Tea type
Black Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Not available
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Jenn-cha
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 4 min, 45 sec

Currently unavailable

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

From Our Community

1 Image

4 Want it Want it

3 Own it Own it

5 Tasting Notes View all

  • “Morning! Time to try one of my new black teas! I got two with very similar flavor profiles so I decided to try this one first just because “Bohea” is fun to say. The smell of the dry leaves was...” Read full tasting note
    100
  • “Thanks to sophistre, I get a chance to try a new Bohea. Yay! I just had Teas Etc’s Bohea this morning, so I can’t help but make comparisons. If I didn’t know better, I would swear they aren’t...” Read full tasting note
    88

From The Tao of Tea

Origin: Wuyishan, China

Plucking Season: Harvested from young leaves, in mid summer.

Introduction: Bohea is from a 400 year old tea garden in Tong Mu Guan of Xing Village, located in the heart of a pristine Wuyi mountains nature reserve, in Fujian, China.

Flavor Profile: Complex, sweet, citrus, and cocoa aromas are complemented by a subtle smoky character.

Ingredients: Ingredients: 100% Organic pure leaf black tea leaves.

Certified Organic by: Quality Assurance International (QAI)

About The Tao of Tea View company

Company description not available.

5 Tasting Notes

100
104 tasting notes

Morning! Time to try one of my new black teas! I got two with very similar flavor profiles so I decided to try this one first just because “Bohea” is fun to say.

The smell of the dry leaves was very smokey which made me a little nervous since the last smokey tea I had was rather like drinking a campfire. But at my first sip of this bright, amber-gold liquor I was, if not in love then in like, and very much intrigued. It was sweet and fruity and the smoke was a nicely subtle compliment to the other flavors. It was a very…thought provoking flavor combination.

At a couple points I thought I detected the coco note in either the aroma or liquor flavor but it was even more subtle than the smokiness and I cannot be certain that that was what I was actually detecting.

I think, after another pot or two of this I could very definitely be more than just in like. Perhaps even in love.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 5 min, 0 sec
Auggy

Whee! I just had some of this, too!

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

88
911 tasting notes

Thanks to sophistre, I get a chance to try a new Bohea. Yay! I just had Teas Etc’s Bohea this morning, so I can’t help but make comparisons. If I didn’t know better, I would swear they aren’t the same type of tea. This one is much milder (in color, smell and taste) than the Teas Etc Bohea. The smoky flavor – which is rich and thick in the TE version – is mild here, somewhat of an afterthought. The first descriptor that crossed my mind with this one, both when smelling and tasting, was ‘sweet’. Because it is. It’s sweet, soft, gentle and has a hint of smoke in the aftertaste that kind of poofs up my sinuses after a sip.

But that makes it sound like, compared to TE’s Bohea, ToT’s version is lacking. It isn’t. It’s just totally different. TE’s version reminds me of lapsang with the edges smoothed out and no tar. ToT’s version reminds me of TeaSpring’s Tan Yang Te Ji with less oomph and MPD-esque complexity. I have to be in a smoky tea mood to drink TE’s Bohea. This one, being milder, wouldn’t require a smoky mood.

So even though they are the same type of tea, they really are totally different. I could see keeping both in my pantry without feeling I was duplicating teas. I could also see using this one as a tea to ease a newbie into smoky teas. It’s really quite tasty.

The second steep (5min) is a little milder than I hoped for (still tasty though) so I think next time I’ll extend that steep a bit for a touch more flavor.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 4 min, 0 sec
sophistre

Woo! I’ve been waiting all day to see what you’d pick first. ^^

Auggy

There were so many good choices for first pick! Sadly, I had given myself the jitters from caffeine before I got your package so I’m having to pace myself! :)

Jenn-cha

I love this one so much. Glad to hear you like it :)

Auggy

I can see why you’d love it – it’s really pretty and ‘pretty’ isn’t something I normally say for a smoky tea but this deserves it.

Thomas Smith

I love your review, but I thought I ought to toss an fyi your way about Bohea.
Bohea (pron. Boo-ee) is the English corruption of WuYi, the origin of the first fully oxidized teas which wound up going for export shortly after their invention. Tan Yang Te Ji was the first high quality hongcha and Zheng Shan Xiao Zhong (Lapsang) wasn’t too far behind. The Bohea from Teas Etc is actually a Lapsang, (which ought to have a balanced smoky aroma with a longan fruit flavor note, unlike the tarry junk that floods the market) while Tao of Tea’s Bohea may be a totally different WuYi hongcha. Interesting thing is ToT’s Bohea is listed as coming from near Xingcun, the birthplace of Zheng Shan Xiao Zhong. You probably have two teas that were processed in different ways from the same general area. Imperial Red – Da Hong Pao Hongcha – is another Bohea.

sophistre

So what is it that makes a tea be called Bohea vs. any number of other equally appropriate names? Is it a lingering designation from a time when the teas were primarily English exports, or…?

Auggy

Ditto to what sophistre said. Why can ToT and TE both call their teas Bohea when they are processed differently (which would make me feel they are different types of tea then)?

Thomas Smith

Well, they can call it whatever they like (I’ve seen a teas sold as “China Black” and “Wu Long”), but really it’s just a place name dragged from antiquity and can be applied accurately enough to any WuYi red. Incidentally, the same is true for Keemun… There are a good number of different reds produced around Qi Men – market trends and historically spread small-leaf varietal leads us westerners to accepting it all as the same. It’s being used as a market name like a company would use “Darjeeling” to evoke refinement (even if it’s CTC or fannings from the area rather than full leaf) – in the case of Bohea, the companies want to evoke posterity or connections to the name’s appearance in literature. Nothing really wrong with it, but it can get confusing since multiple teas fit the bill. I agree that it’s better to specify a style name from within a region; however, this is probably the location with the best case for shying away from that. Most folks have a justified aversion to one of the oldest and most widely produced Boheas, Zheng Shan Xiao Zhong, and the companies may want to avoid pointing out the tea falls under the same name but may taste different.

Localities tend to have a limited range of varietals they grow and local processing methods may vary but have similarities within a region so you can expect different WuYi reds to have different flavors and leaf appearances but share a sort of similar mineral and fruit like characteristics due to terroir and cultivar and be slightly smoky since many producers finish-fire using pine. Zheng Shan Xiao Zhong – Lapsang – has really been corrupted to overly-smoky versions, though. Its smoky rep now has many producers over-smoking it or adding “liquid smoke” to it to produce the aroma, though these tend to have a chemical/ethanol or a creosol-like taint in the flavor as well.

Login or sign up to leave a comment.