Yes it started with DYL and stem vs leaves and the topic just flows. Just like Jazz.TIM wrote:
I thought we are talking about Taiwanese oolong? Not anxi right?

Oops! now I am OT talking about Jazz.

Yes it started with DYL and stem vs leaves and the topic just flows. Just like Jazz.TIM wrote:
I thought we are talking about Taiwanese oolong? Not anxi right?
Cultivars and processing. There is also terroir involved. The idea of not calling a semi oxidized tea an oolong is not my original idea. It was put into my mind by an owner of a Nepali Tea Garden of high repute that makes a semi oxidized tea. He doesn't want to call his tea an oolong so how should he describe it? It's an interesting question.entropyembrace wrote:What do any two Chinese oolongs have in common that oolong from another country doesn't have?Tead Off wrote: And, while we're at it, the idea of calling a semi-oxidized tea grown in a different country other than China, ie., India (Darjeeling), or Japan, an oolong, is not correct, IMO. They should be referred to as semi-oxidized teas. They neither taste nor resemble oolongs in any way except that they are oxidized to a degree.
Obviously if the producer is not taking the effort to produce oolong tea properly, and is simply aborting the fermentation of black tea early it's going to be different. I don't think anyone is arguing that these teas are the same as traditional oolong.MEversbergII wrote:Leo Kwan does a pretty good article on this very subject here: teaguardian.com/what-is-tea/semi-fermented-tea-vs-oolong-1.html#.Uuu9d_uE6jc
M.
I read or heard somewhere that the traditional explanation for camphor flavour in some puerh comes from growing in close proximity to camphor trees. If there is anything to that, it would suggest otherwise. I can't judge that statement though.entropyembrace wrote: I really doubt anyone can tell by the "terrior" especially considering how much variety there is among traditional oolong producing regions in China.
I have heard these stories, though I'm personally skeptical. Also, while you could say that maybe the aroma comes from something above the ground scenting the leaves, I live on a street lined with camphor trees, and the aroma is not strong - it's only if you cut into the tree (for example, when the roots were trimmed) that you really get much camphor aroma.bliss wrote: I read or heard somewhere that the traditional explanation for camphor flavour in some puerh comes from growing in close proximity to camphor trees. If there is anything to that, it would suggest otherwise. I can't judge that statement though.
I agree 100% with you on thiswyardley wrote:I think growing conditions can influence the taste of tea to some degree, but I definitely believe in processing+varietal trumps terroir.
I do not believe in terroir in the literal way that the terroirists believe in, and I think this way of thinking has been pretty well debunked; see, e.g.,
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/06/style ... tdirt.html
That is, tea that's grown in certain environments (high altitude, rocky soil, etc.) may grow differently because of stress, depth of roots, etc., but the tea does not literally taste like the substances it grows in.
What about millenniums of camphor leaves, branches and trunks molting down into soil? Such a soil would definitely be unique in some ways. Just a thought that struck me when I was thinking about this. I know very little about how the extraction of minerals and other goodies (oils??) from soil via roots actually works.wyardley wrote:I have heard these stories, though I'm personally skeptical. Also, while you could say that maybe the aroma comes from something above the ground scenting the leaves, I live on a street lined with camphor trees, and the aroma is not strong - it's only if you cut into the tree (for example, when the roots were trimmed) that you really get much camphor aroma.bliss wrote: I read or heard somewhere that the traditional explanation for camphor flavour in some puerh comes from growing in close proximity to camphor trees. If there is anything to that, it would suggest otherwise. I can't judge that statement though.
+1entropyembrace wrote:I agree 100% with you on thiswyardley wrote:I think growing conditions can influence the taste of tea to some degree, but I definitely believe in processing+varietal trumps terroir.
I do not believe in terroir in the literal way that the terroirists believe in, and I think this way of thinking has been pretty well debunked; see, e.g.,
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/05/06/style ... tdirt.html
That is, tea that's grown in certain environments (high altitude, rocky soil, etc.) may grow differently because of stress, depth of roots, etc., but the tea does not literally taste like the substances it grows in.
Plant roots selectively uptake nutrients from the soil. Other than a few exceptions chemicals can only enter the roots of plants if the plant is producing transport proteins specifically to acquire that substance from the soil. Since camphor is not a nutrient which plants use (it's a toxin a few closely related plants produce for protection) I find it extremely unlikely that tea trees would acquire camphor from the soil.bliss wrote: What about millenniums of camphor leaves, branches and trunks molting down into soil? Such a soil would definitely be unique in some ways. Just a thought that struck me when I was thinking about this. I know very little about how the extraction of minerals and other goodies (oils??) from soil via roots actually works.