Ying Hong No. 9

Tea type
Black Tea
Ingredients
Black Tea
Flavors
Fig, Maple Syrup, Plum, Strawberry, Astringent, Bitter, Cocoa, Drying, Malt, Tannin, Dark Bittersweet
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Daylon R Thomas
Average preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 2 min, 30 sec 5 g 8 oz / 236 ml

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3 Tasting Notes View all

  • “From Daylon R Thomas!  Thanks very much!  The first time I steeped this, I expected it to be light and tame, used two teaspoons and WOWZAs was that too much.  Too astringent. I should have read...” Read full tasting note
    91
  • “I tried again, shortening the time and…it’s still malty and bitter. I got heavy cocoa nibs in profile with a little bit more complexity, but that’s pretty much it. The malt was hitting me more. I’d...” Read full tasting note

From Spirit Tea

The Ying Hong N°9 big leaf cultivar was crossbred by a regional institute in the late 1950s to capture the most endearing elements of its native Guangdong’s Pearl River Delta terroir through the context of a black tea process. Ms. Tseng and Mr. Lin produce this lot completely free of agrochemicals, even using a proprietary, all-natural fertilizer blended on-site, rife with healthy microorganisms. The tea infuses a stark, vivid red and is full-bodied with structure, velvety smooth mouthfeel and a crisp, sweet finish. Notes of Caramel, Cacao Nibs, and Candied Strawberry.

Region: Yingde, Guangdong, China
Variety: Ying Hong N°9
Elevation: 150m
Harvest Date: 3/18/2021
Producer: Mr. Lin, Ms. Tseng
Brewing Recommendation: 5g | 340ml water | 205° | 2:30

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3 Tasting Notes

91
4181 tasting notes

From Daylon R Thomas!  Thanks very much!  The first time I steeped this, I expected it to be light and tame, used two teaspoons and WOWZAs was that too much.  Too astringent. I should have read Daylon’s notes before steeping it up!  (I tend to not do that though, so my flavor notes aren’t influenced by the power of suggestion…) So I vowed to try it again with one teaspoon and here we are. MUCH better.  The leaves are so big, hints of gold, nutty scent almost? Could be the cashews I had.  I didn’t expect it to be so rich, with such huge leaves.  The flavor in the first steep is wonderful and just dark and deep enough:  Plummy, fruity, a combo of sweet strawberry, fig.  But then a spice to it, a kick. Sweet like a pastry, cinnamon roll maybe.  I mean, the flavor notes seem so light and sweet but it’s a STRONG tea at the same time. But then I’m wondering if it’s contaminated from the tea in the infuser before. Very drying to the mouth.  The second steep it’s like impossibly, beyond dark maple syrup which sets my teeth abuzzin.  Syrupy both in flavor and mouthfeel.  Quite astringent even with a tame steep.  It’s quite unique.  Like a stronger Premium Taiwanese Assam.  Note to self: ONE TEASPOON.
Steep #1 // 1 teaspoon for a full mug // 20 minutes after boiling // 2 minute steep
Steep #2 // just boiled // 3 min

Album: Bettye Lavette – LaVette
Song: Don’t Get Me Started https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n04sbZXctjA

Flavors: Fig, Maple Syrup, Plum, Strawberry

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1705 tasting notes

I tried again, shortening the time and…it’s still malty and bitter. I got heavy cocoa nibs in profile with a little bit more complexity, but that’s pretty much it. The malt was hitting me more. I’d be curious to see someone else’s opinion of this tea. It’s too dense for my preferences, and I didn’t rebrew it past steep 2. I still have a lot of it on hand, and I really want to get rid of it. Maybe I can cream and sugar this bad boy up to see if it works better that way.

Flavors: Bitter, Cocoa, Dark Bittersweet, Malt, Tannin

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