Showing posts with label phoenix. Show all posts
Showing posts with label phoenix. Show all posts

Monday, April 1, 2024

Greengold Georgian Kesane oolong and Phoenix roasted green tea

 



Nika of Greengold sent another set of Georgian teas to review, which I started covering comparing two black tea versions, and now I'm on to oolong and a well-roasted green tea.  Many thanks to him for these!

In that black tea review the versions didn't seem as conventional as I expected.  One was similar to one Chinese black tea in style, and the other was unusual.  I suppose trying the earlier set 2 or 3 years ago I'm not remembering how conventional or unconventional those were.  These may be a bit unusual.  I'll use the web page descriptions as an intro again:


KESANE, which is name of one of the most mysterious flower, which in Georgia grows only in Guria region. Our tea plants are surrounded by forrest which is full of this flower. According to the legend this flower is called "Forget-me-not". Our Oolong tea is made with such mystery recipe and after you taste, you will not forget it.

It is a golden tea that displays the aroma of woody, honeyed, fruity, roasted with a hint of vegetal notes. The taste is refined and full-bodied, sweetish. The taste is juicy and smooth, buttery, sweetish, with fruity sourness, spicy nuances and refreshing finish. The liquor is transparent, with a shade of a meadow honey.


PHOENIX tea is a roasted green tea, with a very strong aroma and taste, which makes it an unique product. It is made from morning-plucked fresh leaves and is being roasted on a very high temperature, that’s why is named after Phoenix.

Strong fire is the key to deliver specific strong aroma during the tea manufacturing process.

AROMA: HONEY, WOOD, FRUIT, VEGETABLE

Tea has strong aroma and flavours with some notes of cocoa, honey that gives it points of acidity and notes of aged wood. It has a sharp and delicately texture. The degree of taste balance and the predominant malt taste. It is true that in the mouth, the balance between medium acidity and medium amount of tannins make this tea honeyed, round and easy to drink that highlights the sweet flavour.


Review:




Kesane:  warm, rich, a bit nutty; I expected something else from the moderate darkness of color tones, for it to be even lighter.  There is touch of caramel flavor as well.  Feel is thick and rich too, which is atypical for a light initial round, especially if the flavor is still light.


Phoenix:  that's different.  There is a smoky input that stands out first, then an unusual type of flavor and astringency that pair together, maybe like tree bark.  This tastes like heavy pine smoke.  When you expect that it can be quite pleasant, especially when paired with suitable tea aspects, as with Lapsang Souchong.  When you are expecting a mild floral or vegetal tea, anywhere near typical green tea range, it hits a bit hard.  Mineral undertones are so strong that it tastes a bit like petroleum.

It's odd how the infusion strength differs in these.  The first isn't as light as initial rounds sometimes are but it seems like it will strengthen more in the next round, that it hasn't quite opened up, and this is really intense, even a bit much.  I'll need to use flash infusions for this tea from here on out.




Kesane #2:  it's odd how depth, feel, and richness come across as stronger in this than typical forward flavors.  The flavor is fine in it, along the line of root spice coupled with mild nut, brazil nut, macadamia or such.  A faint touch of caramel and light vegetal edge add complexity, so light that it's hard to define, but not intensity.  Sweetness is moderate but that input works with the rest.  It's odd that this doesn't remind me of any other tea version, strange that no other teas that come to mind have been like this.


Phoenix:  it balances much better for being brewed quite light, infused quickly.  Smoke input really stands out but it's not nearly as strong, and the unusual vegetal (bark) and mineral (petroleum) range have eased up.  Sweetness and feel kind of catch up; this makes a lot more sense now.  One obvious question is if people who love Lapsang Souchong would also love this, given that it's not even a black tea base paired with that smoke input.  I think that most would.

This may or may not even be a smoked tea.  It's pretty smoky though, and that input had to come from somewhere.  It's hard to identify other flavor range to round out a list.  It tastes a bit like pine, not only pine bark but also the needles.  There probably is more to notice that's being overwhelmed by the more dominant range at this point.




