Thursday, April 26, 2018

White silver tip style Assam tea from Bharat Industries




This is the second tea I'm reviewing from this vendor, a source described more in a first post, from Vivek Sharma of Bharat Industries.  This version is a white buds-only style tea, probably not related to a Chinese white tea version called "silver needle" much at all, so those are more often referred to by producers in other regions as "silver tips."  That clarifies that separation but still bring across what the tea is.


The needles are a bit dark.  White teas can be made with differing degrees of oxidation but I wouldn't be surprised if some of this was due to aging, or storage condition related.  Of course that's just a guess, based in part by this needing to have been last year's tea, related to the timing.  Teas can be impacted by heat and humidity a lot faster here in the tropics, and a few months or a year of aging can look like longer, even if sealed to separate the tea from moisture.  That can be positive for white teas, since those can improve with age, but it doesn't have to relate to improvement.  It just depends on the tea and the storage conditions.

Review


The tea was a bit musty that first infusion.  Since it was just getting going I'll start the review on the second round.

That mustiness and a bit of dry mineral defines the tea on the second round.  It's a more oxidized white tea, it seems, or maybe just different in character. The mineral tone is a nice base, and it does have some sweetness.  It's possible that the flavor range will seem to "clean up" a little over these first two infusions and I'll be able to move on to a more positive description.
 




It is better on the third infusion.  It's odd letting more challenging aspects brew through as with a rough-edged young sheng; white teas typically aren't like that.  It hadn't been astringency though, just mustiness.  It didn't really seem off, it just had an unusual near mineral range character that has almost entirely dropped out.

This infusion is pleasant but it is a bit unusual, although I suppose what one would expect for a slightly more oxidized silver tips Assam-region Indian tea.  Mineral grounds the experience, balanced by some sweetness.  All the typical problems with describing such a tea come up:  what mineral?  Is that a trace of rust as a supporting tone, or some oxidized metal other than iron / steel?  Vegetal contributing aspects are light compared to those, but what are they, tying to what plants or vegetables?


In short the tea tastes like mineral and rust, but it's much better than that description would sound.  It wouldn't be for everyone but it is pleasant, after a couple of infusions to serve as rinsing, or maybe just to enable a natural transition.


I'm brewing the tea Gongfu style (kind of obvious from the infusion count, but I might have mentioned that).  I get a sense this tea will just keep going, that there was a lot of flavor to offer in these buds.


One nice part is that as with white teas in general there's none of the challenging astringency found in black tea versions.  This tea is subtle but a lot less so than some buds-only white teas.  For someone acclimated to harsher black teas it might seem relatively mild, or even too subtle, but for someone used to white teas that need to be brewed for long periods of time to taste like anything it's definitely not on that end of the spectrum.  I'm using 30 second or so infusion times, and a lower proportion of tea to water than I've been in the habit of for other types.  With twice as much tea in the gaiwan I'd be using 15 to 20 second infusion times, similar to other tea types that aren't subtle at all.  That's more like how I brew sheng, which depending on the tea version can work best with near flash infusions, brewed very quickly.


I suppose the balance of aspects is shifting a little but basically the tea doesn't change across the next few infusions.  It does work, mineral with a mild earthiness, with a level of sweetness that balance those well.  The mouthfeel is not really thick, just a little full, with a hint of dryness.  The aftertaste works better too, adding one more element to the overall complexity.  It doesn't quite extend to ranges I would describe as "savory" but some might interpret it that way.


I've not tried much for white teas from Assam (none, was it?), so this tea really might be typical, or it may not be.  The mineral and earthiness are hard to pin down.  It's not malty, as Assam black teas are, but there may be a trace of similar flavor aspects there, part of what gives it depth.  It's definitely not similar to black or sheng pu'er teas that I might describe as mineral intensive and earthy, but it's still hard to break that down further.  Sometimes I try to using comparisons to different kinds of rocks or variations of metal rust but I'm not sure that's meaningful, even if I did manage to actually make sense related to comparable aspects being present.


I would've expected these to be slightlty darker



All in all the tea is nice.  I would expect that it was stored in a warmer environment that speeded up an aging process a little, accounting for the unconventional first infusions, but I'd need to have tried it before that to know what changed.  Maybe beyond contributing a bit of mustiness to the initial two infusions the aging transition actually helped the tea character in other ways.  It's hard to know.  I suppose it's possible that the tea might have been better fresh, or that aging improved it and it could become better still in a few more years.


a Halmari conventional Assam; a bit tippy

For someone who likes white teas but struggles with the experience of some not tasting like much this may strike a really good balance.  Some white teas have a pronounced bright, light, fresh, floral, and sweet character and this one is a bit earthier than that, more towards mineral tones, with enough sweetness to make that work.  It really didn't have the pine-like resinous bite that buds-intensive Assam blacks tend to have.  It'd different, and interesting.


I might add a little background about Vivek, although I did mention more in that first post.  He's just getting into this industry, per my understanding.  That's not necessarily negative but it doesn't make for the same story as those farming-family versions (which aren't always true anyway, I suppose).  On the upside if he can make it through some early going he will probably continue to source a broader range of versions of teas, and better ones, and will market them more effectively.


I really do respect the people who have put their time in working in different capacities in the industry, especially related to developing initiatives to improve fair-trade issues in tea, or develop organic production themes, or add value through developing better processing.  All that said I can also respect people for trying out different business models and initiatives.  I don't necessarily see the answers to resolving tea production and distribution issues as tying any one narrow range of solutions. 

Sales that are more direct in relation to producers are better in general, for sure, but lots of vendors are selling good teas that aren't being sold one step away from the farmer.  The bigger commercial brands aren't necessarily the bad guy, but ramping up awareness and demand for a broader range of teas than appear in grocery store shelves should help with a lot of positive steps different producers and vendors are trying to initiate.

