Leafhopper said

What are your favourite green oolongs?

After LuckyMe’s post about Western-facing vendors sometimes not vacuum sealing their green oolongs, I was curious:

1. Do green oolong lovers usually skip Western vendors of oolongs altogether and buy overseas? (I can’t believe places like Red Blossom, which sells their Li Shan at over $50/50 g, wouldn’t vacuum seal their packages!)

2. What are your top five sellers of Taiwanese and Anxi jade oolongs? (It wouldn’t hurt if they sold other Taiwanese teas as well!)

3. If money were no object, what oolong would you splurge on?

4. What is the best oolong you’ve tasted in 2017 so far?

2. My top five gaoshan connections are:
Taiwan Sourcing
Taiwan Tea Crafts
Eco-Cha
Camellia Sinensis (They don’t vacuum seal their bags, but nothing has been stale)
Yunnan Sourcing for Anxi oolongs.

3. I’m thinking about splurging on (sometime way, way in the future):
HOJO’s Taiwanese offerings
Tea Masters

4. The knockout so far this year has been the Eco-Cha Tea Club’s Mi Xiang Oolong, which they sent out in December. YS’s Spring Potion has come pretty close.

Sorry for the long post, and I’d love to hear your suggestions!

13 Replies
pmunney said

tea-masters.com all the way, you can’t go wrong with any of Stephane’s teas.

Leafhopper said

Good to know. His high-mountain offerings are always slightly higher than the competition, so I’m glad to hear that they’re worth it.

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LuckyMe said

I’ll buy from certain Western retailers that specialize in Taiwanese or single origin teas. But large tea companies like Adagio and Rishi don’t offer anything notable and are overpriced to boot.

Honestly I’ve been a little disappointed with the jade oolongs I’ve tried so far this year. The 2015 winter and 2016 spring harvest were outstanding, but with a couple exceptions none of the high mountain oolongs so far have blown me away. What-Cha’s Li Shan was the best this year so far. However it wasn’t as fresh the second time I ordered it and I suspect packaging was the reason why.

The packaging of green oolongs is a real problem even with vendors who should know better. Last year I bought 2 oz of Alishan from TeaRen in Chinatown SF, a well known Taiwanese tea company. To my surprise their teas were sitting in half empty glass canisters frequently exposed to light and air. After one or two sessions, I chucked the entire pouch because it was horribly stale. Beautiful Taiwan Tea Company is probably the best western Taiwanese tea vendor out there. I’ve bought some truly mindblowing teas from them. But despite the high quality of their teas, I’ve sometimes received tea in zipper pouches (usually samples) or otherwise poorly sealed and the quality really suffers.

One reason Taiwan Tea Crafts has become my vendor of choice for jade oolongs is how well their teas are packaged. Every tea whether roasted or unroasted, 10g or 250g is properly vacuum sealed with an oxygen absorber. I’ve bought old teas from them that tasted just as good as the ones from recent harvests.

On a related note, I’ve observed the same phenomenon with Japanese tea. The best Japanese green teas I’ve had came vacuum sealed. The ones in zipper pouches are often lackluster.

Leafhopper said

This is kind of why I don’t want to buy from BTTC, because I suspect them of putting tea in Ziploc bags. Not to mention to premium to ship to Canada.

Pan said

@leafhopper bttc vacuum seals all of their ball rolled stuff and their black teas, the ones that they don’t vacuum seal are because they would break the leaves white tea and such. I don’t know what their storage is in the warehouse though. That being said, everything I’ve had from them has been really good.

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tperez said

I’m not the biggest drinker of jade oolongs, but I find MountainTea.com’s Taiwan oolongs to be good and very reasonably priced. They’re not top quality, but are great daily drinkers.

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Floating Leaves Tea is top of my list. They are also local for me, but they’ve systematically ruined me for other taiwanese teas.

This season’s Baozhong is KILLER good. Shell out for competition style. I had various farmers at WTE and they all said this is the year for Baozhong if you prefer green oolong.

LuckyMe said

Interesting, that was my experience with baozhong this year too. TTC’s gao shans were mostly meh, but their competition bao zhong was crazy good.

pmunney said

I also agree on this years baozhong harvest. Haven’t tried Floating leaves tea – but i’m moving to Seattle in two weeks so I’m sure i’ll be changing that soon!

We got a hopping tea community here @pmunney. Check out the chatroom sticky topic and join us.

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MrQuackers said

The packaging could definitely be one reason. Another reason might be proper storage conditions. Keeping the teas in the cold storage from picking to delivery date.

I don’t have problems to mention with Japanese tea. All my orders have been either in vaccuum sealed tins or bags (which are resealable only after opening). Alternatively, they have one time use paper/foil that you cut open and then place in your own tin. Dealing with reputable companies helps.

Ironically, I’m drinking tea that has been aged (ie to the air) for 1 1/2 years and it’s great!

LuckyMe said

Yep cold storage is another factor. Asian vendors store perishable teas at near freezing temperatures which is why a spring green tea tastes good months after harvest.

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Leafhopper said

Thanks for all the suggestions! I’ll have to take your advice and try some of this year’s baozhong, although I generally haven’t had great experiences with it in the past.

And yes, I totally forgot about Floating Leaves. I had their high mountain oolong sampler last year and it was excellent.

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