Posts Tagged ‘grand tea’

Category: Pu-erh
Tea Company: Grand Tea (website)
Ingredients: Pu-erh Tea
Vendor Suggested Preparation: not listed on the website

Grand Tea Year 2000 7542 Pu-erh - Dry Stored

For the preparation and consumption of this tea, I used a small, 6 oz. gaiwan and boiled water.

What struck me concerning the leaves of this particular pu’erh was that some are whole, while others are chopped, ripped, and torn. This typically is not a good sign, as ripped and chopped leaves tend to “steep-out” faster. The smell of the dried leaf is vegetal and green…a leafy smell, not grassy. A bit loamy.

The first thirty second steep produced a medium brown liquor, with a soft smell. The earthy flavour bursts in the mouth, but it brings with it some distinctly rough edges. The aftertaste of this first steep is strong, but the but it has a weak forward taste.

The second thirty second steep brings with it an earthier smell that is also smooth and deep. The tea bites a bit on the aftertaste leaves a hard flavour under the tongue. The flavour of the tea is still full, but not strong. One feels that this steeping is relatively light.

On the third steeping of the same time as the others, the smell is “dirtier” now. The colour is a golden brown, and that bite has almost completely gone away. The flavour is smooth, but a bit weaker than before. This tea certainly lacks forward flavours and much “personality.”

I go on to steep it three more times. The fourth is much thinner and lighter; the fifth is no different; and the sixth, which I left sit for multiple minutes, barely changed anything.

I would give this tea an 88/100 on my personal enjoyment scale. The aftertaste really was quite pleasant. A tea such as this goes to show that age is not everything in a pu’erh.

You can purchase the Year 2000 7542 Pu-erh – Dry Stored directly from the Grand Tea website.

Category: Pu-erh
Tea Company: Grand Tea (website)
Ingredients: Pu-erh Tea
Vendor Suggested Preparation: not listed

Does this tea smell like dirt? Yes, this tea smells like dirt. But such is a quality beloved of pu’erh. This sheng, or raw, or uncooked (whichever term you wish to use, each variety of pu’erh is a many-named tea) has a clean and clear aroma.

For this tasting, I use a small seasoned yixing pot, filled approximately a third with leaf. The leaves are rinsed and the first steeping is prepared, letting the leaves steep for about 30 seconds. The first taste conveys the earthy flavour well, along with a few vegetal notes. The liquor is light and smells “wet” with a bit of spiciness to it. The aftertaste seems cool and sits lightly in the mouth.

The second steep, of about 20 seconds, is darker in colour. The flavour is not as intense but is far more robust, flowing strongly through the mouth, giving one the full flavour experience. It almost seems as though there is a hint of minty-ness in the aftertaste for this tea. A bit like peppermint, it seems, like a touch of cool spice. One notices that this steeping remains a bit rough around the edges

30 seconds after again immersing the leaves in water, the third steep appears, as dark in colour as the second, and much the same flavour and aroma profile.

Another 30 seconds. The fourth steep maintains the same deep brown, but not quite dark brown, colouration. The flavours, though, are lighter. I cannot escape the strange cool mint-like aftertaste, which is something that barely comes through in the aroma.

Over the next few steepings, various flavours show themselves more dominantly than others. Vegetal flavours, spicy notes, and the complete earthiness all put their best foot forward as the tea continues to evolve.

The seven-years aging has been kind to this tea. If you are looking for a decent pu’erh for regular drinking, this 2003 Qing Yun Hao will surely fit the bill. I rate it a 75/100 on my personal enjoyment scale.

You can purchase the 2003 Qing Yun Hao directly from the Grand Tea website.

Category: Green
Tea Company: Grand Tea (website)
Ingredients: Green Tea
Vendor Suggested Preparation: 85 Degree Celsius Water, steep 1-2 minutes

Grand Tea Xi Hu Premium Dragon Well

The Premium Dragon Well tea from the Grand tea Company is exquisitely light. I was intrigued by the sample, seeing the perfectly flat green leaves characteristic of Dragon Well tea through the stiff plastic sleeve. The leaves were whole and not broken. I knew the sample was small and I’d really have only one quick shot at capturing the essence of this tea from the Grand Tea Company of Hong Kong. The label was vague, identifying the sample only as Premium Dragon Well. I wondered what rated this tea as a premium tea.

I looked up the Grand Tea web site for this tea and found that the full name for this tea was 2010 First Harvest (Pre-Qingming) Xi Hu Dragon Well. I was delighted to have a first flush tea from this year. Now I really had some sleuthing to do as had no idea what Pre-Qingming meant. A quick look up in Wikipedia revealed that the Pre-Qingming tea is plucked 10 days before the Qingming Festival on April 5 each year. Only the youngest shoots are hand-picked by experienced hands and then processed. “Premium” not only refers to the quality of the tea, but also to its price. The leaves picked after the festival are called Yu Qian Longjin and are less expensive. “Longjing” means Dragon Well by the way, and Xi Hu is the name for West Lake in Zhejiang Province where the region’s earns its Dragon Well designation.

When I opened the packet, the most alluring scent of light grapefruit came through. I thought I was crazy because I had never come across grapefruit scent in a tea. Sure enough, even the next day I was sticking my nose into the packet for a deep inhalation. Even a few days later, I could still smell this amazing scent. I wondered if it would carry over to the taste. When I took the tea out the sleeve, I knew I had something special.

