Posts Tagged ‘imperial gold oolong’

Category: Oolong
Tea Company: Mark T. Wendall Tea Company (website)
Ingredients: Oolong Tea
Vendor Suggested Preparation: 90deg C, steep for 4 minutes

Mark T. Wendall Tea Company Imperial Gold Oolong

There are toys you can get – the “amazing expanding dinosaur” or “mermaid that really grows” – compressed sponges that once soaked in water grow something like 400%. This tea is just like these toys. Put in two teaspoons of tea, get an entire cup of giant whole huge tea leaves. A co-worker asked me why I had a cup of wet spinach. And the leaves are good ones too – unbroken and high quality.

And the oolong these beautiful produce is pretty high quality too. This tea tastes like a less oxidized, greener brew, and has a lot of vegetal notes to it. But it also has the buttery mouthfeel you get in some oolongs, the floral notes, and the spicy aromas. Lots of things going on in that cup! It’s a complex tea, but manages to balance the various flavors into a cohesive whole.

Or, to put it another way – Yummy! This is a really nice, solid oolong.

You can purchase the Imperial Gold Oolong directly from the Mark T. Wendall Tea Company website.

Category: Oolong
Tea Company: Mark T. Wendall Tea Company (website)
Ingredients: Oolong Tea
Vendor Suggested Preparation: 90deg C, steep for 4 minutes

Mark T. Wendall Tea Company Imperial Gold Oolong

Argh! I had a nice tasting notes written up for this tea when Bob the computer decided to die on me. *swears*  So I’ll try and reproduce what I remember from it. >:(

I have to say that I feel a little spoiled with the size of the samples Mike’s been giving me, there’s a good 30-40g of tea in this pouch, for instance!  Dry it has a sweet, vegetal scent, and the leaves are rolled like most green oolongs – although fairly loosely in this case – and the leaves look to be a bit paler than what I normally see. The steeped tea reveals how “Imperial Gold” likely got its name – it’s a deep, warmly-golden liquid. It also has a rather delicate floral aroma that teases the nose rather than punches it.

This is quite a ‘green’ green oolong, with a vegetal flavour profile and, oddly enough, little of the sweetness that I’m used to tasting as an oolong cools off. The first steep, at 4 minutes, is a little weak – not too surprising as the leaves take time to unroll and open up. I’ve been told that the 2nd steep of a green oolong is usually the best, and what I’ve experienced so far with this type of tea seems to bear that out, more or less.

The 2nd steep, at 5 minutes, has a fuller flavour and a more substantial body. It has a flavour like cooked greens with a faintly spicy or peppery note that lingers on the tongue. By the third steep, at 6 minutes, I can tell that the tea is starting to lose its omph, as it has a thinner liquor and a sweet, green taste that’s more fresh than cooked – although there are some buttery notes on the end.

Not my favourite – I like my oolongs sweeter, though I think you can put that down to a matter of personal preference rather than lack of quality in this case.  I gave this a Steepster rating of 69/100.  

You can purchase the Imperial Gold Oolong directly from the Mark T. Wendall Tea Company website.

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