Vivek mentioned that he will visit a tea sales event or market area relatively soon (in May or June?) so there might be more to follow about other types and sales channels for tea in Assam.


I've not been adding random pictures of her lately


me this time, with a kid who looks like a monk



Wednesday, April 25, 2018

Roasted Tie Kuan Yin from a Bangkok shop, Ong Yong Choon


the friendly shop owners


I mentioned a local Bangkok tea shop in that post about my son becoming a novice monk, the Ong Yong Choon tea shop.  It's near the flower market that's near Wat Pho, the Pak Khlong market.  I haven't been checking out many new shops in Bangkok for awhile, so this post about local shops from a year ago wouldn't change much based on what I've turned up since.

I'm finally reviewing a roasted Tie Kuan Yin rolled oolong from that shop here, about a month after buying it.  The tea is nice.  It wasn't sold as an exceptionally high quality level version, just a good basic tea, moderate in cost, and that's what it is.  It's a bit unique for the roast level not being unroasted (the "nuclear green" TKY version), or charred, the typical take on a traditional style.  It's in the middle, at a level that seems to bring out nice character in the tea.

An online friend visited this shop not too long ago and bought a decent Shui Xian there (Wuyi Yancha, a twisted-style roasted oolong instead).  I did "try" some of those by smelling sample jars and one of a few I sniffed seemed like it probably was pretty good, but I was in a hurry that day, midway through my son's ordination training at Wat Pho nearby, so I just went with some TKY instead.  I shared most of what I bought that day directly with monks in that temple.  Just because they have limited opportunity to go out tea shopping they shouldn't have to skip drinking decent tea.


one of the owners again


two different languages I can't read


packaged versions, but they do sell tea from loose bulk stock too


that TKY packaging was identical to those portioned out, as single servings


teaware!


Review


The tea itself is a bit dark, and has a nice roasted smell to it, a bit rich, maybe just a little off related to scent tone, along the line of old books or car engine smell.  Taste is the main thing; we'll see if that's clean, complex, and full or not.



It is nice on the first infusion, rich with good depth.  It's clearly a medium roasted version, giving up brightness and potential floral nature to pick up more depth and other range of flavors, warmer and in a different range.  A creaminess underlies the experience, not a foreground part of the aspects but a nice supporting element.  The feel and aftertaste check out, even this early in the process; both are not as exceptional as in the best examples of rolled oolongs but quite decent.



The flavor is complex, hard to pin down.  It might taste like a well toasted rice, which could be interpreted by some as woody, and part of it relates to that old book scent in the dry tea, although really it's closer to old furniture.  I mean that in a good sense; I can see how saying a tea tastes like a dresser or end table might not be a good thing.  It's clean, complex, and well balanced, so it works.  That one unusual part that gives it depth could easily be just a little off and the tea might be horrible (sour, or too woody, or just strange), but in this case it's not, it works really well.  It's nice tea.


For better versions of similar oolongs the complexity remains throughout many infusions as interesting and pleasant transitions continue.  For more average range versions of similar style tea aspects drop out instead of complexity picking up or shifting, and the taste range might drift off being as positive in later rounds.



I went a little longer in the second infusion to get the tea fully opened up and brewing, so this will describe a stronger version (around a half a minute; I'm brewing the tea Gongfu style, in a gaiwan).  I'll try a short infusion (10 to 15 seconds) next and the tea should be unfurled and infusing well enough to show where it is clearly in early rounds.


The one aspect picks up more in woody range, which is nice.  It's not the bright, somewhat edgy woody aspect range that young sheng can sometimes express, which gets interpreted as lots of different things, more a tropical hardwood range instead.  Again there's a trace aspect that drifts just a hint towards nail polish that invokes old furniture, and again that still works out better than it sounds.  The mineral tones that are harder to notice ground that nicely, and the creaminess and fullness help it all make sense and balance.  Some would describe part of the sweetness as floral, maybe along the lines of lavender, versus brighter orchid tones in some other oolongs, and once I think of it that way that's clearly what it is.  It might already be clear in the rest of this but I do leave space for subjective interpretation in tea experience, for "seeing" or interpreting aspects in different ways.

Another way to interpret that roasted effect is through the concept / aspect description of "char."  Usually I wouldn't say much about that unless a tea is roasted a good bit further and does tend to taste like a charcoal.  Darker roasted Anxi Tie Kuan Yin can  be like that, and usually is, or more roasted Wuyi Yancha (Fujian twisted style roasted oolong, from the Wuyishan area instead of Anxi).  It works to say that trace aspect I just described as being chemical in nature really is that char, just a very light version of it, and that sounds a lot better.




Per the input from the owner of my favorite local tea shop, Jip Eu, that aspect is preferred by most Wuyi Yancha tea drinkers in Bangkok.  My sense was that he and I both meant that it's one range of preference that people have, not really a higher or lower form of preference, or invalid, just different.  Cooking a tea to a cinder can cover up flaws, of course, and make it hard to appreciate more subtle aspects in a good tea, so to me it's not necessarily completely neutral as preferences go, but at the same time people can like whatever they happen to like.




Even brewed on the light side that char picks up more in the third infusion, seeming more like char in this infusion.  It still does balance nicely.  It's clean and balanced; there is nothing wrong with it, with the roast seeming to draw out the potential of the tea.  On the more negative side there would be more depth of aspect range if this were better tea, more going on, and the feel would be that little bit fuller, with more aftertaste and overall intensity.  Tea that is good, balanced, and interesting is fine for me; I definitely don't need those extra levels to appreciate one.


All the earlier description still works for this infusion, the balance of them just shifts slightly, and it's as well to not overwork explaining in what way.


