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Mt Alee Taiwan Oolong Spring Tea from Lupicia

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80/100

Mt Alee Taiwan Oolong Spring Tea

Oolong Tea by Lupicia

This famous spring-picked, high mountain oolong from Taiwan boasts a full-bodied taste, delicately roasted aroma, and a sweet, dewy flavour. You’ll be sure to enjoy its crisp taste.

5 Tasting Notes

Luthien
97
Luthien 5 tasting notes

I’m so incredibly tired right now – jetlag has turned all my sleeping patterns inside out and upside down – but I’ve been trying to properly test-drive and review this tea for almost two days now, so here goes.

This is an excellent oolong, which is pretty much a given just from the name. There is such a lot to this tea that it’s really hard to do it justice in a description. I’m not completely sure of everything that’s going on in the taste, but it’s definitely complex. It’s got the sort of silky/full/floral sort of taste that you’d expect, and yet it’s not quite like any other Taiwan oolong I’ve tried, either. It’s not quite as milky/buttery as some others I’ve had, plus there’s also a thread of astringency in it that really keeps things interesting, and helps to make this tea both sharp and smooth at the same time. Be careful, though. This tea is very, very sensitive to steeping time. Steep it even 20-30 seconds too long and that edge of astringency will turn into a full-on bitterness that will ruin your cup of tea. I know this because I did it yesterday with the second steeping of my first attempt with this tea.

Each steeping has a very definite character of its own. The second is probably the best – assuming that you don’t accidentally sabotage it – but I’m just finishing the fourth right now, and it still has plenty of body even though the floral notes have faded a bit at this point.

I was in the mood for a good, unflavoured tea this evening. I don’t have a lot of this left, and I can’t really justify the cost on a regular basis, but it called to me…

There’s not really much to say about this tea that I haven’t said before. I love a good Taiwan oolong more than any other type of tea, and this is one of the very best I’ve tried. It’s not quite as silky as teas.com.au’s Gin Shan Creme oolong, but it has a really distinctive character of its own, with just enough astringency running through it, and draws your attention with every sip. It’s not just a tea that should be savoured; it demands that you savour it.

I was in the mood to finish off the day with an oolong, and there was just a little bit of this one left, so it got the nod.

I think the alishan from teas.com.au might just pip this one at the post, but it’s still a bloody good cup of tea. I like the contradiction of the smoothness of the second steeping partnered with the hint of astringency lurking at the edges of this tea.

Still insanely busy. I seem to be staying up all night tonight, so going with the really good stuff.

Just finishing off the last of this. It’s a bit more astringent than I like, because I vagued out when it was steeping and forgot to set the timer – steeping time given below is a total estimate! – but it’s still pretty damned good. I can’t really justify buying more right at the moment, but I’m really tempted!

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