There are lots of preferred characteristics that I look for in a tea depending on its type, starting from the leaf and how it has been handled right down to how the tea finishes a few minutes after the final drunk drop! I really enjoyed seeing the pluck of the leaf and will use other teas to compare to the sample as you’ll soon see below.

Dragon Well is typically made from a bud and one or two leaves. The whole leaves are distinctively emerald green and flat and are pan-fired. Dragon Well tea liquor has a pale greeny-yellow liquor with the scent of fresh-cut grass and toasted chestnuts. It leans towards the savory, with a unique sweet and slightly bitter quality that invites one to drink more of this mellow brew.

The tea sample showed me a small delicate leaf that was light emerald green in colour. The surface of the leaves were even and there was a slight polish. The perfectly flat leaves were slippery against each other the presentation bowl . This showed there had been a lot of care and attention during the pan-firing to ensure consistency of finish. I could easily see that there was a bud and a leaf on most of the sample and for the most part were unbroken sets. Adding water would open the leaves for further inspection.

I weighed the sample in at 2.8 grams and used a glass teapot with about 150 ml of water at 85 degrees Celsius . By the way, on the Grand Tea web site there is a link to a youtube video showing the proper way to steep a quality Dragon Well tea in a tall glass. I appreciated the instruction but prefer my wider glass teapot so I can see more the action of the leaves with the water. Maybe I’m a bit of an amateur in that respect. The recommended steep from Grand Tea is 85 degrees Celsius for 1-2 minutes. I timed at 1 minute, The liquor was a light lemon-green colour and smelled lightly grassy. After allowing the tea to cool down slightly, I took my much anticipated sip. The natural sweetness came through with low astringency and suprizingly, no grapefruit taste. I received a toasty almost caramel note that left me with a smile on my face. It was a bit short on lingering flavours so I decided I want sightly more intensity on the second steep. For that, I decided to use a little less water but would keep to the 1 minute timing.

For the 2nd steep, I was rewarded with a more robust flavours, with more biscuit tastes rather than toasty. The liquor was more astringent now but fully round in the mouth and I found the flow of chi going to my heart and head. I went for the 3rd steep to see how much this young tea would hold up under pressure. Again I gave a 1 minute steep. The colour was more pale now, washed out but the flavour still held in there without losing its profile. I think if I were to have this tea again, I’d use a 2.5 or a full 3 grams and steep a bit longer for the 1st steep, maybe 1 ½ minutes. There is no point in increasing the water temperature with such a delicate tea. Just play with the timing and you will be rewarded. By the way, the price for this premium tea at $5.60 USD per 25 grams is excellent.

Grand Tea Xi Hu Premium Dragon WellAfter the tea was consumed, I grabbed an inexpensive Dragon Well tea that cost $10 CND for 100 grams, no doubt it was last year’s post-Qingming. See the photo to the left. The leaves on the left are the Premium Dragon Well from Grand Tea. See how small and tight they are with a vibrant green set of 1 leaf and a bud. The picker was very careful to pick only at the base of the bud and leaf set. The Dragon Well on the right is large, bulky and in some cases clearly shows a bud and two leaves. The picker grabbed a lot of twig as well. I prefer to pay a premium price for tea that is well picked and processed rather than by the weight of twigs and branches. So, I will recommend the Premium Dragon Well Tea from the Grand Tea Company as indeed a premium tea that is good to present and to steep. I will be reviewing the Grand Tea’s Bi lo Chun and hope to report that it too, is premium.

You can purchase the Xi Hu Premium Dragon Well directly from the Grand Tea website.

Category: Green
Tea Company: Grand Tea (website)
Ingredients: green tea
Vendor Suggested Preparation: Steeping Temp: 75-80 celsius

Grand Tea Xi Hu Premium Dragon Well

I am just finishing my fourth infusion of this elegant Dragon Well green tea and it is going strong. I have worked a bit at learning how to prepare green teas properly. A little bit of attention to detail–water quality, water temperature, steeping time–repays itself abundantly. The dry leaf does not give away an enormous amount of aroma but seems slightly fragrant and nutty. The leaves are firm and a bit tippy. The wet leaf, as is typical, provides a fresh and vegetal fragrance and resembles broad bright green pine needles.

The vivid tea is a pleasing pale yellow color–the relative pale color testifies to the youthfulness of the leaf. The taste is fresh, light, and buttery–almost like a sweet pea that has some delicately inserted wild rice grains. The taste develops a floral overtone that could be described as “orchid-like”. It’s not at all astringent or bitter.

I think that this tea is youthful and light yet it can sustain multiple infusions. It’s got an extremely fresh and natural taste and the hints of orchid, rice, corn, and vegetable are delightful flirtatious. This is a tea to ponder over and to enjoy. I would not use sweeteners at all with a nicely delicate and bright tea like this one.

I most certainly plan to try more teas form Grandtea.com. Visit their website athttp://www.grandtea.com/. Based in Hong Kong, they specialize in Chinese and Japanese teas of high quality and ship inexpensively to the USA and the rest of the world.

You can purchase the Xi Hu Premium Dragon Well directly from the Grand Tea website.

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