I took a long break from the tea, going out to get a haircut, and gave it a relatively short infusion to start back in, a bit under 30 seconds.  It seems about the same.  Often I would just leave off reviewing around this point anyway but since number of infusions and aspect character in later rounds is one sign of tea quality--not a direct indicator; those things can vary independently of quality--I'll give it a little longer and describe how it works out after the half-dozen infusion mark.


darkened by roasting, still a bit green


The flavors are still ok, still clean and decently balanced.  The char picks up a little since the more subtle flavors fade slightly but that doesn't.  I like the tea, but not everyone would.  If someone drank oolongs for the brighter floral aspects, or liked vegetal range, or the intense sweetness some exhibit this isn't on that page.  Even for medium level roasted oolongs some pick up more of a yeast / bread dough aspect, or flavors more like cinnamon or cocoa, or floral tones can still come through in a different form.  "Old furniture" wouldn't be a primary flavor range everyone is looking for.  For a medium quality oolong it's nice (with that sort of grading quite relative to what a person normally experiences), and I can appreciate the novelty of drinking a style of tea I normally don't get around to experiencing.

I bought an inexpensive light rolled Chinese oolong in a restaurant here a month or so back (maybe six weeks now), again a gamble of sorts, for what I think was 100 grams for around $8, so not that much of a gamble.  At that price and with very little information passed on, and from that source, I didn't have high hopes for that tea, but did hope it was decent and slightly interesting.  It wasn't quite as good a quality level tea as this one (which I think cost a little more but in that general range), and was much different in character.  It had some slight but obvious flaws but the general impression was positive, a bit on the creamy side, with decent complexity, and a reasonably "clean" overall effect.

This other Ong Yong Choon flower market shop tea is slightly better tea, but also just different, roasted more.  I guess I'm not as certain as I could be that they're both even the same thing.  They both could be Tie Kuan Yin, or then again it seems possible that other tea is local Jin Xuan instead.  I think this flower market shop tea was sold as Anxi TKY, but those come in a broad range of styles and quality levels, definitely not all a similar thing.


This tea is fading, around 8 infusions in.  It takes a 45 second to a minute infusion just to get the same intensity that a 15 second version had earlier on.  It's still nice though, still not "going off" and transitioning to negative aspect range.  If it was lower quality tea it would've done that before this round.  It seems quite possible for producers to give rolled oolongs like this one a bit more roast time to help mask flaws or transition negative aspects but in this case it was probably more about getting a desired aspect range out of a tea that was decent to begin with.

I went back to a medium length infusion time, a bit limited for where this stands now, around 30 seconds, and it's still nice on the lighter side, and not finished yet.  The feel is still decent and the aftertaste still works, and that balance of aspects hasn't changed much (mild floral, old furniture, creaminess, limited mineral base).  I think this might make a good old-person's tea, related to a Malaysian online friend commenting about how some vaguely related character in Liu Bao isn't for young people, and that younger people can't appreciate bitterness in the same way.  This tea isn't bitter at all, so maybe I'm mixing ideas and he wouldn't make that comparison.

I'll try to stop back and check out a better Shui Xian version.  Those owners speak perfect English (kind of strange, really, but one had lived in the US), and they were nice to visit and talk about tea with.  They mentioned that shop was there for the last 80 years or so, so beyond talking about tea versions they could pass on impressions of how tea culture has changed in Bangkok, and did so to the degree that limited time allowed that day.


Pak Khlong is the flower market, Wat Phra Chetuphon is the long name for Wat Pho (in the upper left), which is closer than it looks.




Monday, April 23, 2018

Comparing Yiwu gushu and huangpian (yellow leaf tea)


2017 gushu version left, 2015 huangpian gushu right



I'm back to trying more samples of sheng from Yiwu Mountain Pu'er.  I could've been clearer on what huangpian even was prior to tasting it, but I suppose that worked out for the best, going in a bit more blind.  They seem to only carry this product as an inclusion in one of their sample sets (listed here), not for individual sale.

There are references on that from another vendor (Crimson Lotus) and in a Tea Chat discussion, which includes a decent summary.  A friend asked if I'd tried a yellow leaf version from Farmerleaf (probably this one) but they don't use that name in reference, huang pian.  I'll combine two citations from the Tea Chat discussion that works as a good description (bearing in mind that even better reference sources can include ideas that could use a bit of further interpretation):


Yellow leaf or the older lower leaves on the plant stem. Fresh its a good drink. I haven't had much older than a few years though. It is usually sorted out of the tea harvest. Many minority tribes keep it and brew it to drink....

... Aged huang pian generally gets darker and sweeter with varying notes of brown sugar, wood, bark, Chinese herbs, etc. The character is simple becoming more mellow with age, the decent ones can show some depth.


This version is three years old, and the tasting description following helps make sense of the line of questioning in that Tea Chat thread if it mades sense to age huang pian.  This Yiwu Mountain Tea vendor says a little about aging potential in a blog post about a differently presented similar tea, a bamboo packed (tube-shaped) 2005 version:


Huangpian is a very accessible tea as it has many traits that fit beginners:
it has less bitterness and astringency compared to standard leaves, Yiwu huangpian is especially so lack of offensive flavours/aromas (unless stored badly):

  • it is forgiving to brew - it's hard to over-brew unless you totally forget about it
  • it is cheaper to obtain
  • it tastes and ages just like any other Puer





I'd been reviewing a number of different samples from the Yiwu Mountain Pu'er vendor before, just not the gushu versions, with a search for those posts here, which cites some unrelated other posts.  This set of samples included these two teas, which I'll be reviewing here:


2017 Yiwu gushu

2015 Yiwu gushu huangpian



On to it then, cutting the rambling on and background short.  As in this recent review of two different style shengs from two different regions (one from Laos) I don't expect that comparing dis-similar teas will shed much light on either.  Comparison of similar character sheds more light on minor aspects than contrast does, but it moves through samples reviewing faster, and to some extent the contrast can be informative.