Kesane #3:  not transitioning too much.  A bit of autumn fallen leaves tone enters in, but that's pretty close to what I had already been describing.  I like this tea; to me this unusual character works.  It balances well, and is pleasant.  It's not far off typical shou mei white tea range, comparing more to that than to most oolongs.  It's odd trying one very light and subtle tea along with an intense one; it might work out that I like this more for the other being a bit dialed up.  

I'm a sheng pu'er drinker, and was just discussing how unusually high intensity might be part of the appeal of that for me, but it took awhile to really like that flavor set, and what's going on with the Phoenix version is new to me.


Phoenix:  not transitioning much either.  Intensity is moderated by using a really short infusion time but this tea is strong.  

It might come across better paired with food; some of that intensity might make more sense while alternating it with a breakfast or snack food, something rich and intense in flavor.  This might pair well with gingerbread or red velvet cake, something that isn't subtle.  Or this might even be fantastic with a conventional American breakfast, with fried eggs, bacon (especially smoked bacon, setting up a parallel between the two), fried potatoes and so on, all with a glass of orange juice.  

This might even be a rare tea alternative that a coffee drinker seeking a match in intensity might love.  It's not the same as a French roast coffee but it overlaps in a few different ways.  That intensity builds up as you sip it a few times, almost changing in effect, and becoming too much.  I could add milk to this and see what happens, even though that's blasphemy in the tea world.

I actually did that; in one sense this tasting just went off the rails.  With just a touch of sugar this would really pull together, since that softened the intensity issue, but the smoky and pine tones are still a little edgy, even with that one part sorted out.  It would fall close to a London Fog, Earl Grey with milk.  

It might sound like I'm saying that this tea is so harsh that it needs plenty of adjustment, and this commentary can be taken that way, but as I see it I'm really discussing an unusual potential of the tea.  If you put milk in the other version it would disappear.  This can balance in a novel and pleasant way, as more intense Lapsang Souchong can.  Or just drinking it with food would seem to accomplish some of the same effect, resolving high intensity, but in a completely different way.




Kesane, #4:  I brewed this a little stronger and feel includes more of an edge now, not much compared to average tea feel range, but some.  Interpreted in other ways people could see this tea as creamy, or could interpret the nut / root spice / autumn leaf range as subtle floral tones instead.


Phoenix:  this balances better than ever; it softens and gains better balance.  The flavor list still holds up, it's just not similar to earlier in overall effect with the balance of those inputs shifted around.  The challenging part eases up; it wouldn't make as much sense to add milk to this, as brewed this round.


These teas are far from finished, brewed Gongfu style, the notes just stop here.  I tried them for a few more rounds and they didn't transition that much more.


Conclusion:


Interesting, pleasant teas.  That roast level in the Phoenix was a bit aggressive but if you were expecting that, or even seeking it out, it could be quite pleasant.  If you expected a light oolong or moderate roast Wuyi Yancha it would seem burnt to a crisp.  It worked out as Lapsang Souchong works out; you have to like that range to get them, and then it's pleasant.

Oddly I feel like I could relate to these better if they matched standard Chinese or other-origin tea character.  Then that's about needing clear and defined expectations to appreciate tea character, which seems strange to me.  Did I lose experiential flexibility along the way?


The Kesane oolong works well for a mild and unique oolong range.  Maybe it reminds me a little of a gentle white tea, with the full feel and macadamia nut range flavors very approachable.  I would guess that if you try brewing it in different ways and adjust to the character more complexity would stand out, that you could get more flavor range out of it.  Probably trying it alongside a much more intense tea didn't really do it justice.

For the Phoenix tea you just have to be ok with a high roast level.  From there varying brewing approach could adjust intensity, and could shift experienced aspects some, but it's going to be smoky and intense.

Well-roasted green tea is unusual, isn't it?  Then it's back to whether a type being novel is ok or not.  It is if you think it is, if you like the aspects and character.  Aging it a year or two would probably tone down that smoky intensity some, and from there pairing with food or even adding milk would also work, as discussed in the review.  Just dropping infusion proportion would help, the amount of tea used in relation to water.  Or drinking a smoky, intense tea could be nice, if someone's preferences align with that.


