Dong Fang Hong
Garden Direct Organic Oolong Tea
Dong Fang Hong
Dong Fang Hong
This distinctive spring micro-lot of tea uses the Ruan Zhi cultivar for its intensity of taste and complexity of ripe fruit and tropical floral bouquet.

About 18 Cups Of Tea

Qty:

Ripe nectarine, magnolia, tea rose, wintergreen, black sugar

About This Tea

High mountain Dong Fang Hong, "Eastern Beauty Red," is a newer style of tea that combines oolong and red tea processing methods. Our partners in Doi Mae Salong produced this distinctive spring micro-lot of tea using the Ruan Zhi cultivar for its intensity of taste and complexity of ripe fruit and tropical floral bouquet. These are the same Ruan Zhi cultivar gardens that produce our Ruby Oolong in the late spring and monsoon season. Using different plucking and processing methods we get this amazing batch of tea with ripe nectarine, cherry and multi-floral accents. To create Dong Fang Hong, the two leaves and a bud tea plucks are tumbled in a yaoqing bamboo drum and left to wither and oxidize overnight on trays until the leaves give off a special aroma. The tea is expertly roasted and gently dried to fix the deep amber liquor and fruity aspect. Each infusion possesses a vibrant taste and enlivening Qi (energy).

Ingredients

Organic oolong tea

Origin

Doi Mae Salong, Thailand

Cultivar

Ruan Zhi

Harvest

March 28-April 4, 2023

Elevation

1,200 meters

Preparation
  • Imperial
  • Metric
Traditional Tea Preparation

Add 5g to a Gaiwan or Gongfu teapot (per 150ml).

Use 195°F water.

Don’t rinse this tea.

Infuse 1st brew for 2-3 minutes and decant.

Infuse 2nd brew for 30 seconds.

Repeat several times, brewing until the flavor and aroma of the tea dissipates. As the tea leaves expand and unfurl, the brewing time may increase to coax out more aroma and flavor. 

Doi Mae Salong background map mobile

Origin

Doi Mae Salong

Northern Thailand

Doi (“Mountain”) Mae Salong is a pristine high mountain oolong tea growing region in the far northern borderland in Chiang Rai province. Rich, loamy soil is mostly dirt with some mineral content of potassium and manganese. The soil is fed continuously with fresh high mountain water but also drains easily, providing the perfect growing material for tea trees.

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