And it's interesting practice, trying to do that, becoming accustomed to extending that experience range.  If I were newer to it that would be more difficult but tasting comparisons were more or less the running theme last year, some cases of which made sense related to being very similar teas and some didn't.  I'd probably do more with describing feel related aspects of teas in a single version tasting but I'm not learning to prefer feel range in teas as much as traditionally trained individuals might.  I don't notice that as necessarily critical, picking up a learned preference that doesn't occur naturally, but of course preference is the type of thing that varies.

I noticed later that I didn't do take many pictures of this tasting. We had a nice cycle going where I had Saturday late mornings completely cleared for long versions of tea reviews, with Keoni out at Mandarin class then, but all that business with Keo being a novice and the Songkran holiday season disrupted that pattern.  One upside to all that:  Kalani was in swimming class at the same time and she's getting it, probably at the highest risk of drowning now due to picking up confidence but not quite being there for skill level, but within this year she'll probably swim like anyone else does.

Related to that, there were kids around making noise for this tasting session, and towards the end plans for the morning changed from "not going to a water park" to "going to a water park."  The basic description still worked out, it just cut the level of detail recorded at the end.


with Pororo at a water park in Bangna; he's getting some color


Review:


First infusion


2017 Yiwu gushu:  it's not really bitter and astringent but that's part of what's going on.  I went heavy on the proportion of tea for this tasting so I'll be using short infusions in general.  Since the idea is to try this tea in different ages and since hearsay has it that some degree of this aspect range is a good sign for aging potential that's not necessarily a bad thing.  It's quite approachable as it is, just with complexity in those ranges.  And this is the first infusion; it'll loosen up.  It seems as well to start in with taste and feel summary next round.  It has a nice floral range going on for taste, and the feel comes across as a bit dry, which isn't necessarily good or bad.


2015 Yiwu huangpian:  I won't say much about this either.  It seems less floral, with an unusual root-spice range effect, only a little familiar at this point, but I'd have to go back through reviews to see from which other tea or teas.  It has a bit of dryness to it as well but less astringency and bitterness, with a slight dryness but a softer feel.


Second infusion:


It's probably still too early to say a lot about these teas; they're still going through their early infusions transition.  The "2017 gushu" version is still floral, with a little more astringency and bitterness backing up that range, and a nice long finish / aftertaste.  It is of the type I interpret as hui gan, an experience tied to both bitterness and sweetness that settles into the rear of your tongue and throat, relating to effects in the range of both taste and a feel, but described more in terms of aftertaste.  It will be interesting to see how that transitions in other similar older tea versions, and in retrospect a comparison of different ages of that same type of tea probably would have made more sense.

The 2015 Yiwu huangpian expresses a warm spice-type range that's not easy to describe, out towards a combination of root-spice effect and damp autumn leaves.  It doesn't just drop out after you drink it but the aftertaste experience after doesn't take that one particular form.

Third infusion:


2017 gushu:  brewed lightly and having went through a couple of infusions this tea is in a nice place.  That astringency and bitterness falls into a good balance with the sweetness and floral nature of the tea, grounded by a mineral base that integrates well.  It still has a nice solid feel, and plenty of aftertaste.  Using really fast infusions this would probably keep going for a long time, making for a pleasant, long experience with this tea.  It doesn't describe well as an aspect but it's nice and bright, and "clean."  I'm not great with putting names to floral tones, and the mineral base is also hard to describe, on the light side, matching all the rest.


2015 huangpian:  this tea is also much improved for loosening up a little, although it transitioned more in terms of flavor than feel since it was a good bit softer to begin with.  Where the gushu version fell into a better balance based on the same aspects as in earlier infusions this tea's flavor range shifted.  It's still on the "warm" side, and that spice-type range is still present, but it's diminished, balancing better, and a bit cleaner.  It's moved from spice and wet autumn leaf more into dry autumn leaf, creeping just a little into wood or tobacco tone.  It's a completely different range than the other tea but both work.  The 2017 gushu version matches what I've experienced of better tea versions more, but aspects ranges do just vary.  Mineral is subdued compared to in the other tea, and floral tones aren't a dominant aspect.

Fourth infusion:


2017 gushu:  this tea transitioned a good bit in that round, "warming up," drawing closer to the other version in a sense.  Strange.  It still has more bitterness (which balances well; not enough to make it taste a lot like taking an aspirin), and more feel "structure" related to astringency, brightness, and floral and mineral range, but it picked up a depth of warmer tones.  It'll be interesting to see where it goes next.  It seems that transition occurred mostly related to brighter mineral aspects transitioning to warmer related range, although it may keep going.  The feel has a nice structure to it, I'm just not getting around to saying a lot about where it impacts parts of my mouth here.

The huangpian version shifted a little but it seems as well to cover it next round since it'll keep going.


brewed slightly longer that round (huangpian right)


Fifth infusion:


The 2017 didn't transition much in that one infusion, so I'll skip describing one this time.  I did go slightly longer on infusion time, around 30 seconds, and it's not an improvement, but that was about picking up how the tea comes across differently, not optimizing it.  The bitterness falls into a different balance made that way; it's not as nice.  The feel intensifies, and aftertaste, with no flaws standing out.

It's funny how differently the huang pian comes across brewed at a different infusion strength.  That warm spice / dry leaf range works much better brewed lightly, and seems slightly funky brewed just a little stronger.  I'm curious to what extent that's part of the initial tea's aspects and storage related.  I'd think this tea would've been stored too dry for it to pick up anything remotely like that range in two years, so the unusual character is only a result of the difference in material instead of that or processing variation.  Older versions might tell more of that story, if there is more to tell about how it transitions with age.  One more lightly brewed version might tell enough about these teas, and I might just skip describing the late rounds transitions, as I most often tend to.


