Posts Tagged ‘Grass’

Category: Herbal
Tea Company: Rishi Tea (website)
Ingredients: Organic valerian root, organic lemon verbena, organic lemon balm, organic chamomile, organic lavender and organic spearmint
Vendor Suggested Preparation: Water: 212°F / Boiling / Leaves: 1 tablespoon per 8 oz / Infusion Time: 4-5 minutes

Rishi Tea Serene Dream

The dry leaves seemed to be more powder than leaves. The smell reminded me of cut grass.

I poured the contents of the package into my infuser basket, boiled my water and poured 8 ounces of water in my cup/infuser. I waited 5 minutes.

After brewing the smell of the leaves is sweeter. Licorice comes to mind.

In my sample the leaves were more like powder and even with my best fine mesh infuser, the particles found their way into my tea cup.

This tea is not totally undrinkable, but it was a close call on that point for me. With all the particles floating around in my cup and than the taste of valerian root, I did not enjoy this blend at all.

You can purchase the Serene Dream directly from the Rishi Tea website.

Category: Oolong
Tea Company: Canton Tea Co. (website)
Ingredients: Oolong Tea
Vendor Suggested Preparation: Use about 2 tsp per cup (200ml) and brew around 85°C (185°F), allow to steep for 2-3 minutes and infuse at least 3 times

Canton Tea Co. Yellow Gold Oolong Tea | Huang Jin Gui Wu Long

Dry leaf reminds me of fresh cut greens.

Brewed this sample in my IngeniTea and made it into iced tea.

2 minute infusion yields a pale yellow infusion.

This is very much a green oolong, not sweet, not too bitter.

This tea really reminds me of crisp, fresh cut grass.

Good for multiple infusions. The bitterness fades with each infusion, making this oolong more enjoyable the further you go. Try it, Experiment. Enjoy!

You can purchase the Yellow Gold Oolong Tea | Huang Jin Gui Wu Long directly from the Canton Tea Co. website.

Category: Green
Tea Company: Canton Tea Co. (website)
Ingredients: Green Tea
Vendor Suggested Preparation: Use quite a lot of leaves (1tbsp) per cup (200ml) and brew cool, around 80°C (176°F), allowed to steep for 2-3 minutes and infuse at least 3 times

Canton Tea Co. Dragon Well Green Tea | Shi Feng Long Jing

These tea leaves are awesome. They look like they’ve been pressed in a book like wildflowers. Flat spiky leaves that smells delightfully like something like I’d like to have as a vegetable side dish with my dinner; well spiced green vegetables. Almost reminiscent of green beans. Once brewed up, the spicy green bean scent is enhanced tenfold.

The tea is very light colored, and as mentioned very, very fragrant. It’s both savory and sweet with hints of nuts and grass. The cup does leave some astringency to it, but just enough to make you want to drink more. Green teas can run the gambit of so tannic they make you pucker more than lemons all the way to spring water. This tea is slightly tannic but nowhere near the lemon end of the continuum.

This is a very enjoyable cup of tea – light, flavorful, fragrant, and just plain yummy.

You can purchase the Dragon Well Green Tea | Shi Feng Long Jing directly from the Canton Tea Co. website. Save 10% right now when you use the code IIATL at checkout!.

Category: Green
Tea Company: Canton Tea Co. (website)
Ingredients: Green Tea
Vendor Suggested Preparation: 2 tsp to 1 tbs per cup (200ml); water temperature must be cool around 70°C (158°F) Infuse 2-4 mins. Reinfuse at least 3 times.

Canton Tea Co. Anji Bai Cha

I have had AWESOME luck with Canton Tea Company’s teas!  I have enjoyed MANY and this one certainly followed suit!  It’s Creamy, Tangy, and a little semi-sweet grassy type taste. Light and Clean. Sometimes I think the creamy and tangy seem to contradict each other but in this tea they work really well together!  It was a pleasant surprise!  I love the fact that it’s a semi-sweet grassy type taste because I don’t think the stereotypical grassy-grass taste would work with this tea.  It’s just the right amount of sweet.   Having said all of that – this tea IS very Light and Clean.  The clean taste goes on to the aftertaste and it’s just delightful!

You can purchase the Anji Bai Cha directly from the Canton Tea Co. website – Save 10% right now when you use the code IIATL at checkout!.

