China Green Tips

Made from leaves that have not been oxidized.


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Mar 30th, '08, 19:06
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China Green Tips

by JM » Mar 30th, '08, 19:06

A few days ago I picked up a sampler pack from Tazo and really enjoyed the China Green Tips tea. I found it more earthy and oaky then any other green tea I've tried, anyone else drinking China Green Tips?

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Mar 30th, '08, 22:24
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by augie » Mar 30th, '08, 22:24

I have. It's the only drinkable Tazo tea, IMO. I used to drink it at work when I didn't want to mess with loose tea. Many of Tazo's tea is flavored with peach, mint, vanilla, mountain sunshine, etc. . . I'm just not into the flavored stuff. Green Tips is the only tea I can get on the road when I stop at Sbux.

What else was in the sample pack?

I bought a sample of iced teas from Tazo last summer. It was just dreadful. 3 of 4 of them had mint. :P

Mar 31st, '08, 19:30
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by devites » Mar 31st, '08, 19:30

I would love to work for Tazo, and get them some decent tea suppliers. I agree it is the only drinkable green tea that they offer.

Apr 2nd, '08, 05:45
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by chupenglong » Apr 2nd, '08, 05:45

would the pure green tea or adding some flor in it is the best? :) The green tea is a little bit, would you like it ? I like the green tea aroma, but some taste very bit

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Apr 2nd, '08, 20:15
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by JM » Apr 2nd, '08, 20:15

chupenglong wrote:would the pure green tea or adding some flor in it is the best? :) The green tea is a little bit, would you like it ? I like the green tea aroma, but some taste very bit
What's "flor?"

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Apr 2nd, '08, 22:59
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by motokochan » Apr 2nd, '08, 22:59

chupenglong wrote: I like the green tea aroma, but some taste very bit
If you mean bitter, that usually is because you are:

Using water that is too hot
or
Steeping too long
or
both

Although some greens are particularly difficult, try starting at water below a boil (170F to 180F - 76C to 82C) and steep for 3 minutes, no longer. If it is still too bitter, try reducing steep time or the temperature.

Also, make sure you are using enough leaves. I usually measure by relative volume, and you usually want about 1 standard teaspoon per 8 ounces of water.

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Aug 2nd, '08, 13:36
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by JM » Aug 2nd, '08, 13:36

I'm still drinking this tea, anyone know what kind of green it is or know where in China it's from?

Aug 2nd, '08, 16:44
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by Pentox » Aug 2nd, '08, 16:44

oddly enough china green tips tastes more like sencha to me.

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Aug 2nd, '08, 23:15
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by Riene » Aug 2nd, '08, 23:15

I drink Tazo's China Green Tips on occasion, and also the Organic Green. They are (so far) the only greens I've tried.
Although my neighbors are all barbarians,
And you, you are a thousand miles away,
There are always two cups on my table.
--Tang Dynasty

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Aug 2nd, '08, 23:26
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by BryanP » Aug 2nd, '08, 23:26

Pentox wrote:oddly enough china green tips tastes more like sencha to me.
Yes. I actually have a box of this stuff and it's not too bad if you want cheap tea.

Brewed at 175F, 8 oz using a first steep of 3 minutes, it is very light with no sign of bitterness (as noted above).

However, it is too light for my taste compared to even regular sencha. It has a taste of low-grade daily sencha, but hey, it's cheap.

Definitely not something if you want more of a grassy taste.

I think I could get that taste of my daily sencha if I brewed it using 5-6 oz. I'll try later.
Last edited by BryanP on Aug 2nd, '08, 23:32, edited 1 time in total.

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Aug 2nd, '08, 23:26
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by BryanP » Aug 2nd, '08, 23:26

Riene wrote:I drink Tazo's China Green Tips on occasion, and also the Organic Green. They are (so far) the only greens I've tried.
Try non-organic green tea if you want flavor. Organic green teas tend to taste more watered down compared to non-organics. Not ALL organic greens teas are like what I just described, but most are.

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Aug 3rd, '08, 16:28
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by BryanP » Aug 3rd, '08, 16:28

Ok, didn't really make a difference @ 6 oz @ 165F. Steeped it for 4 minutes.

Drinkable though; especially compared to other "popular brand" bagged teas (or even other Tazo bags in this case).

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