Sixth infusion:


The 2017 gushu is in the best place yet.  I didn't mind that astringency and bitterness but it softened nicely, and the warmer range works really well with the floral and mineral tones that stood out earlier.  The overall feel softened a good bit but it still has some structure, and the aftertaste effect may have diminished a little but there's still plenty to it a minute or two after tasting the tea.  It would probably trail off for a long time (the aftertaste) but I'm not exactly testing that, not putting the time in just drinking this tea.

The 2015 version isn't changing.  It's nice, different.  The balance of aspects works well brewed lightly.  That character is unusual, and flavor range, but I do like it.  It doesn't have the same type of intensity as the other tea, not as much feel structure, or aftertaste, and the flavors are in a completely different range, but it's pleasant and interesting.

I checked a seventh infusion too; slightly longer times draw out more but these teas aren't exactly fading.  Related to personal preference I like the conventional "gushu" versus huangpian better, but it would depend on someone's take on that warm spice / earthy range.


Conclusion


Not so much to add; these were two interesting, nice teas.  This Yiwu gushu version matches character for other better versions of teas I've tried from that broad region.  It's a bit hard to directly compare over time to others that were similar but it holds its own.

The huang pian wasn't a favorite but in this case I might like it better once I get used to the novelty of the style.  I wonder how a few more years of aging would affect it, since it lacked the astringency and bitterness that seem part of the reason that it works well to transition character of other sheng through aging in the first place.  Of course all of that is intended as an observation of one way preference might work out for one range of types of teas.  People liking young or brand new sheng also makes sense, and Yiwu versions seem approachable across an age range in general, as much as broad generalities like that ever make sense.

Wednesday, April 18, 2018

An East Berlin early Cold War tea mystery


Someone contacted me about a tea mystery, about tracking down a childhood tea for an acquaintance of theirs, with the details as follows:


He is seeking a tea he remembers from his childhood in Berlin after the war. It is likely to be Russian, or perhaps, Georgian. He does not know the name or type. It is very, very strong, sort of ‘oily’ but not exactly oily, smokey but not Lapsang. The family housekeeper would bring it from the Russian-held part of Berlin.


So the time frame is late 1940's, with that tea from East Berlin. A Russian tea vendor contact told me what is now being sold as "Russian caravan blend" is a made-up designation, just modern marketing spin, but if it had existed 70 years ago that would be a possibility. A blend including some Lapsang Souchong would account for the limited smokiness. Or tea processing style or preparation methods could be other critical factors.

The "oily" designation may be a clue; not many teas come across in that way, and black teas in general tend not to. Maybe it's a black tea but mixed with an herb, which is not unheard of in Russia. I have willow herb at home, also called "Ivan chay," and it has been described that way, and per recently trying it I could see the connection.

I posted this as a request for more input in a few related online groups.  I'll include a combined review of the best input here.  I'd asked in the International Tea Talk Facebook group that I'm an admin for, in the Gong Fu Cha group, in a St. Petersburg FB expat group, on Quora, and in the Trip Advisor travel forum section, and in a couple of other similar groups.


me with a mural in the St. Petersburg metro system

That last group mentioned might seem a little out of place; tea history isn't travel.  Back when I was asking around about tea in Russia before I went there over the last New Years people active in that group / discussion area were most helpful.  They were a little touchy about people not reading the entire FAQ section too (who does that?), but beyond that very nice and informative.  I'm a fan of Russian culture now, after that trip, and that kind sums up how Russians seem in general:  a little gruff, and plain-spoken, but nice and helpful as could be once you get past all that.



I'm a member of that St. Petersburg expat group for the same reason.  St. Petersburg is fantastic, by the way, almost worth it to visit just to see the metro system and the buildings.

Let's go right to what turned up.


Groups and forums input


One person in the St. Petersburg forum mentioned this great article on the old "elephant" brand Russian commercial tea.  It seems pretty unlikely that's what it was but maybe it could've been.  Per that article it seems more likely that product was developed in the 1960's, with the question about a tea experienced in the late 1940's.

Russian "elephant" tea (credit that reference article page)


I'll cite some of that article, since it's fascinating, if not a likely lead:


Initially, there was only Russian Georgian tea in the USSR . This was a real breakthrough in the industrial industry, and the drink was even exported to other countries, where it became popular... In the seventies the tea industry in the USSR fell, the state suffered losses and began to decide what to do about it. 


Many people, who came to the USSR, sadly remember those times when both "the grass was greener and the sky was cleaner", and the products were of the highest quality, in comparison with them, even the imported ones were useless. But many did not even suspect at the time that they drank tea, collected not in the territory of their beloved homeland, but far beyond its borders. It so happened that the Georgian tea had become unusable, so the USSR concluded a contract for the supply of tea with countries such as Sri Lanka, Kenya, Tanzania, India and Vietnam. With our previous importer, China, which could also supply tea, our state quarreled and therefore did not use its services... Initially, this scam went well, but still "domestic" tea replaced the same Indian tea "with an elephant". 

This tea was distinguished not only by its bright and strong taste, but also by packaging, which was specially developed in 1967, and Indian tea "with an elephant" was sold in 1972... Tea "with an elephant" was divided into higher and first grade... The first grade packaging contained only 15% of tea from India, 5% from Ceylon, 25% from Madagascar, and as many as 55% of sheets from Georgia. 


It's a little rough (automatic translation) but all that seems clear enough.  The earliest time-line isn't really stated but if the earliest date mentioned is the initial origin the products were made since the 1960s.

A link mentioned in the Trip Advisor forum responses shows the modern version of the tea for sale (which had been discontinued at one point), with that person's input that the modern version of the tea didn't seem very good to him.

