbles began breaking the surface (would that be ~75ish degrees Celsius?).

It had a nice rounded mouth-feel that lingered pleasantly. I was impressed with how the tea blended with the water: It was like the two had completely become one (as opposed to other brews I have had that have been quite insipid or unbalanced).

The flavour I could only describe as a nutty grassy taste, perhaps with a bit of a mildly roasted sensation. I’m sure if I had eaten more vegetables and smelt more flowers in my lifetime I would have a better lexicon for this (future goal?). In summary, very nice flavour.

I couldn’t get much from the aroma. There were hints of the lightly roasted nutty flavours I had experienced in the drinking, but only from the pot. When trying to make out the fragrance of the tea in my (tiny Chinese gongfu) cup, I often found myself accidentally dunking my nose in the tea due to lack of fragrance.

Perhaps it can be said of this tea that the fragrance is mild yet compelling?

I was very happy with this tea. Thank you T2 for restoring my faith in the Dragons of the Well.

Preparation
170 °F / 76 °C 1 min, 30 sec

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80
51 tasting notes

TTB 2025 – This tea is nutty and savory. Many of the leaves were broken. It seems to be a lower grade than other Dragonwells I’ve had, but it’s also less expensive. For the price point, it’s enjoyable enough.

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83
1284 tasting notes

Sampler Sipdown September! Getting closer to finishing off my T2 samplers… and I think this is at least the last Chinese green from the green tea sampler pack. I’m not expecting their Dragonwell to be anything like the one I had from Dazzle Deer, but compared to the last few green teas I’ve had this week, this has got to be an improvement! Right now, I’m just craving a decent cup of green tea, really.

The dry leaf smells like dry grass, pepper, and smoke. The yellow brew smells like vegetables sauteed in a bit of pepper. Lord, yes. The flavor doesn’t have as much depth as the version I remember trying from Dazzle Deer, but it is still really nice, especially compared to all those mediocre cups of green tea. I’m getting a very smooth tea without any astringency, with a mild grassiness and strong beany vegetal taste, a buttery body, and this delightful peppery finish. Solid.

Flavors: Beany, Butter, Grass, Green Beans, Smooth, Vegetal

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 2 min, 0 sec 2 g 12 OZ / 350 ML

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82
313 tasting notes

Fairly sure this is what I wolfed down 3 sample cuppies of at the T2 shop in Shoreditch; why I didn’t buy it, I can only guess I was being good knowing we’ve just moved house and resolutely do NOT need more stuff to store. Still, a good lung ching! I’d buy it when I’ve got a green gap next in my tea cupboard. No idea under what parameters it was brewed, but it was nice and sweet, low in astringency, with a touch of nuttiness and top notes of a lightly floral fruit. Yeah, this was lovely!

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