Teabox – Goomtee Special Summer Chinary Black
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This Darjeeling from The Goomtee Tea Estate in Kurseong is described on the packet as having a plum, grapefruit and apricot aroma with a medium-based fruity, woody palate.
And, yup, I reckon that’s all fair, but I’m not sure it goes far enough in describing the deliciously complex tastes in this brew.
A word which crops up a lot in other people’s descriptions of this tea is ‘muscatel’. And muscatel tea, when you look into it, is quite a hard thing to define. The origin of the term comes from muscatel wine, which is made from muscat grapes and it’s used to describe certain (usually second flush) Darjeeling teas.
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Everybody seems to agree that it’s a good thing, but nobody can put their finger on exactly what the taste is. TeaEpicure.com collated a whole bunch of muscatel descriptions which include “hint of plum pulp and tobacco”, “dried raisins with a hay like finish” and “wine, wet fallen leaves & the smell of cedar bark”.
So, in that spirit, I am going to do my level best to describe Goomtee Special Summer Chinary Black. There are definitely fruity flavours in here, a sort of plummy, grapey taste that is slightly reminiscent of a fortified wine. Or possibly prune juice. There is also a woody vibe going on here. It smells a bit like damp paper but, you know, in a good way.
Inevitably, what it tastes of most is a flavoursome black tea. Tea that has been grown and processed with care and skill and which showcases the rich, complicated flavours that can be found in a damn fine cup of tea. And, maybe “a tea that tastes like a really good tea” is enough to say on the matter.
Today’s featured book is Flush by Virginia Woolf.