I’m so far on the backlog….

Since I’ve been teaching so much on the computer, I’ve been trying to take breaks from technology. Now that I have a moment of respite, I wanted to get back some reviews of some of the teas I’ve hoarded from whiteantlers.

There’s one black tea that I’ve deeply enjoyed, but don’t know quite what it is. It’s only got Mandarin on the package, but if I were to guess, I think it’s either a Tongmu/Wuyi or Tie Guan Yin type black since the leaves are smoothened out with few to little gold tips and a longhan aroma, or it could be Taiwanese because it’s sickeningly sweet and fruity. I have had fruity Chinese and Fujians for sure, but they are usually limited to apricot, citrus, berry and cherry for blacks while the flavor is usually more savory. Taiwanese blacks in my experience are thicker and fruitier, especially leaning into more tropical and stonefruits.

Going into this tea, it’s a sugar bomb-I’ve questioned whether or not it’s been roasted with sugarcane because it’s that immense. Lychee, Longhan, Chocolate, Cherries, Brown Sugar, and Light Malt is what I get, but then it dies off after steep three western, and five if I really take the time to gong fu it. There were times were I’ve wondered if the tea has raised my bloodsugar because of how sweet it is.

I don’t know how else to describe it in terms of notes, but it’s one of those teas that I want to drink all the time, but I get overpowered by cloy if I do. I LOVE it, because it does have some depth and layers underneath all the sugariness, but it pack a punch. Whiteantlers, you might be able to define it?

Anyway, it’s one of the teas that I’ve drank the most so far. I’ve been occasionally trying my new teas if its a sample, but I’ve mostly drank Hugo’s Jasmine Green, What-Cha’s Li-Shan Black, Hugo’s Earl Grey, What-Cha’s Amber Gaba Oolong (SO SMOOTH), Unytea’s Jasmine Black, and Whispering Pines’s Imperial North Winds…which I’ll add today for notes. The rest I’ve already added from what I’ve listed-go check them out!

Selfish side note-Heavily missing my lack of Alice…

White Antlers

Hey Daylon sorry-have no idea what that one was. When I was packing your tea box, I tried to put in as many oolongs as were fit to drink, then just some random things that would fit in as filler. I don’t even remember a packet with ‘Mandarin’ written on it…

Cameron B.

Aww it sounds amazing, I would love to know what tea it was!

Mastress Alita

Oh man, this sounds so good!

Lexie Aleah

Agreed! I wish I knew what it was as well.

Leafhopper

Yes! I also wish I knew what that tea was. Sounds like something I’d want to pick up. Sadly, What-Cha’s Li Shan Black was out of stock when I tried to buy it, and I hope it comes back next year. I want fruity black teas!

derk

Are the leaves all whole and needle-like? Twisted, shiny and hard? I had a big envelope of mystery tea from White Antlers with characters that looked Mandarin. I remember one of my first thoughts was “this smells like it was pan-fried in sugar.” Haven’t brewed it yet, though.

Daylon R Thomas

YES! That’s the one

Daylon R Thomas

I could be wrong in that they are Japanese characters-it’s hard to tell since it’s using calligraphy. Now how to use a translater app on my phone…And yes, derk. The are black, twisted, and pretty shiny. Some have small gold tips, but very few. And man, does it smell like pan fried rock sugar.

Mastress Alita

If anyone can get a good, CLEAR picture of the characters, I may be able to translate.

Daylon R Thomas

How do you post pictures on here? I’ve tried copying an pasting mine, but it would not let me. I’ll forward you a message with it.

Daylon R Thomas

Crap. It won’t let me do that either. I’ll just have to add a note with it’s picture.

Mastress Alita

Post a link to where the picture is uploaded?

Mastress Alita

Hmm… I do manga scanlation in my free time, but admittedly am used to dealing with type-printed text over hand-written/stylized which makes it harder for me to pick out some of the kanji. Will try to call in some phone-a-friends and see if any of them can fill in the ones I’m still blank on.

Daylon R Thomas

So the calligraphy is Japanese then? Thank you for taking all this time and effort for a simple translation. Let me know if you need me to take another picture.

Daylon R Thomas

(Although I know Kanji is Japanese use of Chinese based characters, too)

derk

That’s the tea, Daylon. Martin Bednar might have the original packet in his possession unless I had sent it to somebody else.

White Antlers

I wonder if that came from Bitterleaf…

Mastress Alita

It’s Chinese. Japanese imported a good deal of Chinese characters into their language (as well as having their own characters as a phonetic system). I have my ways of dealing with them when I’m transcribing manga… but then, I’m usually dealing with typesetting, and not hand-scrawled calligraphy which is a whole different beast, ha!

Mastress Alita

Well, the consensus seems to be that the large text is 純手工制作 … but from what I can see that doesn’t appear to be the tea’s actual name, but “handmade” or “handcrafted.” And the smaller text is just a bit too small in the picture to try to make out.

Daylon R Thomas

Thank you. Is it bitterleaf’s sugar glider, maybe?

White Antlers

Daylon I believe so.

Daylon R Thomas

I looked at the package. The description is close, but it’s more decorated. It does taste like a Bitterleaf tea, though. I do have the Ya-Shi I’ve been saving from you. I’ve held back on the fruity Dancong oolongs lately. I’m not sure what it is, but they tend to slam me with a different punch of energy. I used to crave the sweetness, and I still like sweeter teas, but the ripeness of it all….intense.

White Antlers

I think our tastes, and not just in tea, change with the seasons and where we are at particular times in life.

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White Antlers

Hey Daylon sorry-have no idea what that one was. When I was packing your tea box, I tried to put in as many oolongs as were fit to drink, then just some random things that would fit in as filler. I don’t even remember a packet with ‘Mandarin’ written on it…

Cameron B.