That Quora question turned up some interesting input, not cited for sourcing, but worth considering:


The three main general kinds of black tea available for the Soviets at that time were: Chinese, Georgian and Azerbaijanian. Of those, the Chinese tea would be the least probable, given the state of matters in China at that time (civil war followed by the Japanese invasion).

The Georgian black tea of lesser quality (it’s highly doubtable that the elite kind would be available to the troops) is described as “smelling like tobacco and having a terrible taste.” The Azerbaijanian tea was quite similar.

As for the herbs, the Russians were often adding all kinds of those to the tea, the main limitations being the fantasy of the cook and the availability of the herbs around. Therefore it would be almost impossible to know what exactly was added back then (if it was). The Ivan Chay, aka Fireweed (US), aka Rosebay Willowherb (UK), was not only used as an additive, but also as a cheap surrogate when the real tea was unavailable.


Another comment (hard to keep track of where) claimed Indian tea was also available in Russia at that time.  Indian and Sri Lankan teas were definitely around then, so it might come down to a matter of what really were "main" imports, per that answer input framing.  That overall import source proportion may not determine if teas from those nationalities really would have been sold in East Berlin then.  It would be impossible to remember a taste from 70 years ago in enough detail to trace that back to a foreign tea style back then, never mind linking it to a blend.  The aim here is to see how far review might be able to get.


dog sledding at 5 PM; it had been night for a couple of hours


I just had black tea mixed with herbs (which ones wasn't described) in a visit to a sled dog camp outside of Murmansk, Russia, back during the last week of 2017.  It was a bit hard to place; it's easier for mixes of different things to be non-distinct.  That was actually made in a samovar too, the only time that came up in the Russia trip.

In kind of a typical theme for me I was taking my daughter to use the restroom when they actually talked about that part, that brewing device, and what teas were typical, and what it was we drank then.  My son just became a Thai novice monk monk recently, and after waiting around for two days of training and build-up my daughter absolutely needed to use the restroom at a few moments before he took the vows (with more on how all that worked out here).  I really don't mind at all; they are the priority, and the rest comes and goes as it will.


samovars brewing tea at the dogsled camp


that tea break, just before they brought out crepes



with tea break company like this the other details don't matter so much


To make a longish story short I reported back to the person posing the question that I thought the tea probably would have been one of three things:


1.  an earlier version of a Russian caravan blend, mixing Lapsang Souchong and other tea versions.

2.  a Georgian or Azerbaijanian black tea.

3.  black tea mixed with willow herb (Ivan Chay) or other tisanes.


It probably never would be possible to narrow down which it was.  It would be possible to try modern Georgian tea, and that tisane, willow herb (with both sold through this Moychay site), and to try out mixing the two.  Maybe something would seem really familiar, a likely match.  I reviewed two Georgian black teas from Moychay here and they just seemed like normal black teas, maybe slightly different in character as teas from different regions or teas processed differently tend to.


Review of willow herb


I bought willow herb in the Perlov shop in Moscow (where I also bought the only Russian tea I found on that trip), and this prompted me to try out that tisane, reviewed as follows.

the exterior of that shop is beautiful


friendly Russian guy who translated tea labels for me there


The "tea" tastes nice rich and malty, just in a different sense than in the two other ways I tend to use malt as a description.  The main way I use that description is for Assam, related to that strong near-mineral flavor range.  A second is for sweeter, richer, smoother teas with a version of malt that reminds me more of Ovaltine.  A mid-roasted rolled oolong can also taste malty (like a Dong Ding), which can be really pronounced in a winter harvest tea version, but it's malt in a different sense, a bit closer to how Ovaltine comes across, or a malted milkshake.

When I first smelled this tea a warm, sweet, complex scent was familiar from long ago:  it smelled like animal feed.  That sounds like an insult, but processed malted grains used as animal feed smell nice.  I won't get too far into details but I raised pigs when I was younger, growing up in rural Western Pennsylvania.  There are more stories about how that went but none that help the context make any more sense than it already does.  It was kind of a normal thing to do there.

I don't know what those feeds were made from, although I must have read the bags back then, around 40 years ago.  I don't know how they were processed in order to smell as sweet and rich as they did, or what was blended with what.  I loved the smells related to that farming activity, and truth be told I loved those animals too, perhaps one main reason I spent nearly 20 years as a vegetarian later in life.






The first taste of the tisane was a little like that, just probably much cleaner, more complex, and more pleasant than it sounds.  Tisanes often come across as really one-dimensional compared to actual tea but this had a good bit of aspect complexity going for it.  The flavor was sweet and rich, mostly related to that malted grain taste.  There was other earthy range that gave it more depth, a strange sort of root-spice complexity, not so far off licorice.  It's almost as much an overlapping interpretation versus being a different aspect but it also tastes like bread dough, that one yeast-like flavor that comes up.  The feel was thick, a bit oily, and the tasting experience ended with more trailing aftertaste than usually occurs with tisanes.


Related to this being drank on its own it's fine, a bit richer and more complex than infused herbs tend to be.  I'd probably rather drink a mid-roasted rolled oolong, which seems closest to this in profile, but those are more complex.  It might work really well combined with black tea, since it is smooth and complex but a bit thin related to that broader aspect range.  It lacks all of the edge that standard black teas typically have, the astringency, and also the flavor range that is more typical of what people call malt when reviewing teas, and the other mineral or fruit range that different black teas can express.


As chance has it someone just gave me what looks like a pretty standard plain Kenyan tea (Williamson Tea "Traditional Afternoon" blend), so I tried it mixed with that.  I tasted that black tea alone first:  it's CTC tea-bag black tea, not great, not awful, not surprising in any way.


