Huo Shan Huang Ya

Tea type
Yellow Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Apricot, Asparagus, Butter, Corn Husk, Grass, Green Beans, Hazelnut, Melon, Mineral, Snow Peas, Spinach, Sweet Corn, Vegetal
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Cameron B.
Average preparation
185 °F / 85 °C 6 g 4 oz / 120 ml

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2 Tasting Notes View all

  • “I had a nice Huo Shan Huang Ya from Teavivre last year, and thought it would be fun to try the same tea from another vendor for comparison. Both teas were around $18 for 50 g, meaning that the...” Read full tasting note
    86
  • “This is a great experience for green tea lovers looking for some new, interesting flavors. Yellow tea is a great opportunity to explore. The base of this tea provides notes of sweet corn, corn...” Read full tasting note
    89

From Yunnan Craft

Spring tea leafs from County Huo Shan located in Anhui province. This is a type of green tea which has an additional post-processing to diminish original excessive bitterness of the green leafs which will turn to yellow-ish color after. It’s recommended to use lower temperatures for brewing in order to get sweet and rich tea liquor. Yellow tea was very popular in early Tang dynasty.

About Yunnan Craft View company

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2 Tasting Notes

86
415 tasting notes

I had a nice Huo Shan Huang Ya from Teavivre last year, and thought it would be fun to try the same tea from another vendor for comparison. Both teas were around $18 for 50 g, meaning that the quality should be similar. Since Yunnan Craft didn’t provide brewing instructions, I used the ones from Teavivre, steeping 6 g of leaf in a 120 ml porcelain pot at 185F for 50, 60, 70, 90, 120, 150, 180, and 240 seconds, plus some long, uncounted rounds.

The dry aroma is of hazelnuts, green beans, snow peas, and butter. The first steep has notes of candied hazelnuts, green beans, snow peas, grass, butter, and something fruity that’s close to melon. Asparagus appears in steep two and the tea has a starchy quality. I get corn and cornhusk in the next couple steeps, with apricot sneaking through in the aftertaste. Subsequent steeps have notes of spinach, beans, grass, apricots, and minerals.

This is a lovely yellow tea that’s perfect for spring. I think the one from Teavivre had more nutty, buttery flavours while this one is greener, though it’s hard to remember much about a tea I drank a year ago. Both are less aggressively vegetal than most green teas—a definite plus in my books!

Flavors: Apricot, Asparagus, Butter, Corn Husk, Grass, Green Beans, Hazelnut, Melon, Mineral, Snow Peas, Spinach, Sweet Corn, Vegetal

Preparation
185 °F / 85 °C 6 g 4 OZ / 120 ML

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89
167 tasting notes

This is a great experience for green tea lovers looking for some new, interesting flavors. Yellow tea is a great opportunity to explore. The base of this tea provides notes of sweet corn, corn husk, and honey. Not unlike sweeter green teas.

It gets interesting with notes of honey roasted peanuts, mint, and even hints of lemongrass and coconut. There is also a consistant sweet note that I can only describe as cinnamon pastry. Complex and delicious.

https://www.instagram.com/p/BmDs-YVnvOh/?taken-by=cincinna.tea

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