Dragon Well

Made from leaves that have not been oxidized.


Nov 13th, '10, 23:46
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Re: Dragon Well

by Proinsias » Nov 13th, '10, 23:46

Tead Off wrote:Keep in mind that 2010 was not considered to be a good year for LJ and many other teas. Climactic conditions wreaked havoc in many parts of Asia. Everywhere I went this year, tea people told me the same thing, a bad year for teas.
I know.

This was part of the reason I was smiling so much when drinking this today. I've found a long lost tea that I loved and there's a good chance it will be even better than this in the future. It may not be the finest example of long jing but it had the same taste and feel that got me into tea years ago when I must have drank something very similar, and thinking back the price was prety similar.

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Nov 23rd, '10, 10:53
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Re: Dragon Well

by bryan293 » Nov 23rd, '10, 10:53

I've only ever tried one dragon well, and it was from teavana. I didn't like it very much. can anyone recommend a good beginners dragon well?

Nov 23rd, '10, 11:18
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Re: Dragon Well

by Proinsias » Nov 23rd, '10, 11:18

TeaSpring are usually pretty good value for money when it comes to long jing and sell in 25g sizes, I haven't tried them this year though.

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Nov 23rd, '10, 11:53
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Re: Dragon Well

by rabbit » Nov 23rd, '10, 11:53

Proinsias wrote:TeaSpring are usually pretty good value for money when it comes to long jing and sell in 25g sizes, I haven't tried them this year though.
+1 ... I really liked the LJ that I had from teaspring.

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