Aww it sounds amazing, I would love to know what tea it was!

Mastress Alita

Oh man, this sounds so good!

Lexie Aleah

Agreed! I wish I knew what it was as well.

Leafhopper

Yes! I also wish I knew what that tea was. Sounds like something I’d want to pick up. Sadly, What-Cha’s Li Shan Black was out of stock when I tried to buy it, and I hope it comes back next year. I want fruity black teas!

derk

Are the leaves all whole and needle-like? Twisted, shiny and hard? I had a big envelope of mystery tea from White Antlers with characters that looked Mandarin. I remember one of my first thoughts was “this smells like it was pan-fried in sugar.” Haven’t brewed it yet, though.

Daylon R Thomas

YES! That’s the one

Daylon R Thomas

I could be wrong in that they are Japanese characters-it’s hard to tell since it’s using calligraphy. Now how to use a translater app on my phone…And yes, derk. The are black, twisted, and pretty shiny. Some have small gold tips, but very few. And man, does it smell like pan fried rock sugar.

Mastress Alita

If anyone can get a good, CLEAR picture of the characters, I may be able to translate.

Daylon R Thomas

How do you post pictures on here? I’ve tried copying an pasting mine, but it would not let me. I’ll forward you a message with it.

Daylon R Thomas

Crap. It won’t let me do that either. I’ll just have to add a note with it’s picture.

Mastress Alita

Post a link to where the picture is uploaded?

Mastress Alita

Hmm… I do manga scanlation in my free time, but admittedly am used to dealing with type-printed text over hand-written/stylized which makes it harder for me to pick out some of the kanji. Will try to call in some phone-a-friends and see if any of them can fill in the ones I’m still blank on.

Daylon R Thomas

So the calligraphy is Japanese then? Thank you for taking all this time and effort for a simple translation. Let me know if you need me to take another picture.

Daylon R Thomas

(Although I know Kanji is Japanese use of Chinese based characters, too)

derk

That’s the tea, Daylon. Martin Bednar might have the original packet in his possession unless I had sent it to somebody else.

White Antlers

I wonder if that came from Bitterleaf…

Mastress Alita

It’s Chinese. Japanese imported a good deal of Chinese characters into their language (as well as having their own characters as a phonetic system). I have my ways of dealing with them when I’m transcribing manga… but then, I’m usually dealing with typesetting, and not hand-scrawled calligraphy which is a whole different beast, ha!

Mastress Alita

Well, the consensus seems to be that the large text is 純手工制作 … but from what I can see that doesn’t appear to be the tea’s actual name, but “handmade” or “handcrafted.” And the smaller text is just a bit too small in the picture to try to make out.

Daylon R Thomas

Thank you. Is it bitterleaf’s sugar glider, maybe?

White Antlers

Daylon I believe so.

Daylon R Thomas

I looked at the package. The description is close, but it’s more decorated. It does taste like a Bitterleaf tea, though. I do have the Ya-Shi I’ve been saving from you. I’ve held back on the fruity Dancong oolongs lately. I’m not sure what it is, but they tend to slam me with a different punch of energy. I used to crave the sweetness, and I still like sweeter teas, but the ripeness of it all….intense.

White Antlers

I think our tastes, and not just in tea, change with the seasons and where we are at particular times in life.

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First Off, Current Targets:

Whispering Pines Alice
Good Luxurious Work Teas
Wang Family’s Jasmine Shanlinxi
Spring, Winter Taiwan High Mountain Oolongs

Dislikes: Heavy Tannin, Astringency, Bitterness, or Fake Flavor, Overly herby herbal or aged teas

Picky with: Higher Oxidation Oolongs, Red Oolongs (Some I love, others give me headaches or are almost too sweet), Mint Teas

Currently, my stash is overflowing. Among my favorites are What-Cha’s Lishan Black, Amber Gaba Oolong, Lishan Oolong, Qilan Oolong, White Rhino, Kenya Silver Needle, Tong Mu Lapsang Black (Unsmoked); Whispering Pines Alice, Taiwanese Assam, Wang’s Shanlinxi, Cuifeng, Dayuling, Jasmine Shan Lin Xi; Beautiful Taiwan Tea Co.“Old Style” Dong Ding, Mandala Milk Oolong; Paru’s Milk Oolong

Me:

I am an MSU graduate, and current alternative ed. high school social studies and history teacher. I formerly minored in anthropology, and I love Egyptian and classical history. I love to read, write, draw, paint, sculpt, fence(with a sword), practice calisthenics on rings, lift weights, workout, relax, and drink a cuppa tea…or twenty.

I’ve been drinking green and black teas ever since I was little living in Hawaii. Eastern Asian influence was prominent with my friends and where I grew up, so I’ve been exposed to some tea culture at a young age. I’ve come a long way since I began on steepster and now drink most teas gong fu, especially oolong. Any tea that is naturally creamy, fruity, or sweet without a lot of added flavoring ranks as a must have for me. I also love black teas and dark oolongs with the elusive “cocoa” note. My favorites are lighter Earl Greys, some white teas like What-Cha’s Kenyan offerings, most Hong-Cha’s, darker Darjeelings, almost anything from Nepal, Green Shan Lin Xi’s, and Greener Dong Dings. I’m in the process of trying Alishan’s. I also tend to really enjoy Yunnan Black or Red teas and white teas. I’m pickier with other teas like chamomile, green teas, and Masalas among several.

I used to give ratings, but now I only rate teas that have a strong impression on me. If I really like it, I’ll write it down.

I’ll enjoy a tea almost no matter what, even if the purpose is more medicinal, for it is my truest vice and addiction.

Location

Michigan, USA

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