Thursday, October 22, 2015

Wu Dong Dan Cong, a Phoenix mountains oolong

The tea:


one of the shop owners

I picked up a Wu Dong Dan Cong oolong at the Jip Eu shop in Chinatown on a second visit there, the place I was raving about related to finding good Wuyi Yanchas.  I spent an hour tasting different teas and talking with the owners during this last visit.  It was really a shame it wasn't half a day.  Talking to them was like skimming through a reference book on tea, and they were so nice.


The label for the tea was almost entirely in Chinese, with the main title translated as "Wu Dong Dan Cong." Of course this a location reference for the name of an area in the Phoenix mountains and a regional oolong tea type.


40 year old longjing; good luck finding that








This is not to be confused with the Wu Dang kung fu fighting style, although that's probably also interesting.


kung fu!  credit china.org.cn
















Review part:



beautiful, but you really should smell this

Floral!  With fruit!  The tea is like a mixed bouquet of flowers distilled into a teacup, with a bit of light citrus, sweet peach, and honey for a base.  A mild vegetal taste and light astringency even matches the flower stems part.  The fruit component even tasted a bit like banana, and after thinking about it some of the flavor that seemed floral came across more as banana; funny how that can work out.


The sweet floral profile was so rich it might be possible to list out different flowers showing up in it, but I'm not the best person for that.  Maybe some type of orchid for that bright sweetness with something like chrysanthemom filling in a softer floral base, but really that's probably not even close.


The tea brewed lots of infusions, relatively consistently, although I did wonder if the proportion of different floral elements was changing and I wasn't picking up on it.  The astringency and vegetal component picked up a little after many but basically the tea stayed consistent.



The astringency was presented a little differently than I remember experiencing before.  I just wrote about an Oriental Beauty, where that astringency came across as a light dryness, resembling that in a black tea, just milder, with a different feel.  But this was nothing like that.  It was closest to some types of green teas, or maybe reminiscent of Darjeeling, with the degree being comparable but not the type.  It was interesting the way that bit of astringency integrated with other flavor components; it made sense together.



leaves!


The tea was a relatively direct contrast to the Wuyi Yancha types I've tried a lot of this year:   soft, rich, earthy teas that emphasize mineral components over floral aspects, with very limited astringency.  Better versions are quite aromatic but across a very different taste profile range, definitely not so floral and sweet.


I feel like I was too overwhelmed to really do a taste-by-taste description justice.  Some of that dazzling sweetness seemed to relate to fruit components rather than flowers, bright citrus, peach, even banana but I was a bit star-struck to really sort it all out.  After tasting a lot of teas from one type it becomes clearer how other aspects relate to different presentations of the tea type, how aftertaste and feel factor in, but this was a bit new to me.


Research:


At first it seemed the name wasn't complete enough, just a location name and general type, but then naming conventions do vary.  In some cases they are based on plant types and locations; other times more details apply.  Research should turn up a bit more, maybe even about this specific tea.


This long reference article by Hojo Tea covers a lot of scope, about the general type, typical aspects and how better versions differ, the region, cultivars, preparation methods, how to brew the tea.  Actually one might do well to skip reading the rest of this post and just read that instead.  I'll cite a few key points here and move on to what other references cover beyond that.


Tea type:  they say the better versions are from Wu Dong mountain, and claim that most are varieties of Shui Xian, a plant type common to the Wuyi growing areas, but quite different versions even though there is some relation.  As in discussion of those types, they mention the most specific plant types vary a lot:

Due to a few hundred years of cultivation, the cultivar of Phoenix tea trees have undergone years of natural hybridization or mutation, where such biological changes brought diversify to the flavors of respective trees. Tea leaves plucked from different trees will produce different flavors, even if the processing methods or techniques were the same. The name of various Phoenix Dan Cong oolongs was given based on the flavor of tea leaves produced from its original tree. 


