Lu Shan Clouds & Mist

Tea type
Green Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
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Caffeine
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Certification
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Edit tea info Last updated by Teafreak
Average preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 1 min, 30 sec

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6 Tasting Notes View all

  • “Backlogging. I’m tired of wanting to do these reviews and still not doing them (because I don’t have much to say about them, and the tea is long done been drunk up). So I am going to knock a bunch...” Read full tasting note
    72
  • “I am in green tea mood lately. The description of this tea says that it has a sweet taste. They weren’t kidding. The taste is very hard to describe. The sweetness is there, It is an ethereal...” Read full tasting note
    96
  • “This is a very delicate and delicious tea, but unfortunately it can only be steeped about 3 times effectively before is losses quite a bit of flavor.” Read full tasting note
    78
  • “Have been tucking into the 2010 harvest of this tea lately. My perspective on green tea aging has changed a little bit. I don’t think every green can handle time, but some of them manage to keep...” Read full tasting note
    80

From Tea Trekker

Lu Shan is from Jiangxi Province, which along with Anhui and Zhejiang create the Golden Triangle of eastern China green tea production. The name Clouds & Mist refers to the lush, verdant growing conditions of this environment. Lu Shan is blessed with ample water ( from the Yangtze River and Lake Poyang ) that, coupled with the climate conditions creates vast blankets of soft, nurturing ‘clouds and mist’ which keeps the tea bushes well hydrated. This results in sweet, tender buds and leaves that are filled with abundant plant nutrient and sweet flavor. Because of the natural beauty of the mountain, Lu Shan is a high level resort area. When we visited Lu Shan, we discovered that this tradition gained speed when both Chiang Kai-chiek and Mao Zhedong built summer cottages on the mountain. During the Tang dynasty ( 618-907 ) the sage and Father of Tea, Lu Yu, wrote of the delicious nature of Lu Shan Clouds & Mist tea. Today, this tea is continues to enjoy over 2,000 years of production history. Forty percent of the tea comes from village tea farms and leaf that is deemed not good enough to be Lu Shan Clouds & Mist becomes other local green teas.

Steep 2-3 infusions at 2 minutes each.
Water temperature should be 170° – 180° F

About Tea Trekker View company

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6 Tasting Notes

72
171 tasting notes

Backlogging. I’m tired of wanting to do these reviews and still not doing them (because I don’t have much to say about them, and the tea is long done been drunk up). So I am going to knock a bunch of ‘em out by keepin’ ’em simple.

Experience buying from Tea Trekker http://steepster.com/places/2820-tea-trekker-online-northampton-massachusetts

I liked this tea. Can’t get any simpler than that, now can ya!?

Preparation
170 °F / 76 °C 1 min, 0 sec
Daisy Chubb

Sometimes, in the words of Monokuro Boo: Simple is best. :)
(I love your long reviews, and your short reviews!)
http://www.sky-wallpaper.com/uploads/2011-04/monokuro-boo-wallpaper/1303696020-988NU2U.jpg

SimpliciTEA

Cute little buggers.

Thanks for your kind words! : – )

Azzrian

I agree – not every review needs to be spectacular nor do all teas merit it. Sometimes a good tea is just good because its simple. :)

SimpliciTEA

Delete less than a minute ago

Thanks, Azzrian. To be honest part of my reluctance to review these Tea Trekker teas is that I can’t really remember much about them, and they are long gone, so I feel a little guilty that I can’t do them justice; and that’s compounded by my perfectionism—I expect more from myself then just saying, “It was good.” shrugs Not much I can do about it now, though.

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96
25 tasting notes

I am in green tea mood lately. The description of this tea says that it has a sweet taste. They weren’t kidding. The taste is very hard to describe. The sweetness is there, It is an ethereal sweetness that you don’t really notice at first but the longer you leave it in your mouth the sweeter it becomes. It never becomes too heavy or even too sweet, at least on the first steep. It is just right.

The smell is hard to pin down. It is slightly floral, and I know I have smelled something similar before but what it smells like evades my memory right now.

The liquor is very light green. The tea gives you a sort of calming stress float away sensation, just as it should.

I brewed it for 2 minutes at roughly 175 F, using two heaping tablespoons just as it said to use.

In summary, I am not a green tea expert but this is one of the most elegant green teas I have ever tasted. It is light and airy with an ethereal sweetness to it that only gets better the longer you leave it in your mouth.

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 2 min, 0 sec
Teafreak

Agreed, I think this was my favorite of the samples I bought from tea trekker

Fred

I bought a 1/4 pound of this tea and I’m sure glad it wasn’t just a sample with the way it tastes.

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78
62 tasting notes

This is a very delicate and delicious tea, but unfortunately it can only be steeped about 3 times effectively before is losses quite a bit of flavor.

Preparation
170 °F / 76 °C 1 min, 30 sec
Fred

I usually only get 2 maybe 3 infusions with most of my green teas. They just don’t hold up that well for multiple infusions. I would suggest trying some of the less oxidized orchid oolongs if you want something that you can steep multiple short times. They are hardy enough to be steeped multiple times but light enough to still have that mellow delicate taste you are looking for.

Teafreak

Agreed, I usually steep my greener oolongs about 6-7 times if possible. Usually though I can get 3-4 steeps out of high quality greens, but this one is a pre qing-ming green so it comes really early in the season

Fred

Teafreak what are your thoughts on teatrekker? I think they have great quality tea and they are very knowledgeable and know how to treat their customers, even online customers right. Have you had the same level of service I have had?

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80
240 tasting notes

Have been tucking into the 2010 harvest of this tea lately. My perspective on green tea aging has changed a little bit. I don’t think every green can handle time, but some of them manage to keep much of their character and evolve a little in pleasant ways. This one is drinking fine after a year. I eventually burn out on the charcoal, toasted chestnut, and mineral-forward elements of almost any Chinese green, but in the meantime, this provides a light, crisp, refreshing spring brew.

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85
12 tasting notes

This is a pretty good tea. It has a fairly ‘green’, grasslike taste. It’s refreshing.

I tried the 2017 harvest.

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81
2 tasting notes

This is a rather amazing tea, nuanced and full of flavor. If prepared really well, the first sip is almost shocking; the buttery note really comes through. However, I have only prepared it this well once. This tea is very easy to get wrong. After doing some searching, I found the “top-down” method worked really quite well in a glass or gaiwan. This involves dropping the tea leaves into the glass with the water already poured, watching them fall to the bottom and opening up.

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 1 min, 0 sec

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