Bhutan Ja Aum

Tea type
Black Tea
Ingredients
Full Leaf Black Tea
Flavors
Not available
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Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Martin Bednář
Average preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 4 min, 0 sec 3 g 10 oz / 300 ml

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  • “Finally I decided to open those Bhutanese tea samples. And I thought this may be very interesting and I was in a mood trying something unusual, maybe because I just came home “on time” and not...” Read full tasting note

From Klasek Tea

The original local Bhutanese form of tea came from the producers of Samcholing’s Tea Growers’ Cooperative in the Trongsa region of central mountainous Bhutan. China tea bushes, brought from neighboring Darjeeling in the 1950s, grow at an altitude of 1800 meters. The method of processing is quite rare, and the tea is unlike anything we have encountered before. This tea is most commonly drunk in Bhutan as Suja, a salted Tibetan tea with butter and milk. The classic preparation of steeping in hot water is also encountered. Dark brown to black leaves with a higher content of stems and twigs, without any signs of shaping, with a very intense woody, slightly fermented to animal scent. Dark infusion reminiscent of dark (shu) puerh with a surprisingly delicate, earthy and woody, slightly salty taste with a trace of damp autumn forest and mushrooms.

Ja-Aum tea processing process

Larger, more mature leaves including petioles and small twigs are used for this tea. These are first finely chopped immediately after harvesting and then boiled for about ten minutes. The water is salted and the leaves gradually dry in the sun for 2-3 days. The dried leaves are then boiled for about an hour in water with stirred oak ash (sometimes barley ash is used, sometimes baking soda). During this cooking, the leaves darken completely. Those wet, dark leaves are bathed in a thick layer and gradually withers over a week. During this final stage, the leaves are also undergoing a partial fermentation process.

The tradition of drinking tea in Bhutan is very old. It must be said that it has spread here from neighboring Tibet. The first references date back to the 7th century AD, but Tibetan butter tea became more popular in the 13th century. For centuries, tea was imported to the Tibetan plateau from the Chinese provinces of Yunnan, Sichuan and Hunan. If the idea of strange combination of tea, salt, butter and milk keeps you unsettled, try a bowl of hot strong tea with salt, butter and milk on a frosty morning at 4,000 meters altitude. Once it gets into your stomach, you’ll be ready for the next day. Because of the occasional shortage of good tea, locals have learned to make their own tea from local plants and have also developed this specific process for processing their leaves.

About Klasek Tea View company

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1 Tasting Note

2038 tasting notes

Finally I decided to open those Bhutanese tea samples.
And I thought this may be very interesting and I was in a mood trying something unusual, maybe because I just came home “on time” and not late like other days; and moreover not so tired.

The dry leaf looks very unusual. It looks like burned leaves, there wasn’t any rolling or shaping; just dark, huge leaves. I may use this into the sipdown prompt! Well, afterall, you can check picture yourself. There are also stems and branches; fairly uncommon for loose leaf.

The aroma itself is also different than I am used to. No, this doesn’t smell like a black tea at all. Rather a shu. With extra salinity and something that reminds me manure. Very woody too.

Decided to brew it western, 4 minutes. It brews sooo dark. This is not a black tea. It’s a shu puerh, but not from Pu Erh region and not pressed.

Anyway, the taste is smooth, maybe almost flat (like not an explosion of flavours in the mouth); woody, wet forest floor and a bit mushroomy. Yes, again a flavors of shu, not a black tea. Aftertaste is a bit earthy and woody, which makes sense, considering the visual of the tea.

I have thought that the tea has more to offer; so I prepared also the second steep; this time 3 minutes brewing.
Definitely it has got potential to show me another impressions. It was dark as the first steep, but the flavour was more woody and earthy, with salt and mineral aftertaste. A bit like licking rock salt (yes, I did that). Not bad!

I’m definitely going to try this gongfu… with a little less leaf than I will be used to. But on the other hand, I don’t think I will try Bhutanese style. That’s prepared this way: into boiling water you throw the leaves, you let them steep in the boiling water, strain the leaves, add hot milk, butter and SALT. Yes, like the tea isn’t salty itself!

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 4 min, 0 sec 3 g 10 OZ / 300 ML
Martin Bednář

If interested, it’s still available: https://www.darjeeling.cz/cz/cerny-caj/bhutan-ja-aum-2714
435 CZK for 50 g
108 CZK for 10 g sample

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