Auburn First Flush

Tea type
Black Tea
Ingredients
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Loose Leaf
Caffeine
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Edit tea info Last updated by Cameron B.
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From white2tea

The Auburn first flush was a crowd favorite from last year’s tea club (and there will be a small sample coming in the 2018 June tea club as well!). The aroma is floral and complex, with a depth of fragrance that endures from steep to steep, evolving as the tea progresses through a session. The sweet body of the tea and its deep inherent smoothness make for a rich experience. This is one of our favorite high quality Fujian black teas; made with a focus on fragrance and quality over visual appearance.

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2 Tasting Notes

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16518 tasting notes

Tried this tea for the first time on Friday, brewed up Gongfu and paired with an absolutely incredible raisin and fennel corn crusted baguette from a local bakery!

I actually started with the baguette, and then tried to pick a tea to drink specifically when I ate the baguette – so thank you to James/Shredsofmetal for helping me select the tea! We generally have very, very similar tastes in hongcha, so when he said that this was a really raisin-y tea that would suit the bread quite well (based on the description of the bread) I definitely trusted his opinion!

Of course, unsurprisingly, he was absolutely correct. I knew he would be as soon as I opened up the sealed bag of loose tea for the first time; the smell of the dry leaves was deeply, sweet raisin-y with a hint of malt and autumnal leaves. I was salivating before I’d even begun to heat the kettle!

Similar to my experience with a lot of W2T’s black teas, this doesn’t have a ton of longevity when brewed Gong Fu – which is why I often drink most of White2Tea’s black teas Western style or Grandpa style. I have a gut feeling this would be incredible brewed up in a big ass, huggable mug. So, I got about five really solid infusions of this when brewed Gongfu – and then two more lousy ones at the end of the session that I’m not going to count against the tea.

The tea was thick, full bodied and raisin-y right off the bat; and that raisin note continued all throughout the session – easily the most prominent flavour throughout the whole session. However, it wasn’t all raisin notes: I also thought that this was pretty sweet and malty, with undertones of very dark cocoa as well and even a hint of overripe, dark cherries during the middle of the session.

The bread was essentially fancy raisin bread – so of course a very raisin-y tea and a sweet, raisin heavy bread would compliment one another; but it did go farther than that: the maty, cocoa notes in the tea also complimented the raisin and the sweetness and licorice-y note of the fennel in the bread added a hint of sweetness to the tea as well. Essentially just making both sweeter and more robust feeling.

Photos: https://www.instagram.com/p/BxlKasQgzUk/

Song Pairing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bqOICwwBUP4&list=LL1M1wDjmJD4SJr_CwzXAGuQ&index=13&t=0s

VariaTEA

Don’t you not like raisins? Am I thinking of someone else? Also, talking about Montreal breads, I used to get a mini loaf of this amazing bread that had 3 different chocolate chips in it and it was SOOOOOOOO GOOOOOOODDDD!!! It was from Brioche Doree I think

VariaTEA

Or maybe Au Pain Doree

Roswell Strange

You’re not thinking of someone else; I’ve always enjoyed that raisin note in straight tea, but I used to really struggle with actual raisins (the taste and the texture) but I’ve gradually gotten a lot better with them – and now even enjoy them most of the time :)

tea-sipper

This tea sounds dreamy.

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