3/5 (see my bio for more info on my new pared down scale)
So oolongs. Now I have a million of them, and I’ve learned wine-y, peachy Taiwanese ones are my favorite while milk and coconut oolongs, at least last I checked, taste bizarrely marshy to me. Haven’t had the famous TGY type yet, so here we go! Did the rinse and western-style 30 second thing per Verdant’s site instructions. I dig the color of this one—first steep’s a creamy, pretty pale gold hue—and the smell is sweetly floral. First tentative sip is surprisingly buttery as well as a bit oaky and hay-like—reminds me somewhat of the kind of Chardonnays that flooded the wine market in the ’90s and people are now reviling but I still enjoy (I mean come on, wine that tastes like buttered toast! Ha). Lots of round sweetness with non-animal farm evocation—sunny days smelling hay and flowers.
Ack, husband just called to say he’s coming home and wants to know if I’ll go with him out to do some sudden errands. Guess I’ll finish this up later.
2nd steep: whoa, much roastier, to the point I’m almost reminded of roasted nuts, yum. Color’s a darker gold hue. The floral element has deepened and become more concentrated, but not at all in a cloying way. Jasmine, it seems. Plays well with the hay and oak thing still going on. Very different from the first steep, and I probably like this one better but they’re both quite nice.
steeps 3-6: the roastiness lasted through all the steeps, and the tea got mildly fruit-sweeter towards the end. Didn’t notice much new, just a smooth unfolding of elements already identified, though I admit I was a bit distracted as our power went out right after dinner and the internet broke and wasn’t resolved until this morning.
Good you mentioned the need to really get all the liquid drained off before steeping again to avoid the next cup tasting bitter. Too many people rush making tea and regret it…oops…! (We’ve all done it) Mentioning it here helps teach newer tea drinkers that might be having trouble. The other most common flavor killers are bad water (unfiltered) and wrong temp./steep time.
I hope a lot of people see this, since it was a fairly harsh lesson for me when I learned it a couple of years ago. Jasmine tea and 2-minute steeps using lousy water from my university campus is not exactly a very good combination…
Not to mention all of the perfectly good tea leaves I wasted since sometimes I couldn’t stand the flavor and had to throw it out…