Firebird 2015 Fenghuang Dancong Songzhong Oolong from Bitterleaf

Firebird 2015 Fenghuang Dancong Songzhong Oolong from Bitterleaf is really something special!  It has a crustiness or bakey-like flavor to it – much like some of the more bakey black teas I enjoy but with the leaf of an oolong!  The product description says it’s ‘the closest thing they’ve experienced to drinking a sticky bun’.  I was intrigued at that statement.  However I didn’t have that exact experience – I did still have a wonderful sipping experience regardless!  

Having said that Firebird 2015 Fenghuang Dancong Songzhong Oolong from Bitterleaf is slightly sweet and does have that touch of natural caramel goodness laying underneath while still providing a VERY strong crustiness to the sip and I find that amazingly wonderful!

For kicks I decided to add a few pure sugar crystals to this – which I almost NEVER do – but I had them on hand.  By doing so I found that Firebird 2015 Fenghuang Dancong Songzhong Oolong from Bitterleaf taste a bit more like the ‘sticky bun’ nod the product description claimed.

The natural honey-like aftertaste is something that certainly lingers on to the aftertaste.  This is a really interesting offering from Bitterteas and I’m honored to have tried it! 

 


Tea Information:

Leaf Type:  Oolong Tea

Where to Buy:  Bitterleaf

Tea Description:

 

One of our first two selections from the world of oolong, our Firebird Song Zhong Dancong is medium oxidized with a roasted sweetness. With honey and caramel as the most prominent flavours, this tea is about the closest thing we’ve experienced to drinking a sticky bun. The soup brews also out a clear honey-orange, but no actual honey was added, we swear.

This tea comes to us farm-direct from Chao Zhou.

Learn even more about this tea here

Mi Lan Dan Cong Tea from Canton Tea Co.

Tea Information:

Leaf Type:  Oolong

Where to Buy:  Canton Tea Co.

Product Description:

Dan Cong is the champagne of oolongs:  ripe with intense fruit and sweetness. This high grade example comes from a plantation on the lower slopes of Wu Dong Mountain, Chao Zhou. The leaves are thoroughly fermented and baked to produce a rich liquor with unique flowery and honeyed notes that can be enjoyed through multiple infusions.

Our Buyer’s notes:

“This tea is more heavily baked than the Song Zhong Dan Cong to allow the tea to produce its unique honey and lychee flavours.”

Taster’s Review:

Ooooooh-Long!  This tea definitely puts the Oooooh into Oolong.  It is truly wonderful.

The aroma of the brewed liquor is delightful.  It has this amazing sort of “outdoorsy” kind of scent, like the fragrance you might experience if you were walking through the woods on a quiet spring morning.  It is smells of earth and damp wood, as well as newly blossoming flowers and hints of fruit, and even a clean, crisp air-like scent.  This is a tea that you need to inhale deeply – taking in this extraordinary aroma – before taking a sip, to truly experience it in its entirety.

And then, of course, there is the flavor.  And … put simply, this has a flavor that keeps you sipping.  That is to say, my cup is now empty and I need to infuse the leaves again in order to compose the right words to describe this tea.  It is so good that I finished the cup before I could start writing about it.

Now as I sip my second cup (the result of my third and fourth infusions combined), I can tell you a little more about this tea.  The flavor is intense.  It has a honey-esque tone to it … not just the sweetness of honey, but also the unique floral taste of honey.  It is sweet with the subtlest tone of sharpness in the background, such an enchanting, piquant kind of taste.

And as the description from Canton Tea Co. suggests, there is a lychee kind of flavor to this too.  It is so very similar to the unique flavor of lychee, in fact, that I had to double check on this tea to make sure it wasn’t a lychee flavored or scented tea.  But no:  these interesting flavors are achieved naturally through the baking process of the tea leaves, and not through a flavoring process.

I was able to infuse this tea a total of six times with no loss of flavor, making this not only a delicious tea, but also a good value for your money too.  This is the kind of Oolong I would recommend to a tea enthusiast who finds some Oolong teas to be too delicate for their taste.  The flavor of this is so intense, they’re sure to change their mind about Oolong!