Ancient Snow Shan Red Oolong

Tea type
Oolong Tea
Ingredients
Oolong Tea Leaves
Flavors
Almond, Bright, Citrus Fruits, Citrusy, Clean, Cocoa, Coconut Husk, Dark Chocolate, Earthy, Floral, Geosmin, Leather, Mineral, Osmanthus, Red Fruits, Silky, Smoke, Smooth, Sweet, Tangy, Tobacco, Wet Rocks
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Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Martin Bednář
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 1 min, 0 sec 5 g 4 oz / 118 ml

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2 Tasting Notes View all

  • “If Vietnamese red teas are too strong and rustic for you, consider this oolong. It has a very similar taste profile without the harsh stomach. A beautiful tea, silky smooth with strong wet rock...” Read full tasting note
    93
  • “First of 7 teas from SiamTeas Clubbox January ’23 – Tuyet Shan I vaguely remember having some Shan Tuyet — Red Buffalo oolong, but also some other Vietnamese teas. But it seems it was pre-Steepster...” Read full tasting note
    92

From Siam Tee Shop

The Wuyi-style multi-roasted, medium-oxidized oolong tea comes from leaves of over 100 years old “Tuyet Shan” tea trees thriving in their natural forest environment in the northern Vietnamese province of Ha Giang. The delicately spicy and intensely sweet fragrance of the dry tea leaf reflects in the complex taste profile of the crystal-clear transparent, bright red infusion in a composition of ripe fruits, aromatic woods and spicy roasted notes.

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2 Tasting Notes

93
1548 tasting notes

If Vietnamese red teas are too strong and rustic for you, consider this oolong. It has a very similar taste profile without the harsh stomach. A beautiful tea, silky smooth with strong wet rock minerality and a slight rasp on the tongue. Alluring character that evokes damp smoke and tobacco notes weaving through a pristine high mountain clouded forest. This tea manages to capture citrus, red fruits, osmanthus, leather, cocoa and tobacco in equal parts. It also has a strong calming effect.

Thanks for sharing, Martin!

Flavors: Almond, Bright, Citrus Fruits, Citrusy, Clean, Cocoa, Coconut Husk, Dark Chocolate, Earthy, Floral, Geosmin, Leather, Mineral, Osmanthus, Red Fruits, Silky, Smoke, Smooth, Sweet, Tangy, Tobacco, Wet Rocks

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 1 min, 0 sec 4 g 4 OZ / 110 ML
Martin Bednář

I am really glad you liked it! Definitely, your note is more descriptive than mine :)

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92
1846 tasting notes

First of 7 teas from SiamTeas Clubbox January ’23 – Tuyet Shan

I vaguely remember having some Shan Tuyet — Red Buffalo oolong, but also some other Vietnamese teas. But it seems it was pre-Steepster time for me (I have been on r/tea pretty much active), because no notes for those teas here. Also I have decided for whole Tuyet Shan CLUBBOX, becaue it will be interesting example how different processing can make different teas, though used same plant from same region.

Why I took oolong at first? Well, I was in mood for oolong. And this is also Wuyi style oolong — something I have so very limited experience with.

The leaves look amazing. It’s not rolled into small balls, instead it is long and sharp, wiry. After adding 5 grams to preheated 125 ml gaiwan, it was very strongly mineral, almost licking a stone or cave aroma (somebody wrote it somewhere before and I still remember that) feel and I was afraid it won’t be my jam.

I have decided to steep it as suggested by vendor. “That is, 3-4g/100ml might steep at a sequence of 1-1-2-3 minutes for a total of 4 infusions. At this, each infusion surprises with an individual taste pattern of its own.” which is quite interesting, as I tend to do first steeps short, maybe even 10 seconds long. I did completely no rinse, because there was absolutely no dust to be flushed away.

I did 60 seconds long steep and well, I am not used for such long steep with boiling water. My fingers are a little sore from very hot gaiwan, but it’s fine, they need to get used to. I got also very dark liquid, with orange-red colour, with red fruits aroma, mostly I think about raspberries, with they tart aftertaaste, with sweet note, but it’s fruit sweetness, not sugar, stevia whatsoever. Mouthfeel is very long, smooth and actually no minreal notes to be found! How aroma of dry leaf can be misleading!

2nd steep was again one minute long.
This time it is with we leaves already, so I assume flavours will be very similar, but stronger. But anything can change, so I wouldn’t be surprised to notice other things. I took a sniff on wet leaves in gaiwan and it is still mineral, with red fruits. Mouthfeel is great, very coating, but also so smooth, with flavours towards mineral part of the flavour wheel, however, I would rather say slightly nutty, also peanuts here. Certainly it’s less sweet, a bit burnt-like. Aftertaste and mouthfeel are long again.

Third steep, 2 minutes! Isn’t that too much?
I guess not. It leans again to different flavour profile. Now it is sweet again, a little bit like licorice root? It’s a bit sticky too. Flavours are a bit more woody, with sweet aftertaste, aroma is weaker mineral from dry leaf. Yes, in flavours it is woody-herbaceous combo. Oak wood with hops. That doesn’t make any sense! That long mouthfeel is amazing about this tea!

4th steep, 3 minutes. Even longer? Fine!
It tastes like washed out all other steeps together. Not bad, of course, but much weaker level of flavours and aromas. Mouthfeel remains long, smooth, almost velvet like.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 1 min, 0 sec 5 g 4 OZ / 125 ML
derk

I know you don’t gongfu brew too often, but I love seeing your longer notes when you do have a session!

Martin Bednář

Actually I did several sessions in this ending week, but I wrote usually post-note while this one was during-session-note :)

Thanks for leaving the comment though!

derk

This tea was wonderful. Thanks so much for sharing <3

Martin Bednář

I am considering getting a smaller bag of this. Indeed a wonderful tea!

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