Chinese Restaurant Tea

Owes its flavors to oxidation levels between green & black tea.


Aug 7th, '20, 16:31
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Chinese Restaurant Tea

by lavendershampoo » Aug 7th, '20, 16:31

When I was growing up, I’m 53 now as a reference, I loved the tea at Chinese restaurants! I remember is was loose and I’ve been told it was Oolong but the Oolong’s I’ve tried are too mild or smoky (not a fan). The closest thing I could find was Bigelow bagged tea. Any recs for similar in loose?

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Aug 13th, '20, 11:48
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Re: Chinese Restaurant Tea

by sneakers » Aug 13th, '20, 11:48

There are many oolongs, along the spectrum from black to green, and each one tastes different. I've had a highly-prized oolong that tasted like mud that I wouldn't buy again. Chinese restaurants us a generic, cheap oolong. I've found a similar taste in Black Dragon Formosa Oolong from SilverTips Tea.

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Aug 27th, '20, 02:50
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Re: Chinese Restaurant Tea

by bagua7 » Aug 27th, '20, 02:50

It's what the Cantonese call Bolay tea. Usually cheap maocha (puerh pre-processing phase). Not certainly oolong is what you get in a Chinese restaurant!

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Aug 27th, '20, 03:06
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Re: Chinese Restaurant Tea

by sneakers » Aug 27th, '20, 03:06

bagua7 wrote: It's what the Cantonese call Bolay tea. Usually cheap maocha (puerh pre-processing phase). Not certainly oolong is what you get in a Chinese restaurant!
Probably right. I'm not familiar with the taste of maocha.

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Aug 27th, '20, 10:27
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Re: Chinese Restaurant Tea

by Bridgette » Aug 27th, '20, 10:27

lavendershampoo wrote: When I was growing up, I’m 53 now as a reference, I loved the tea at Chinese restaurants! I remember is was loose and I’ve been told it was Oolong but the Oolong’s I’ve tried are too mild or smoky (not a fan). The closest thing I could find was Bigelow bagged tea. Any recs for similar in loose?
Hey there, you might enjoy this oolong that we recommend as a Chinese Restaurant tea.
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Aug 27th, '20, 22:16
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Re: Chinese Restaurant Tea

by LeoFox » Aug 27th, '20, 22:16

lavendershampoo wrote: When I was growing up, I’m 53 now as a reference, I loved the tea at Chinese restaurants! I remember is was loose and I’ve been told it was Oolong but the Oolong’s I’ve tried are too mild or smoky (not a fan). The closest thing I could find was Bigelow bagged tea. Any recs for similar in loose?
A common chinese restaurant tea is cheap ripe pu-erh mixed with chrysanthemums. Here is a description:

https://www.teasenz.com/chinese-tea/chr ... ecipe.html

Aug 30th, '20, 22:58
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Re: Chinese Restaurant Tea

by Lyuluck » Aug 30th, '20, 22:58

Oolong tea is good for the stomach, especially after you are over 50

Sep 3rd, '20, 11:01
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Re: Chinese Restaurant Tea

by 12Tea » Sep 3rd, '20, 11:01

Bridgette wrote: Hey there, you might enjoy this oolong that we recommend as a Chinese Restaurant tea.
I actually have some of this at home :) It's pretty good. The flavour is somewhere between a dark oolong and an aged white tea.

Sep 3rd, '20, 11:02
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Re: Chinese Restaurant Tea

by 12Tea » Sep 3rd, '20, 11:02

bagua7 wrote: It's what the Cantonese call Bolay tea. Usually cheap maocha (puerh pre-processing phase). Not certainly oolong is what you get in a Chinese restaurant!
Actually Tie Guan Yin is a very common Chinese restaurant tea here in Europe. The other ones are:
  • ripe puerh (bolay)
  • chrysanthemum tea
  • chrysanthemum + ripe pu erh blend

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Sep 24th, '20, 01:09
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Re: Chinese Restaurant Tea

by bagua7 » Sep 24th, '20, 01:09

The thing is that the OP hasn't mentioned his location. This is problematic. In Australia, where I live, cheap bolay. You dine in Taipei and it's a totally different game:

http://taipeiexpat.com/cha-for-tea/

;)

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Sep 25th, '20, 02:31
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Re: Chinese Restaurant Tea

by SmallSmallTea » Sep 25th, '20, 02:31

When i was younger, often hear Luk Pou, Pou Lei, Kuk Pou being ordered. Oh! Not to forget Heong Pin and Tork Shou Heong which is rather famous too.

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Sep 25th, '20, 14:08
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Re: Chinese Restaurant Tea

by sneakers » Sep 25th, '20, 14:08

SmallSmallTea wrote: When i was younger, often hear Luk Pou, Pou Lei, Kuk Pou being ordered. Oh! Not to forget Heong Pin and Tork Shou Heong which is rather famous too.
You live somewhere where you get choices :D The tea served in every Chinese restaurant I've been in here (NYC area) is just called "tea," so we don't know exactly what we're getting. I think the OP has plenty of ideas to test out now.

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