Imperial Green

A Green Tea from

Rating

82 / 100

Calculated from 10 Ratings
Tea type
Green Tea
Do you recommend this tea?
Recommend to Facebook friends
Tweet this tea on Twitter
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Broth, Butter, Chestnut, Cucumber, Freshly Cut Grass, Lychee, Umami, Almond, Hazelnut, Pine, Nutty, Toasted
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Typical Preparation
Use 37 oz / 1086 ml of water
Set water temperature to 175 °F / 79 °C
Use 5 g of tea
Steep for 0 min, 45 sec
Join the largest Community of Tea Experts
Review this tea
Save to your wishlist
Add to your cupboard
Edit tea info

8 Tasting Notes View all

“Aloha. Mac nut honey and poi toast for breakfast. Without knowing what I was drinking (this is a sample so there are few things on the package). Very visibly a dragonwell/longjing when I opened the...” Read full tasting note
“Nutty, roasted aroma, one of the best long jing i had.” Read full tasting note
“A March 2017 harvest from Xinchang, Zhejiang. A deliciously fresh and somewhat savory green tea.” Read full tasting note
“I heard a lot about this tea and was very curious to try it. So I ordered two packages. I tried a lot of different Long Jing teas before. Some directly from China, some from local distributors....” Read full tasting note

Description

SEASON
Spring 2016 (March 20th)
CULTIVAR
Long Jing 43
ORIGIN
Zhejiang, China
PICKING & PROCESSING
Bud and one or two leaves
ELEVATION
600m

This is China’s most famous Green tea, absolutely revered for its rich yet refreshing flavour and the fragrance of lush spring grass. This tea was picked on March 20th 2016 making it a very early Pre Qing Ming tea.

Authentic Long Jing tea (otherwise known as Dragonwell) must be grown in Zhejiang province. If it is grown anywhere else then it is considered a fake (much like champagne). Every year we taste many samples of Long Jing to find our batch for the year. This year we have selected a tea from outside the West Lake area because we felt that it had a much higher quality compared with the West Lake tea. It is from a less commercial cultivar too (Xiao Ye vs Long Jing 43).

Qing Ming is a traditional day for paying respects to ancestors and clearing their graves. It is a public holiday in China (and Taiwan) and falls on the first day of the fifth solar term which equates to fifteen days after the Spring Equinox which is usually the first week of April. Any tea picked before this date is very early Spring picked and is called Pre Qing Ming.

This is a Pre Qing Ming tea picked on 20th March giving a lightness and delicacy combined with a powerful fragrance and taste. Any Pre Qing Ming tea from Xi Hu (West Lake) is exorbitantly expensive and whilst it is often excellent tea, we felt that this batch won out in terms of flavour and we are not paying the extra price tag for the name of Xi Hu.

We are sure that you will love our 2016 batch of Imperial Green (Long Jing). Please note that you may find white yellow fur on the tea and little balls of fur in the tea. This is NOT mold but is tea fur showing that the tea is a very early spring tea – it demonstrates the quality of this Long Jing.

About Mei Leaf

Company description not available.

Teas Similar to Imperial Green

Recommended Teas to Try