I found some great green tea Xia Zhou Bi Feng

Made from leaves that have not been oxidized.


Jul 27th, '08, 17:17
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I found some great green tea Xia Zhou Bi Feng

by jashnew » Jul 27th, '08, 17:17

I found some great green tea called Xia Zhou Bi Feng. It's a Chinese green that combines nuttiness with a vegetable taste. Has anyone else had this? I wrote a full review at my website.
There are two things I love, tea and rooibos http://www.teacontent.com/

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Jul 27th, '08, 18:04
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by Salsero » Jul 27th, '08, 18:04

I haven't had it or heard of it, but here is the Babelcarp page about the meaning of the words.

http://www.panix.com/~perin/babelcarp.c ... ou+Bi+Feng

Jul 27th, '08, 18:20
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by jashnew » Jul 27th, '08, 18:20

Salsero- Thanks for that. That sounds pretty cool. I put that Babelcarp page in my favorites.
There are two things I love, tea and rooibos http://www.teacontent.com/

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Jul 27th, '08, 23:43
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by chrl42 » Jul 27th, '08, 23:43

I might be able to answer this one after August 1, cos that's when my brother bring my Chinese tea book from my parents house..he he he

By the way, Xia Zhou Bi Feng is one those rare Hubei tea along with En Shi Yu Lu. Of course I haven't tried this yet..

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Jul 28th, '08, 00:55
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by Salsero » Jul 28th, '08, 00:55

chrl42 wrote: By the way, Xia Zhou Bi Feng is one those rare Hubei tea along with En Shi Yu Lu. Of course I haven't tried this yet..
So Jashew has something extra special there! Great to know.

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Jul 28th, '08, 01:24
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by Chip » Jul 28th, '08, 01:24

I had this in 2006/7 from TeaSpring. I enjoyed it enough to reorder. My review from their site.
The sweet fragrant aroma belies the pleasant astringent flavor with a masked sweetness of the first infusion. The first infused leaves tell of a future full of bright promise as the successive infusions reveal a pleasant sweetness that will ultimately be devoid of any trace of the first infusion’s astringency.
Here is their old link that still works even though it is gone from the site and no longer available.

Xia Zhou Bi Feng

Actually...I have a 50 gram bag of it in the TeaFridge.

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Jul 28th, '08, 01:32
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by Salsero » Jul 28th, '08, 01:32

Chip wrote: Actually...I have a 50 gram bag of it in the TeaFridge.
I just get curiouser and curiouser about what all is in the TeaFridge. :?:

Jul 28th, '08, 01:58
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by Pentox » Jul 28th, '08, 01:58

Salsero wrote:
Chip wrote: Actually...I have a 50 gram bag of it in the TeaFridge.
I just get curiouser and curiouser about what all is in the TeaFridge. :?:
Me too, i'm starting to imagine a full size fridge or a walk in fridge.

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Aug 9th, '08, 02:24
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by chrl42 » Aug 9th, '08, 02:24

Sorry I'am a bit late as my brother made a delay.

I will just write down what was in the book.

First-grade leaves picked one-stem-one-leaf, second-grade one-stem-two-leaves. thin and long, glossy dark green. Aroma fresh and lasts longer. elegant taste with a clean finish. Brewed color brownish apriocot. Brewed leaves soft green.

City of Xi Chang was called Xia Zhou in Nan Bei Chao period(439~589) and was famous for tea growing. In Tang dynasty, was popular for tea and loved by Pi Ri Ti, Su Dong Po and such scholars. Once stopped producing for a moment and restarted in 80s.

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