Lapsang Souchong

Tea type
Black Tea
Ingredients
Black Tea
Flavors
Malt, Pine
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
High
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by TeaNecromancer
Average preparation
Boiling 4 min, 45 sec 8 oz / 236 ml

Currently unavailable

We don't know when or if this item will be available.

From Our Community

1 Image

0 Want it Want it

0 Own it Own it

2 Tasting Notes View all

From Phoenix Herb Company

Lapsang souchong is a tea which has been withered over pine or cedar fires, pan-fried, rolled and oxidized before being fully dried in bamboo baskets over burning pine. The result is a smoky, earthy brew with a dominant scent and flavor of campfires, which overlies the flavor of the black tea itself.

About Phoenix Herb Company View company

Company description not available.

2 Tasting Notes

1705 tasting notes

After trying Shang’s Tangerine Blossom, I got hooked and had to go on a search for it and some Lapsang Souchong. Typing it up on the Google, the Tangerine Blossom showed up on their website, they were in the same city as Shang, and the tea had the exact description. This company had all the teas I was looking for and for slightly cheaper than Shang, so I decided to get a lot.

This one was balanced Lapsang. Smokey and thick like tree sap and pine resin, but sweet enough to stand on its own. Very easy to drink, but powerful. Just what I was looking for. Now to tuck in the little staple to the side.

Evol Ving Ness

Smart cookie.

Evol Ving Ness

Also, since when have you been into Lapsangs?

Hoálatha

I tried a sample of their unsmoked in Seattle and got myself a couple of ounces. It was really nice!

Daylon R Thomas

Evol, hawkband1 and I swapped samples and the Lapsang she gave me was good which got me to start drinking them. My first lapsang just tasted like burnt old tea leaves and I did not like it. Once I found some that had the pine resin/tree sap taste going on, I got hooked ‘cause I need more fire in my life. The unsmoked Lapsang from What-Cha was also really good. I’ve noticed that the unsmoked ones tend to be on the cocoa side of sweet as far as Fujian teas go.

Evol Ving Ness

Good to know. Thanks, Daylon.

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

89
921 tasting notes

I sadly do not have anything really interesting or important to open today’s post with. My sleep schedule is all wonky, so I woke up late in the afternoon, I played Minecraft (working on a Creeper Argonath) and played some Soul Calibur V with Ben. My breakfast was cornbread stuffing and a Matcha latte, so yeah, nothing too exciting today.

Today’s tea is Lapsang Souchong from local tea and herb shop, Phoenix Herb Company. Lapsang Souchong is a fun tea, it originated as low quality tea that was sent to those outside of China since apparently smoking a tea over pine fire makes it a lot easier to transport (less apt to rotting on the Tea Horse Road). Nowadays we can get the fancy stuff that was originally reserved for tribute, but we still love our smoked teas. The aroma is extremely smoky, it is like sticking your face in a pine wood campfire or running away from a forest fire. There is no subtlety at all in the empyreumatic (smoky) aroma of this tea, but there is more to it than just smoke. Once you waft off the clouds of smoke you can pick up a faintly sweet malty quality and a hint of pine resin.

The brewed tea is not like sniffing a forest fire any longer, the smokiness is significantly more subtle and joined with malt and molasses sweetness. The aromas blend together quite nicely and the tinge of sweetness is tantalizing. The liquid has the aroma of campfire and also pine sap with a hint of rich malt.

Fun side note, when I first started drinking primarily loose leaf tea, Lapsang Souchong was one of the ones I drank the most. The taste of this particular Lapsang Souchong is quite pine heavy, both in pine smoke and pine sap. There is also a rich malt quality similar to an Assam, there is mildly astringent finish that gives the mellow and rich smokiness an extra zing at the end. I recommend this tea, so much so that whenever there is a family gathering and I do not feel like offering a tea menu, this is the tea I serve everyone. It is safe to say I end up brewing several pots and give lots of refills.

For photos and blog: http://ramblingbutterflythoughts.blogspot.com/2014/03/phoenix-herb-company-lapsang-souchong.html

Flavors: Malt, Pine

Preparation
Boiling 4 min, 45 sec 1 tsp 8 OZ / 236 ML
Stephanie

I love Soul Calibur! :D I have been thinking about Lapsang Souchong lately because my husband found a smoked tofu recipe that uses Lapsang in it…we’re definitely going to have to try making it some day!

TeaNecromancer

Ooooh that sounds delicious!!

Login or sign up to leave a comment.