this post was submitted on 21 Nov 2023
8 points (90.0% liked)
Tea
199 readers
1 users here now
A community for discussions related to tea.
Group icon taken from Wikipedia user "Difference engine", licensed CC BY-SA 4.0
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
shrug I only just got into to tea and most of my information is from gong fu instructional videos. And the translations can be inconsistent. Black meaning fermented makes sense but unfortunately English names for tea arent complete or consistent.
Yeah, I get you. English just called everything black or green. I agree with the other posters to try and grab a dragon well type tea, and then aim for other loose leaf teas. Also make sure you're using the correct steep times and water temperature for the type of tea leaf you're using otherwise it will mess with the flavor. I have a precise temperature kettle for tea but many teas are fine at standard boiling temperature.
I follow the brand's instructions and use a digital thermometer. I saw people suggesting gunpowder tea which looks to be ball rolled leaves but isnt a specific sinensis variety or region. Is dragonwell a region or variety?
Dragon well is a variety of green tea from a specific region in mainland China (Longjing village, kinda like bourbon and champagne are regional products but not sure if the plant variety is actually different), usually lighter flavor, and a bit of smoke/nuts.
Oh! So dragon well is the literal translation. Long is dragon so Jing is probably well. Pretty epic name.
Yeah, I figured it'd be easier to search dragon well. It's one of the "premier" teas in China but there are a lot of other good ones. I just don't know them by specific name. The Pu'erh from Yunnan province is usually a nice woodsy/nutty flavor that I like but there's a ton of different brands