Chou Shi

Tea type
Oolong Tea
Ingredients
Oolong Tea Leaves
Flavors
Butter, Cantaloupe, Cream, Floral, Grass, Green Apple, Green Beans, Honeysuckle, Mineral, Orchid, Pear, Peas, Spinach, Squash Blossom, Vanilla, Violet, Zucchini
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Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Medium
Certification
Organic
Edit tea info Last updated by eastkyteaguy
Average preparation
190 °F / 87 °C 7 g 4 oz / 118 ml

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5 Tasting Notes View all

From UNYtea

This tea is the culmination of recent tea experiments in china, specifically dancong oolong. Dancong is typically medium to heavy roasting, this is most definitely a “green” oolong. The tea is like a cross between a light roast baozhong and a light roast anxi TGY. light, refreshing, and energizing.

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5 Tasting Notes

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1048 tasting notes

This was another tote cleaning discovery. I ordered several samples from Unytea back around the start of the year, but only got around to trying one of them. When I stumbled upon this tea, my initial reaction was more or less something to the effect of “oh, I should probably go ahead and drink this. I’ve had it for awhile.” Then I remembered that Chou Shi is far from my favorite type of Dan Cong. I soldiered on anyway, and lo and behold, I really liked this tea. The fact that it was from last year’s harvest may have had something to do with it, but this was much more approachable and mellow than I’m used to Chou Shi being.

I prepared this tea gongfu style. For this session, I steeped 7 grams of loose tea leaves in 4 ounces of 190 F water for 5 seconds following a brief rinse. This infusion was followed by 13 additional infusions. Steep times for these infusions were 7 seconds, 10 seconds, 15 seconds, 20 seconds, 25 seconds, 30 seconds, 40 seconds, 50 seconds, 1 minute, 1 minute 15 seconds, 1 minute 30 seconds, 2 minutes, and 3 minutes.

Prior to the rinse, the dry tea leaves emitted pleasant aromas of butter, cream, peas, and fresh flowers. The rinse allowed me to get a better feel for the tea’s floral aromatics. I picked up more clearly defined scents of lilac and violet. I also began to get touches of spinach and vanilla. The first infusion brought out touches of orchid. In the mouth, the tea led with gentle impressions of butter, cream, vanilla, lilac, violet, and orchid before vegetal touches reminiscent of garden peas made themselves known. Subsequent infusions brought out aromas and flavors of damp grass, spinach, green beans, honeysuckle, sweet pea, squash blossom, and fresh zucchini. Unlike the other Dan Congs I have tried, I curiously did not get much soapiness in the mouth. The body was slick and relatively thin, but not soapy. Around the middle of the session, I began to get fleeting impressions of incredibly gentle minerality and some vague, distant fruitiness. I couldn’t decide if it reminded me more of green apple or underripe pear. I continuously waffled on that. I also got what struck me as a more definite touch of cantaloupe. The late infusions were mild, buttery, creamy, and vegetal with a slightly strengthened mineral presence.

Normally when I think of Chou Shi Dan Cong, I think of a slick tea that often awkwardly juxtaposes fresh floral tones against a buttery, vegetal backdrop in an effort to approximate the characteristics of a typical jade Tieguanyin. That may not be entirely accurate, that’s just my perception of this style of tea. Until I tried this one, I had little interest in teas like this. When I tried this tea, however, I found an approachable, straightforward, immediately gratifying tea with a nice balance of savory, floral, and vegetal. My only wish now is that I had purchased more.

Flavors: Butter, Cantaloupe, Cream, Floral, Grass, Green Apple, Green Beans, Honeysuckle, Mineral, Orchid, Pear, Peas, Spinach, Squash Blossom, Vanilla, Violet, Zucchini

Preparation
190 °F / 87 °C 7 g 4 OZ / 118 ML
Rasseru

Nice. I tried other chou shi and on paper was nice but didnt suit me at all unless all the way down at 70c

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1705 tasting notes

Thank you so much Jeff! My Unytea order was very aesthetic and very considerate. I smelled through the bags of course and I am oddly really excited for one of the blends.

This particular was recommended for a non-stomach upsetting nuclear green oolong, and I’ve been really curious to try this varietal. The large nuclear emerald leaves smell green and clean. Tasting it, this tea is the embodiment of orchid floral from Tie Guan Yin and Bao Zhong. I was surprised that the florals were a little too strong for me. it had the World Market organic luxury soap thing going on.

So I did a five second rinse for my wopping 6 grams for 6 fluid ounces, then I brewed up the first steep at twelve seconds. I think that steep was too short because I got ORCHID and STEM. I’m not getting creamy so much. The later steeps were more enjoyable with a good balance between the green flower stem taste and some fruitier, more lemon and pineapple qualities. It also has some staying power ‘cause I’m still drinking it after steep seven. I used short steeps, however.

I have to play with this one more, and luckily, I have the amount to do so. It does not quite have the balance I’m looking for, but it is still a great quality tea and I am excited to see what else I can do with these lovely leaves. I am looking forward to other goodies I have. I also need to write so many more reviews…

Rasseru

Also try maybe with green tea temps, that tamed the perfume with the YS one

Daylon R Thomas

Noted. I brewed it close to 180 anyway.

UNYtea

I’m working on adding brewing notes on the labels for each tea. I’m sorry I’m just seeing this now. Def do very short steeps like any other dancong oolong I usually do 15 sec 20-25-30……and with this tea I sometimes will not preheat my pot or Gaiwan. Which lowers the temp a bit on its own also do a rinse before your 1st steep. Which as Rasseru stated will help alleviate the strength of the perfume/soapy note. My email is always open to talk tea!

Daylon R Thomas

That sounds like a good idea :) Using less leaf and higher temperature definitely improved it with the rinse. And I did rinse my Xiang Fu tea pot to warm it up the first time I drank it.

UNYtea

I drank Chou shi all day today lol I brew tea generally a little lower than suggested. It helps with Matt stomach discomfort

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