I visited my favorite tea shop to pick up some tea before I travel back to Hawaii, that CNNP cake I reviewed not long ago (a 2007 8281 Mengku origin sheng pu'er), and to get a bit of tea to give to monks I know on the way out of town.
While there the owner let me try some exceptional Mi Lan Xiang Dan Cong (Chaozhou, Guangdong origin oolong, of course). It was presented as from a single tea plant, which is possible, but you kind of never really know. The quality was really high; it was at least one of the best Dan Cong versions I've ever tried, and maybe the best. There wasn't that much room for improvement, only style difference.
The pricing was eye-watering: 500 baht or $15 for 7 grams, so it's pretty much $2 / gram tea. Too much, for an ordinary experience. But I suppose people might see it as a unique experience they wouldn't get around to repeating, that "once in a lifetime" kind of theme. I don't even consider such things; my tastes and appreciation are fine with drinking ordinary teas. And I'm adapted to Bangkok pricing ranges, where you can eat a meal for a lot less than $15, or eat and also travel around all day.
To start we discussed processing, relative degree of oxidation and roast. Kittichai, the owner, said that it wasn't in the modern very lightly oxidized and roasted form, that it was more in a medium range (for both), so a step towards a more traditional, older form. Really whatever works best for that tea material is best, along with personal preference determining that. It worked out.
The scent of the tea was incredibly sweet and floral, or maybe floral and fruity, but very fragrant either way. It didn't really come to life until he put it in a warmed gaiwan, then it did, even dry. He was using 4 grams in an 70 ml or so gaiwan (not that I can assess volume like that). Probably the infusions were even smaller, with the top that you don't fill and the tea taking up space.
It was bright, fresh, fragrant, and intense right away. The taste was as fruity as floral, even though that type (Mi Lan Xiang) is described as honey orchid, and it's usually more floral than fruity. It tasted like fresh lychee, the other owner claimed, and that was a good match, even if the power of suggestion may have helped cinch that judgement.
From there it intensified over a few rounds, really turning it up around the 4th infusion. Sweetness was off the scale, astringency fairly moderate, although there was some, and flavor intensity was crazy. It was really clean, with great aftertaste expression, and positive mouthfeel. Good enough to justify the $2 / gram value? Who knows. It was roughly as good as Dan Cong probably gets, although I suppose someone who has been exploring the high end of that range for awhile could judge better.
It didn't transition that much until around 9 rounds in, and then a little astringency started to pick up, which one might interpret as tasting like bitterness, even though the two things aren't the same at all. It wasn't really pronounced until about the 10th infusion, and we let off around then, or maybe at 11 or 12.
Flavor complexity was so intense that you were just being blasted by floral and fruit range, so it might've been hard to do the normal round by round description of shifts. If the relative balance of all that was there kept changing I didn't keep track. It was definitely clean, sweet, intense, balanced, and complex.
I didn't mention the color; it started out with a pinkish sort of color, then I think it transitioned to a more typical light golden amber oolong range. I'm not sure what that's about, the extra touch of pink, or if it signifies anything.
Packaging was definitely a bit much; it came in tiny aluminum canisters, like weed might be sold in, if there is such a thing as elaborately high end versions of that. Then that was in a custom case. This isn't so unusual for Chinese teas, presented as exceptional; they can go a little overboard. I suppose status would be part of the appeal, drinking what is expensive, refined, and rare, and the packaging helps support that.
Things are just different in China too. One might expect lots of things to be rougher edged or more basic, somehow, but there's a broad higher end range of lots of types of experience or aesthetic context that's more the opposite. Not that I've ever really been living the high life in China; I've visited that country three times, but as a value-oriented tourist (twice), and on a work trip once. That almost leads into telling a story or two, doesn't it? I probably shouldn't, but let's.
I went to China on business a long time ago now, maybe just over 15 years, so what I relate might be dated. I'll skip the parts about the work context; it was somewhat IT related, since that's the field I work in, and from there it doesn't matter. I was introduced to better tea in a Gong Fu ceremonial brewing demonstration at the company we visited (probably the one company you might think of).
They were pretty good about not making it seem like tall, beautiful women were the norm in that country, even though they were that as hosts, and extending that not to make lots of claims about the tea brewing, hyping ancient traditional forms as being something they're generally not. People might make wishes when they pour tea over tea pets; a fairly basic idea like that comes up. Maybe that frog relates to money (it is holding a coin), and another to success with family, so it would be a good place / context for asking for a next child.
Chinese people love to make wishes, as Thais do. My wife loves to visit Hong Kong temples and go through all of that, or there are lots of Chinese temples in Thailand too. We just happened to be walking into a local Chinese temple in Korat, Thailand, when we had just picked up Myra, our cat (then a kitten), back in 2021, so I took her in there and asked the multitude of Chinese gods to keep an eye on her. So far so good.
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some people might recognize this old Shenzhen mall space |
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Hong Kong; a temple, of course |
Apparently drinking alcohol plays a role in business connections. That's probably the last time I've been good and drunk. The next time we met with another Chinese company I kept it bit more reeled in; it matches an expectation to go there, but it's really a bit much for me, as a non-drinker (now even more so, but mostly that back then too).
Enough stories. Later I bought some tea in a shop, waiting for others to buy other things, and that started my next level of tea exploration. But it was all normal enough.
Back to this tea, it was amazing. Others would probably appreciate it a lot more than I did. Earlier on in my exploration of teas I was really into broadening my horizons, and trying out exceptional range, and now I'm fine with just drinking good tea, and by that I mean anything with character and aspects one can appreciate. That's most teas; they just offer different experiences. Maybe the low end grocery store versions aren't like that, and other ranges that are comparable, but so, so much of tea range is interesting and pleasant, or at least just pleasant.
But it was nice having a unique experience. I ran through a tasting set of pretty decent Dan Cong from ITea World a year or so ago (more now?), and it was nice trying the other types. Mi Lan Xiang and Ya Shi / duck shit get most of the attention in "the West." And they're often quite pleasant, so I suppose that they should, but others are also interesting. I tried a number of them from Cindy, of Wuyi Origin, and that's a good source for exploring pretty far up the quality scale, at pricing that's quite fair for what they sell, even approaching $1 / gram.
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Cindy! |
Being more into sheng pu'er I don't even buy that much oolong now, of any kind. Eventually I'll probably cycle back through a long exploration and experience phase again, but who knows how long that will take. Good black tea is more my fallback, most often Dian Hong. By good I don't mean searching out the high end, best of the best, I mean basic and pleasant. And if good comparable forms are from Thailand and Vietnam I'll drink that instead, so I suppose calling that Dian Hong style tea is more accurate (DH adjacent?).
This shop sells pretty decent, upper medium quality tin packaged Dan Cong, at a much lower price point range. That's more what I'd drink, but I only buy it there to give away to monks, to save my tea budget for the next sheng cake, or maybe black tea.
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that tea I just bought, and already reviewed earlier, 2007, so perfect for getting to now |










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