The blend of the two was a little unusual.  I'm just not accustomed to drinking black tea mixed with much, although I did buy a floral and Ceylon black tea commercial blend in Russia for the office staff here.  That was ok, those inputs matched.  It didn't help that I don't really love CTC black tea, that malty, mineral-tone, rust-like edge those have.  This mix might've been what he had been drinking as a child but it would take some getting used to.  That's especially if someone had already been on the page of drinking better Chinese black teas, deviating to drink a better orthodox Assam or Ceylon when those come up.


I think I liked the tisane better alone since it didn't run counter to my expectations for black tea in the same way.  That malted grain and licorice range sweetness and flavor depth just seems odd paired up with it.  Towards the end it started to make more sense and I'd bet if I had it a few times I'd like it a lot better.


Back to the search


I drifted just a little further towards tracking down willow herb (Ivan chay) and other Georgian tea options in NYC but didn't get far with that.  I asked about options in a NYC tea group and heard nothing back.  I had tried a reasonable Russian caravan blend from Sun's Organic in the NYC Chinatown but it wasn't really close to that initial flavor description.  It seemed highly unlikely that even a tea based on the same mix of tea type inputs (from the same regions) would be similar when made from modern versions.


I asked around a little about Russian markets in NYC but mail order was probably going to be an easier path to follow, unless the person checking wanted to spend a couple hours on Google search and a half a day walking around that related neighborhood.


Of course Google does turn up options fairly quickly, so it wouldn't take much to try finding that one tisane.  After a few clicks an online option turned up locally (there), associated with a local physical store, and some of the same search options I'd checked in this investigation turned up other promising leads.

As mentioned it really could've just been plain, unusual character Georgian or Azerbaijanian black tea, and it may not be possible to find an identically processed tea version today, 70 years later.  If someone had dried teas indoors using heat from a wood fire back then that could have contributed that smoke aspect, and what might well be seen as updated processing improvements might drop that smoke aspect out.  Ordinary black tea shouldn't seem oily, a plain tea or a blend, so maybe that was from an herb, or it could've just been from a processing flaw, or atypical result.  At one point I considered whether it may have even been a Liu Bao instead (a hei cha, not black tea at all), but I've not been discussing that since I rejected it as unlikely.

If anyone reading this thinks "I know what that probably was" it would be interesting to hear more input, probably best communicated through this blog's related Facebook page.

Tuesday, April 17, 2018

Ban Komaen 2017 (Laos) and Nan Mei gushu 2015 tasting


 Ban Komaen (Laos tea) left, Nan Mei right


I'm back to trying pu'er samples generously sent by Olivier Schneider, a pu'er expert and author of the reference page puerh.fr.  That page is in French but automatic translation works well between related languages.  It's a separate subject but I've been noticing that automatic translation from Russian to English goes better than you'd expect.  He's not actually a vendor, in the typical sense, more a researcher who is also involved with pu'er sales in the development and wholesale levels.

This follows on a review of two initial sheng samples here, which lists out details for the two I tried and the rest.  I'll compare these two teas:


Nan Mei gushu 2015 (small production tea)

Ban Komaen 2017 (old tree tea from Phongsally, Laos, so this is "sheng-pu'er-like" tea)


There isn't much reason why I'm pairing the tasting of these two.  The ages are comparable, and they're the next two on the original samples list, arranged more or less by age.  Trying very similar teas together works better but I'm not clear on expectations related to these.  At a guess they won't be similar.

Nan Mei is a village area in Lincang, Yunnan, as described in this puerh.fr article.  Olivier includes a producer profile of a woman tea maker in Laos in another article on sexism in tea  (who may or may not have made this tea; I'm not claiming that connection).  I won't do much for describing those locations or variations in the teas here; the point is just review, conveying an impression, which is already a lot to cover.

In this case comparison tasting is also about getting the tasting and review process moving since I've been off that for the last three weekends related to my son becoming a Buddhist novice monk.  It's the main Songkran weekend here (the traditional Thai New Years), so we're a little busy doing water park outings and errands, but it did work to set aside time for a tasting.  Conditions were not optimal since the two noise-makers were around for it but a long day at a water park the day before had their volume turned down a little.








Tasting notes


First infusion:


Nan Mei:  the tea is nice.  It's complex, well balanced, with good intensity.  The profile includes plenty of mineral depth, well integrated with the other range along the lines of wood tone and leather.  I'd expect some of this taste range matches flavor descriptions that would be familiar to others but I'll need to muddle through breaking them down through other comparison descriptions.  The astringency is limited for as intense and full in feel as this tea is.  It won't really need to transition to soften to be approachable but I expect it will develop over the next several infusions.

Ban Komaen:   this tea is similar in one sense and completely different in another.  It also expresses good intensity, good body, and complexity, based in a lot of mineral range, with very different other primary flavor.  This tasting is going to be tough in terms of description.  With a lot of other teas it's a stretch to pin components and labels on what's going on but this really isn't getting far, and I'm not sure it's going to.  I'll probably keep saying things like "mineral, wood, earthy, tree bark" and it won't convey much.  So goes tea review in general.

I guess the difference might be in some teas tasting more like fruit or vegetables, or at least like somewhat familiar range like hay or fallen leaves.  With these teas so far into mineral range and other flavors that aren't exactly familiar it's not going to be easy.  Some unusual versions of nuts might make for a start, and describe one part, or spice descriptions could tell part of the story.  It might work as a fall-back to describe differences in the two instead of getting to an accurate flavor or aspect list.


Nan Mei 2015 gushu



Ban Komaen 2017 old tree


 Ban Komaen (Laos tea) left, Nan Mei right

Second infusion:


Nan Mei:  The overall effect is really nice; it's probably as well to communicate that before tripping over the details.  The depth and complexity are good, and the flavor range is positive, if hard to describe well, with a nice thickness to the tea and a long aftertaste.  The previous mix of heavy mineral, wood tone, and tree bark (for lack of a better description), are joined by a trace of tobacco.  There's more going on that that; a rich depth that reminds me a little of brazil nut.  The tea is really approachable for being as intense and complex as the flavors are.  It's not especially bitter or astringent but it has a lot of aspect range to give it complexity; it's not soft or thin.


