2020 Li Shan Bug Bitten Hong Shui Oolong

Tea type
Oolong Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Ash, Bitter, Butter, Cookie, Fruit Tree Flowers, Fruity, Hibiscus, Hops, Mineral, Soybean, Sweet, Tart, Umami, Wood
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Togo
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 30 sec 6 g 5 oz / 160 ml

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  • “On the one hand, I love the aromas and the well-balanced taste profile of this hong shui, while on the other hand I also think the roasting is too strong for my liking and I am not a big fan of the...” Read full tasting note
    85

From TheTea

Origin: lower parts of Li Shan mountain, Heping District, Taichung, Taiwan

Harvest: Spring 2020

Varietal: Qing Xin (Chin Shin)

2020 batch comes from the same garden but it’s little bit less oxidized comparing to 2019. Tea is more into honey notes with pleasant bright fruity nuances.

The story behind this tea is quite surprising cause I didn’t buy it from the farmer or even tea seller.

I found that tea in Kaohsiung during my evening walks in the city. I just spotted the shop with amazing antiques – Yixing teapots from 19th century till the late Factory #1 time, old Tetsubins and Japanese “Hagi” teaware. Most of the goods in the shop were extremely expensive buy I was kindly invited by the shop owner to sit and taste some tea.

We were talking by translator I had in the phone sipping really delicious oolong.

What I know about this tea: it was “custom made” for the shop owner from organic, high mountain garden in Li Shan during the spring 202-.

You know, most of the leaves from Li Shan are processed into very green style high mountain oolongs but this one was made in the Hong Shui style with beautifully rolled small leaves.

This tea belongs to the category of “bug bitten” oolongs. Some of Hong Shui oolongs are notable as it requires the leaf to be bitten by jassids just like Oriental Beauty (Bai Hao Oolong) The tea plant responds by releasing more polyphenols into the leaves, resulting in flowery and honey like flavours.

This tea has it all! It’s gentle and sweet like high mountain oolong with oily texture and amazing body full of honey and fruity flavors.

it for me something like marriage of oriental beauty with taiwanese hongcha and high mountain oolong.
It’s a special treat. Shining star amongst Hong Shui oolongs I have ever had.
Please use boiling water and short time infusions.

About TheTea View company

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1 Tasting Note

85
982 tasting notes

On the one hand, I love the aromas and the well-balanced taste profile of this hong shui, while on the other hand I also think the roasting is too strong for my liking and I am not a big fan of the mouthfeel. I would still choose to drink this tea semi-regularly if I had more of it. It fills the niche of bug-bitten tea very well without being fussy like some oriental beauty can be.

Dry leaf aroma is a beautiful mix of waffles, honeydew melon, longan, and ladyfingers. When wet, I am transported to an autumn meadow, churning butter with hibiscus and hops around.

The liquor is light-bodied and numbing with a foamy and chalky mouthfeel. It is imbued with a woody bitterness and fruity sweetness. There are also notes of ash, butter cookies, miso and nectarine skins. One is then left with a long-lasting floral sweetness mixed with the tartness of ripe fruits and a cooling, astringent bite.

Flavors: Ash, Bitter, Butter, Cookie, Fruit Tree Flowers, Fruity, Hibiscus, Hops, Mineral, Soybean, Sweet, Tart, Umami, Wood

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 30 sec 6 g 5 OZ / 160 ML

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