This is a Zi Juan “Purple Beauty” varietal that was grown in Lancang county in the Jingmai mountainous area. First flush of spring tea leaves were used and processed into a green tea. This is the first ever Purple Beauty Green Tea we have offered.
The taste is unique, something like a Dan Cong meets Yunnan Assamica Green Tea. The tea soup is a grey-purple color and the brewed leaves of this varietal remain dark even after many infusions. There is an umami taste, with sweetness, and slight bitter after-taste. The tea is packed with cha qi and if you are sensitive to it, you’ll most likely notice the feeling of this tea.
Late April 2017 harvest
Comparing Purple Bud and Purple Beauty:
The main difference between Purple Bud and Purple Beauty tea lies in the fact that Purple Bud tea is natural but has undergone genetic mutation due to climate and seasonal changes. Purple Beauty, on the other hand, is the result of human cultivation.
The tea community first began to notice the Purple Bud variant at Wuyi Shan. Purple Bud has long been known as a scattered deviation that grows extensively among different kinds of tea plants. It is most common in summer tea. High anthocyanin content provides its purple color. It also results in a bitter flavor, which has given the purple buds a reputation as unsuitable for tea.
However, in the late 70’s and early 80’s Wuyi Stone Tea (Yan Cha) producers discovered that Stone Tea variants could be cultivated and tamed, resulting in a fine tea variety with high yield and stress resistance. This also reduced much of the tea’s bitterness. Consequently, the Fujian Tea Research Society produced a new asexual tea variety through natural hybridization of Da Hong Pao tea: Purple Bud Stone Tea. In technical terms, it is a medium leaf, late budding, shrub tea variety. It features dark yellow-green tender tips, purple buds, purplish-red leaf bases, short space between sections, little fuzz, soft leaves, and dense bud tips. In addition, it grows with high yield, and high stress resistance. Spring buds occur in mid to late March and one-bud-three-leaf growth occurs in mid to late April. The quality of this tea is excellent when processed as an Oolong. This variety represents a successful example of utilizing and improving on precious existing tea tree resources and is suitable for widespread cultivation in Oolong tea growing areas.
Building on this breeding experience with Oolong teas, research was begun into the cultivation of variants of Yunnan large-leaf teas. In 1985, technical staff from the Yunnan Tea Research Institute discovered a tea tree with purple buds, leaves, and stalk among the institutes’ plantation of over 600,000 trees. They processed its fresh leaves to produce a dark green roasted tea. The dried tea had a purple color and maintained this color in its brewed tea liquor. It also possessed a pure fragrance and a strong, intense flavor. Because of the tea’s purple buds, leaves, and stems and the fact that it maintained this purple color after processing, they named the tea “Purple Beauty.” Through research and further cultivation, this variant has given rise to current Purple Beauty tea trees.
Purple Beauty tea trees are considered a small arbor/shrub, big leaf, medium bud variety. The tea trees have a half-open appearance with high branches and moderate branch density. Leaves grow with an upward slant.
Spring buds occur in late February and full one-bud-three-leaf growth occurs between late March and early April. Bud growth is strong with moderate density. The buds are a purple color and are relatively plump, fuzzy, and tender.
This tea is well-suited to planting in large-leaf tea growing areas due to its high capacity for cuttage reproduction and resistance to cold, drought, and disease. It can be grown in the same manner as other Yunnan large-leaf teas. Tea tree production volume is moderate. Purple Beauty has an elevated aroma, smooth and light mouth feel (kou gan), but with a noticeable bitterness. In 1991 experiments conducted by the Yunnan Institute of Material Medicine showed that Purple Beauty is capable of lowering blood pressure, which greatly added to the reputation of the tea. Numerous plantations began cuttage cultivation of Purple Beauty trees.
Traditional Purple Bud refers to a bud deviation in large-leaf arbor trees due to seasonal and growing conditions. Only a few trees in a tea forest produce purple buds, and even ancient trees produce limited purple buds. Purple Beauty, on the other hand, is a cuttage plantation tree grown with high yield and tight planting. Tea variants are preselected with light and temperature added to encourage trees throughout the plantation to develop a purple color from the buds to the leaves and stalks. Traditional Purple Bud leaf blades are thick and dark green. The prominent veins in the leaves are similar to those of wild tea. Traditional purple bud arbor tea brews a golden-yellow tea liquor with a heavy mouth feel and full flavor, while purple beauty has thin tea liquor, brownish-green color, and is relatively bitter. The two share high levels of anthocyanin, which provides certain health benefits. These purple teas contain higher tea catechin levels than other teas. Consequently, the roasted tea is somewhat bitter and astringent, and the brewed liquor is a brownish green or indigo blue color, the sun-dried version shares some character with Pu-erh and has balanced astringency / bitter character. Sun-dried Purple beauty is suitable for compression and aging as well!
I’m glad you reviewed this one. Purple teas can be interesting – they certainly have a unique flavor – but they are fairly bullyish and tend to dominate the flavors you would expect from the processing, as you note.
After trying white, black, and sheng purple tea processing, I think sheng pu’erh is the most successful vehicle for its flavors. I was curious how green processing would carry the flavors, but I don’t enjoy purple teas enough to have committed to a purchase. Sounds like it tastes about how I expected it too. Quirky teas for sure.
Personally, my favourite purple tea I have tried is the Feng Qing Ye Sheng Hong Cha from YS. Do you have any particular sheng in mind apefuzz?
2014 Dehong Ye Sheng white wrapper mini cake from YS was my favorite. Flavors were complex but balanced. I also have the 2013 autumn ye sheng, which wasn’t as much to my liking – less smooth, more punchy and smokey. Of course, I haven’t had either for a while, so I need to check in and see how they’re doing. I think I prefer purple sheng because the flavors make more sense. Finding fruity flavors like dried apricot, etc, is common, so the whallop of fruitiness from purple teas is a bit more normal. Plus the other powerful flavors of sheng can stand up better to the purple tea flavors.