Ban Komaen:  This tea shifted into a sweeter spice range that's a lot closer to lemongrass than I'd have expected possible.  It transitioned a lot in just one infusion.  It's not less approachable than the other tea, in spite of being a year old versus three, not harsh or astringent at all, although maybe a little softer in effect.  Neither are bitter.  There is enough complexity that maybe a little bitterness can be separated out as one part of what's going on but it's definitely not dominant in either tea.  There is a lot of mineral depth and wood range in this tea but that sweetness and lemongrass range really stands out.  It also has a nice feel and again the experience lasts a good while after swallowing the tea.

Some of this range reminds me a little of how Vietnamese snow teas come across, it's just not as bitter as those often are, and not quite as vegetal.  Those don't seem like typical green teas to me but they tend to span a character range in between sheng and green tea.  It's that mineral and earthy flavor aspect range that's common, some parts of which overlap with the other tea, with some parts not.


 Ban Komeun (Laos tea) left, Nan Mei right

Third infusion:


 Ban Komaen (Laos tea) left, Nan Mei right (infused a little longer)

Nan Mei:  a bark spice aspect picks up, a bit like that "darker" version of cinnamon Rou Gui resembles.  A local Chinese vendor said Vietnamese cinnamon tastes like that, but I'm really not familiar with a range of versions of cinnamon.  It could come across more like tobacco (and it did to me more in the last infusion) but it's only a little towards that from the cinnamon.  Or it's just both; usually tea review is presented as an aspects list.


Ban Komaen:  that nice spice range shifted a bit more; it's cool how novel this tea's flavors are.  It still reminds me quite a bit of lemongrass, so I'd say it's mostly that, but of course the mineral depth and earthiness in the wood range isn't common to tisanes.  The wood in both seems like an aged hardwood, if that helps, maybe with a very faint bite of young branch shoot.

The Nan Mei comes across as "drier" in feel when comparing the two; that full feel tightens your whole palate and gives it a dry feel in comparison, which is more noticeable as a contrast with the other tea.  The Laos tea has a good bit of structure and fullness to it (relatively speaking related to teas in general; really moderate as sheng goes) but the finish feels smoother.

Fourth infusion:


On that last infusion I went slightly longer than usual, which I often do to get a better feel for the feel of teas, and to check how the various aspects work out slightly more intense.  In this case it was because my daughter interrupted me, but the effect in tasting isn't so different related to it being planned or not.  I'll try this infusion quite light, which actually can make it easier to notice trace flavor components.


Nan Mei:  this tea is actually nicer brewed very lightly.  There is still plenty of flavor to be enjoyed and the fullness of feel and aftertaste are still pronounced, and the balance works better.  The list of what I'm experiencing hasn't changed, and the gap in describing it.  It's complex; I get the sense there are layers I'm just not getting to assigning a description to.  The woodiness is probably more like leather than wood, which is sweet enough there might be a dried fruit aspect that matches part of it.  Faint prune, maybe?  Possibly something else dried I'm not familiar with, or just not picking up clearly enough to pin down.

Ban Komaen:  the sweetness and lemongrass effect seems to be falling into more of a balance with the earthiness in this tea.  It has mineral range for a base but less than the other tea, and probably in a lighter range.  Neither of these teas express any aspect range that I'd expect would improve by diminishing through aging.  I can't judge aging potential well yet, or how they would change over a few more years, but they're both very nice now, in two different ways.


 Ban Komaen (Laos tea) left, Nan Mei right

Conclusion:


The next infusions will continue to show transitions; these teas are far from finished.  The basic story is already told, and I get bored with review notes that delve into finer and finer details and transition differences.  I expect that few readers want to read further after getting through a full first page of tasting notes anyway.

Both teas were really nice; both somewhat new ground for me.  The Nan Mei was nice for being so complex and pleasant, really solid across the entire range of aspects, and the Ban Komaen for being so novel.  I liked the Laos tea better because that unusual aspects set really worked for me, the unique flavor of the tea, but I guess others with different preferences might feel different ways about it.

It goes without saying but the continuing emphasis on how the teas taste doesn't match the sheng pu'er theme perfectly, for many.  Feel and aftertaste are highly valued aspect ranges for many sheng drinkers, and I'm not even mentioning qi here (drug-like effect, or at least along that line).  Comparison tasting gives up reviewing that as a factor, since tasting two completely different versions together mixes that effect.  I tend to not notice it that much myself anyway, and don't love it even when the effect is so pronounced it can't be missed.  I already put in my time with using recreational drugs and for me tea isn't about that.

There's room for more rambling on about appreciating different aspect ranges in teas, and how to some extent transitioning what one does appreciate could relate to what is experienced.  Exploring that line of thinking works through analogy:  if coffee and beer are acquired tastes, not so delicious or enjoyable when one first tries them, the existence of a lot of coffee and beer drinkers implies that lots of people had to keep trying them after initially not liking them.  Maybe mochas help explain some of the coffee part, or people needing to stay awake late at night.

Maybe I will start discussing how appreciating mouthfeel, aftertaste, and effects of teas are growing on me, or it could go the other way, and I could decide to ease up on exploring sheng because taste alone doesn't make for enough of a draw.  Of course there's no need for a deadline related to that.  It has been interesting getting further with this especially complex and novel tea type.  I doubt I'll part ways with drinking sheng, I just won't drop interest in all other tea types as some do.  I already have one more set of notes on other versions to convert into a post, and more teas to try.


still wearing that novice-monk haircut, which I do like on him


after an 8 hour shift at the water park


two days later, back at that park