Vietnam 'Wild Boar' Black Tea

Tea type
Black Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Astringent, Bread, Citrus, Cocoa, Dark Bittersweet, Malt, Orange, Roasted Nuts, Smoke, Smooth, Thick, Wood, Cream, Forest Floor, Moss, Pine, Spicy, Sweet, Cedar, Dates, Fig, Honey, Black Pepper, Brown Toast, Butter, Camphor, Caramel, Cherry, Chestnut, Clove, Dark Chocolate, Dark Wood, Dried Fruit, Eucalyptus, Ginger, Mineral, Red Apple, Walnut, Fruity, Chocolate, Earth, Autumn Leaf Pile
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by What-Cha
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 2 min, 30 sec 4 g 8 oz / 236 ml

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From Our Community

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28 Tasting Notes View all

  • “My morning cuppa. Another of my 2017 teas that I’m working through, in a still-sealed 10g package. I usually brew 3.5g to 500ml but dropped it to 3.3g to try to more evenly split the leaf into...” Read full tasting note
    76
  • “I’ve never had a tea from Vietnam so I thought this would be fun to try. Black tea is my favorite and I found this one to be enjoyable, although you do have to watch you me steep time as it can get...” Read full tasting note
    79
  • “[Spring 2018 harvest] I found derk’s review of this tea match my experience very accurately, so I will be fairly brief. This tea is nice and all, but it didn’t really strike me as exceptional in...” Read full tasting note
    78
  • “Rejoice! First day of the rainy season! Let there be oil-slicked roads and accidents, landslides, lakes on 101 that span 3 lanes and potholes lurking underneath that eat cars for breakfast. Wash...” Read full tasting note
    85

From What-Cha

A brilliant wild growing black tea with a rich taste of chocolate and malt.
The wild growing tea leaves are picked by local hill tribes who bring the leaves into town where they are processed. The tea is named after the wild boar which roam the area.

Sourcing
All our Vietnamese teas have been sourced by Geoff Hopkins of Hatvala, who regularly travels Vietnam in search of the best teas, all of which are sourced direct from the tea producers.
It is Hatvala’s mission to raise awareness of the high quality Vietnamese teas which are often overlooked on the world market and it my pleasure to assist by making Hatvala’s full range of Vietnamese teas available on What-Cha.

Tasting Notes:
- Smooth texture
- Rich taste
- Taste of chocolate and malt

Origin: Nui Giang, Yen Bai Province, Vietnam

Tea Trees: Wild growing with an age between 200-800 years old

Tea Varietal: Camellia Sinensis var. Assamica

Altitude: 1400m+

About What-Cha View company

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28 Tasting Notes

83
3986 tasting notes

Woo, I got my What-Cha order! I forgot how many samples I ordered, and taking them out of the box made me feel a bit like Mary Poppins because they just kept coming. There was a little village of pouches on my coffee table by the time I was done unpacking. Thanks to Alistair for including two bonus samples and a lovely handwritten note! I admit, I ordered two Vietnamese teas mostly because the names were so epic! Seriously though, Wild Boar and Red Buffalo? Too awesome. The leaves of this tea are large and twisty, and there are a few golden tips included. Dry scent is malty and sweet but also savory in a way that I can’t describe.

The steeped cup smells rich and malty. Hmm, this is a simple but yummy tea. Definitely quite malty, and the texture is very thick and rich. I can definitely see a comparison to unsweetened dark baking chocolate or very dark cocoa powder. I have a hard time tasting chocolate when there’s no sweetness, but since I already read the description and know it’s supposed to be there, I can taste it. There’s perhaps a tiny bit of dried fruit flavor? Overall, it’s a strong tea with Assam-like intensity but without bitterness. Perhaps the tiniest touch of astringency?

Flavors: Cocoa, Dark Chocolate, Dried Fruit, Earth, Malt, Smooth, Thick

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 3 min, 0 sec 1 tsp 8 OZ / 236 ML
DeliriumsFrogs

That tea sounds really good…. and I agree on the name thing. So epic!

Cameron B.

The name is definitely appropriate one this one! Nice and strong, a wake-up tea. :P

Anlina

I love that Alistair sells 10g samples. Every time I order I have to restrain myself from getting a sample of everything, because individually they’re so reasonable, but there’s so many teas, and it adds up fast.

Cameron B.

Anlina, hah! Yeah I just got enough samples to bring me up to the $40 free shipping mark. ;)

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1719 tasting notes

Man, did I need caffeine this morning. So of course that means road blocks at every turn. The biggest hurdle was getting the CTC from yesterday out of my teapot. That won’t happen again.

So this smells malty, dry. It smells malty, and a little baked brownies, steeped. It tastes lightly malt and unsweetened chocolate. There is a much desired, by me this morning, briskness to it that starts at the front, early in the sip, and expands around to the sides. It drifts into a sharp finish. Along the way I sense a fruity taste like the Muscat of the Darjeeling I had a couple days ago.

Not a one note tea by any means but not super complex either. Perfect for my first couple cups of the morning.

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90
16 tasting notes

Tastes like a dark chocolate heavy on the fruit notes. Husband would not share, so I had to make my own mug.

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 3 min, 0 sec 5 g 14 OZ / 414 ML

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90
12 tasting notes

Very smooth black tea. It has a warm and dark aroma and taste. Both are very welcoming. It reminds me of Adagio’s Yunnan Jig. It’s a nice simple black tea that I could give to friends who aren’t into tea without having to go into much explanation about what they’re about to drink.

Flavors: Autumn Leaf Pile, Malt, Wood

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 3 min, 0 sec

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