Rare Tea Co – Tie Guan Yin
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Tie Guan Yin lies at the green end of the Oolong green/black spectrum. The Rare Tea Company say that this tea can be infused up to six times, which I have to admit indicates a commitment to re-steeping that I haven’t yet achieved. Maybe I need a smaller teapot.
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The packaging tells me that this tea will “reveal astonishing flavours from soft florals to rich tropical fruit”. I can attest to a certain amount of floweriness here, but I didn’t detect any tropical fruit flavours. Maybe they come to the fore around the fourth or fifth steeping.
The dried leaves arrive in little clusters reminiscent of a fancy green granola. The leaves unfurled to an extraordinarily satisfying size, which doesn’t seem physically possible given the size of the original pellets.
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Tie Guan Yin is the Iron Goddess of Mercy. It sounds like a name for a heavy metal band but, in fact, she is a revered Buddhist bodhisattva associated with compassion. Her name literally means “the one who perceives the sound of the world”.
I enjoyed this tea a lot. It was fresh and floral with a satisfying depth of flavour. Although to be honest, if I had been handed a cup of Tie Guan Yin without context, I would have totally assumed it was a green tea. If you wanted to put together some kind of “Green or Oolong?” parlour game, I reckon Tie Guan Yin would present quite the challenge to the participants.
Today’s featured book is A Journey to the Tea Countries of China by Robert Fortune, first published in 1852.