wulong tea

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Properly translated, the Silver Flower in Chinese is 金銀花, which…

Properly translated, the Silver Flower in Chinese is 金銀花, which is Honeysuckle. So our connoisseur collection of Phoenix teas this season will be:
Honeysuckle Phoenix(aka Duck Poop)
Song Zhong
Jasmine Fragrance

We will take a break from Almond, which had a funny finish this season, and not sure about the 8 Immortals yet. Yellow Branch was way too expensive this season so we will take a break as well. This is a rare new selection and no one should be disappointed at the change up…

This selection will be tasted at the Harvest Party May 2nd, so reserve your space early.

烏龍Wulong or Oolong means black dragon. ‘Doesn’t it look like a…

烏龍Wulong or Oolong means black dragon. ‘Doesn’t it look like a black dragon?’ Said the locals. It was named this because of the way it’s made: twist leaf, charcoal baked very dark. It had nothing to do with a legend involving a black dragon encircling the tea field, nor the Cantonese version where wulong means ‘confusion’. As most farm names go, the most simple and direct is the fact.
As far as Wuyi Yancha or Cliff Rock teas go, there are about 700-800 old and new varietals. Outside the area, it was all called ‘Big Red Robe’. It gave outsiders a headache to even attempt to understand all the different varietals. Could you tell the difference in those cups of teas above? Drinking each, one can tell a distinct difference. Looking at the leaves, even the tea master himself can’t tell the difference!
I said that’s ok, my customers still ask us ‘So is oolong a green tea or a black tea?’ Never mind there are dozens of major types of Oolongs, parsing down to 800 varietals of just Wuyi Rock oolong!

Day 1: sudden bursts of heavy rain, punctuated by fluttering…

Day 1: sudden bursts of heavy rain, punctuated by fluttering butterflies, whizzing dragonflies, and songs of frogs hidden amongst puddles. Our group of tea aficionados braved the elements to taste Baochong oolong first hand. Their feedback? Indescribable sweetness and fresh aroma, unlike any Baochong they have ever tasted. Of course there was the freshness factor. The batch we tasted had been harvested late afternoon the night before and made just minutes ago, and went from baking oven to Gaiwan. That and on top of it all, steeped with the water from their mountain spring.

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