
I also fell in love with Darjeeling Poobong White, can drink like three 12 oz cups of it in a row

Jade Flower, which vendor your Darjeeling Poobong White comes from? It sounds like something I might like as well.Jade Flower wrote:I also fell in love with Darjeeling Poobong White, can drink like three 12 oz cups of it in a row
Yep, I do this a lot, actually. Japanese greens are so much more blendable than Chinese greens (just teas, not flavorsRussianSoul wrote: I made myself a Sencha-Gyokuro blend this afternoon. I mixed equal amounts of er... sencha and umm... gyokuro and brewed for 2 minutes at 155 degrees. OMG! It is wonderfully sweet, vegetal and thick.
I should have mentioned that I got this idea from you, actually. Thanks, Chip!Chip wrote:Yep, I do this a lot, actually.RussianSoul wrote: I made myself a Sencha-Gyokuro blend this afternoon. I mixed equal amounts of er... sencha and umm... gyokuro and brewed for 2 minutes at 155 degrees. OMG! It is wonderfully sweet, vegetal and thick.
Shucks...RussianSoul wrote:I should have mentioned that I got this idea from you, actually. Thanks, Chip!Chip wrote:Yep, I do this a lot, actually.RussianSoul wrote: I made myself a Sencha-Gyokuro blend this afternoon. I mixed equal amounts of er... sencha and umm... gyokuro and brewed for 2 minutes at 155 degrees. OMG! It is wonderfully sweet, vegetal and thick.
Sakura is a Spring tea made with cherry and/or cherry blossoms. The one I have has cherry flower buds in it since it is made before the blossoms open. It is a tradtional tea usually consumed around the time of the flowering cherry trees around Kyuoto.chamekke wrote:Who makes the sencha sakura? I am strangely intrigued.
Did you say llama?Cinnamon Kitty wrote: Yesterday I sampled Yunnan Gold, Spring Darjeeling, and Peach Oolong. I really did not like the Yunnan Gold at all. The smell of the dry leaves and the tea itself reminded me of the barn at the zoo with the musty hay and the sheep, pigs, goats, and llamas. The flavor of the tea was smooth, but I couldn't get past the barn smell.
Thanks! I'll have to see who offers that; sounds interesting.Chip wrote:Sakura is a Spring tea made with cherry and/or cherry blossoms. The one I have has cherry flower buds in it since it is made before the blossoms open. It is a tradtional tea usually consumed around the time of the flowering cherry trees around Kyuoto.chamekke wrote:Who makes the sencha sakura? I am strangely intrigued.
So I have read...
chamekke wrote:For certain springtime Chado events, we're sometimes served sakura-cha prior to entering the tearoom. It's also called sakura-yu ("yu" meaning hot water)... it's just dried cherry blossoms in salt. You drink it out of a sencha-style cup.Chip wrote: Sakura is a Spring tea made with cherry and/or cherry blossoms...
Probably better to avoid it if you have high blood pressure
You could try a loose pu erh.henley wrote:I have this same problem w/pu erh. Don't know that I could ever try it just because the cakes remind me of something I'd see at my FIL's farm out in the pasture.CynTEAa wrote:It's funny. Sometimes I perceive the hay and sometimes I really don't. (No llamas though..) But I get how you can't get past something in a tea. Once there was a tea that just reminded me of a medicine I had as a child. It was a bestseller, too everyone loved it, but I just couldn't enjoy it. Sorry, ladies! But it means more Yunnan Gold for me!LavenderPekoe wrote:I have the same problem with this tea. I can't even have a brewed cup sitting on my desk...I actually don't even remember if I like the flavor, I couldn't get passed the hay smell at all.Cinnamon Kitty wrote: <snip>I really did not like the Yunnan Gold at all. The smell of the dry leaves and the tea itself reminded me of the barn at the zoo with the musty hay and the sheep, pigs, goats, and llamas.![]()
TeaChunnel...FTW...CynTEAa wrote:You could try a loose pu erh.henley wrote:I have this same problem w/pu erh. Don't know that I could ever try it just because the cakes remind me of something I'd see at my FIL's farm out in the pasture.CynTEAa wrote:It's funny. Sometimes I perceive the hay and sometimes I really don't. (No llamas though..) But I get how you can't get past something in a tea. Once there was a tea that just reminded me of a medicine I had as a child. It was a bestseller, too everyone loved it, but I just couldn't enjoy it. Sorry, ladies! But it means more Yunnan Gold for me!LavenderPekoe wrote:I have the same problem with this tea. I can't even have a brewed cup sitting on my desk...I actually don't even remember if I like the flavor, I couldn't get passed the hay smell at all.Cinnamon Kitty wrote: <snip>I really did not like the Yunnan Gold at all. The smell of the dry leaves and the tea itself reminded me of the barn at the zoo with the musty hay and the sheep, pigs, goats, and llamas.![]()
(Okay, I really just wanted to do one more quote
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