Category: Green
Tea Company: Mark T. Wendall Tea Company (website)
Ingredients: Green Tea
Vendor Suggested Preparation: not speficied

Mark T. Wendall Tea Company Dragonwell Green

Having settled into a mood for tea tasting on an overcast summer day in my garden, I examined the dry leaf of the Mark T. Wendell Dragonwell Green Tea. Do others see the emerald green and blue colours in the flat dry Dragonwell leaf? After plucking and withering, these tea leaves are pressed and pan-fired (tossed in a hot wok) to stop the enzyme process. Often the smell and taste of the roasting will get into the leaves, leaving a slight smokiness. Not in this case. In fact, the roasting has been handled with the care the tea deserves. Dragonwell is a style of tea, found from the Zhejiang province of China. Dragonwell is typically made from a bud and one or two leaves. The whole leaves are distinctively emerald green and flat and as mentioned above, are pan-fired. Dragonwell 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.

Mark T. Wendall Tea Company Dragonwell Green

As you see in the photo, I examine both the dry leaves (on the right) and the wet (on the left). Whether it is from rough-handling of the packaging, the leaves were most often broken and not very distinctive by the usually elegantly flat leaves. I looked into the centre of the package to see if the leaves were more protected there but found that the leaves were also broken. While the leaves were small attesting to their spirited youthfulness, I concluded that this tea is not the highest of qualities as it contains many single broken leaves and very little sets of a bud and a leaf or two. I was a bit disappointed that my sample was not going to be a connoisseur’s delight and had to lower my expectation to the sample which is typical of a commercially available tea. With that in mind, I prepared myself because if the tea makes it to a typically Dragonwellian taste characteristic, it is still economically viable for a mass consumer market, even if it doesn’t look pretty.

I started with 2.5 grams (0.08818 oz. or about 1 heaping dessert spoonful) of tea in about 150 ml ( 5 ounces) of water in a traditional Gaiwan, the yellow vessel that you see in the accompanying photo. The vessel was warmed first. The water temperature was 80 degrees Celsius (185 Fahrenheit). I timed at 45 seconds with a gentle stir a few seconds before steeping had finished. As evident by the leaves floating on the surface, the water had not been absorbed by the leaves. I decided to extend the timing to 1 minute, thinking that this tea may need a higher temperature at 85 degrees C. (190 F.) or more patience on my part, probably the latter. Leaves that don’t absorb the water right away tend to float on the surface. Usually this means the temperature isn’t quite right to activate the leaf. Sometimes adding a few drops of hot water to the leaves will help them wake up and will expand slightly taking on the heaviness of the water before the initial flow of water over the leaves. It’s sometimes a trade-off between more steep time or a higher temperature. Some Dragonwells can become very bitter in a longer steep. As this is a tea for the general consumer, the astringency would be low and the leaf must be able to tolerate mistakes of the server, such as very hot water and a long steep time. You still have to provide a good cup of tea at the end of the day.

The slow release of the leaf reveals that the second steeping will need to be a steep of about 30-40 seconds and a third steeping a bit longer, maybe up to 1 minute to extract the final liquor without astringency surfacing. When I checked back to the Wendell web site looking for instructions about the Dragonwell, I didn’t find any so I was left on my own to make decisions about its preparation.

I like to smell the vapours before pouring off the tea, lifting the lid of the Gaiwan near the end of the steep to smell the scented steam as it rises. The inside of the lid offers a special opportunity to get up close and personal with an initial impression. I could smell the toasted chestnuts and some vegetative high notes. I poured off some into my cup to cool down and the remainder into a small 6 oz. glass pitcher for a later refill. Before drinking, I raised the steamy wet leaves to my nose to take a good sniff, thinking how all those olfactory receptors were picking up information that would translate into tasting notes if I just let my brain function naturally. When I raised the cup of liquor to my nose, there were soft grassy notes. The colour of the liquor was typical of Dragonwell, pale lemon-yellow and an attractive green-emerald tinge.

Taking a first sip, I found the tea to be bright and warm over the tongue. There was a distinctive feeling of the tea bringing its fullness in the mouth. The tea stimulated some secretions of saliva, making me think that this tea would be good to accompany a meal as it would provide some ease to digestion. There was a slight citrus finish but the taste washed out quickly. This would be a good afternoon sipper because of its low astringency and low complexity so it would not compete with food so could be served with fish, seafood, or cucumber or egg tea sandwiches . There was no doubt I had a physical response to the tea. I breathed in and out like I was letting go of some busy-ness of the day. My shoulders started to relax and I nestled into my garden chair. I seemed to melt into the air and let the tea provide its healing. Any tea that does that has achieved its purpose, in my books.

This tea is not as robust or complex as I’d like to see for a Dragonwell. The tea retained its colour well through 3 steepings. The 4th washed out the taste and the colour weakened. The Wendell Dragonwell is pretty typical of a commercial tea and no doubt is a mid-range, standard loose tea that can be handled successfully by many different preferences and through different preparations. Now if it only looked better as a whole tea, I’d be happier.

You can purchase the Dragonwell Green directly from the Mark T. Wendall Tea Company website.

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