Citation editing note:  I had to take the "u" out of flavour.  They must have their regional dialect version set wrong.

There's a lot of such interesting background in that article, of course covering such subjects as old tea trees and tea processing steps, but the most relevant points related to the flavor of the tea:

If you try the authentic Phoenix dan cong oolong, I am certain that you will be shocked by the overwhelming extent of fruitiness. 


I was shocked.  It really was a unique experience, that tea.  The astringency was also a bit unusual, relating to a comment there:

... if the tea is plucked during early spring, it should not be bitter. Generally, the tea harvested during the late spring, summer or autumn, produces bitter and astringent taste, and it leaves a very unpleasant feeling on the tongue. 


I wouldn't describe the astringency as bitterness, or as an unpleasant feeling on the tongue, but it was a bit different than almost all other oolongs, which are typically very soft.  One online tea friend remarked that he would even crave this aspect in the tea, not just accepting it as a companion to the floral and fruity sweetness but regarding it as a positive aspect.  I'll have to keep drinking it and see.  

Echoing a completely separate but related discussion of aging Wuyi Yanchas this article claims that in some cases aging can affect the tea positively (but I won't go on about that; lots else to cover).  All the parts on tea processing are also too much to go into but definitely worth a read too.


I found a secondary blog source that goes into lots of detail about the type, but it's all really too much to treat fairly here, so I'll just cite that reference.  Suffice it to say it delves a bit deeper, with interesting points related to narrowing the scope of tea characteristics down from tea producing region, tea plant type, and estate / grower to teas varying as they come from specific tea trees:



And a bit on brewing advice:



Dan Cong names:



One more subject I didn't get to (one of several parts of the story, really) is differing names for Dan Cong teas.  One part of which relates to naming variations after characteristic tastes and scents.  The Tea Obsession blog goes into the standard names used related to specific fragrances:


Top 10 fragrance DCs were registered then, namely:

Yu Lan Xiang - magnolia flower fragrance 玉蘭香
Huang Zhi Xiang - orange flower fragrance 黄枝香
Xing Ren Xiang - Almond flavor 杏仁香
Zhi Lan Xiang - Orchid fragrance 芝蘭香
Mi4 Lan Xiang - Honey Orchid fragrance 蜜蘭香
Gui Hua Xiang - Osmanthus fragrance 桂花香
You Hua Xiang - Pomelo/grapefruit flower fragrance 柚花香
Jiang Hua Xiang - Ginger flower fragrance 姜花香
Rou Gui Xiang - Cinnamon flavor (not the same as Wuyi Rou Gui) 肉桂香
Mi3 Lan Xiang - Milan flower fragrance 米蘭香 - tinny grain size yellow flowering plant from the southern provinces of China)


It's interesting to note the complexity of this tea I tried could be an indication of a lower grade than those types, with that distinctiveness further emphasized when the tea is coming from a single tea tree source.


Of course the type that gets the most press lately goes by the unusual name "duck shit" Dan Cong (Ya Shi Xiang Dan Cong--not as catchy, at least to an English speaker).  One part of that is Forbes publishing an article on it, where it's described as a relatively mainstream trend (which of course is all relative; only widespread within a narrow scope).  Oddly the only description of the tea itself in that article says that it "doesn’t truly smell or taste like duck waste."  Good!  But not descriptive.

There is a nice Steep Stories review of one version of this tea here, and a Yunnan Sourcing vendor blog explanation of the name here (although there often tend to be multiple explanations for such things):


It's called "duck shit aroma" because in the Ping Keng Tou village area the soil has a somewhat yellow brown look to it and is unique to that area....  Villagers wanting to guard the uniqueness of their tea bushes told outsiders that the color and uniqueness of the soil in their village was due to copious amounts of duck shit...


According to the tea vendor source for the Steep Stories blog review cited here (White 2 Tea, which I see referenced more often for pu'er sourcing), about that tea:

the actual fragrance is floral in nature and the tea has a lasting sweetness in the mouth.


More on that type later then.