Golden Bridge Brand
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This was originally purchased by my sister some years back (!) when she’d traveled to the Far East – the container held 8 oz of tea, though I only have half of that now. I’d thought it was jasmine tea, because that’s its taste, but I see no flowers among the green tea.
Here is where I sadly betray my lack of wider experience with authentic Chinese teas.
Someone else here had a different Golden Bridge Brand tea, and described its container to match this one: golden with a small red label near the top which read Golden Bridge Brand. There are also two green oval stickers, one on each side, right at the line where the lid meets the body. These show when the container has been opened, which is undoubtedly why they’re there.
Most of the label is in Chinese, though in the middle (sideways, so it visually matches the direction of the Chinese characters) the English words “GUAN YIN – WORLD SHARING TEA – The famous of China”. So at first I thought it was Guan Yin tea.
But then on the bottom of the container is a white label which says MO LI HUA TEA. So that’s what I’m calling it, since in trying to find it here at the Steepster database, I found other Mo Li Hua teas, which taste like jasmine.
Was it good? Yes, even though I don’t even know how old it is. Sadly, my sister passed away going on four years ago, so I cannot ask her when and where she got it. Since she was moving to a different state when she gave it to me, I wasn’t focused on finding out more at the time.
But it’s a very good quality. I chilled some of it because of the July 3rd Air Conditioning Appreciation Day sip down suggestion of drinking a tea cold, combined with another suggestion “your oldest green”. If you find it, or are gifted some, it’s worthy of your time. I do recommend it.
Flavors: Green, Herbaceous, Jasmine, Sweet, Warm Grass, Tea
Preparation
This is only the third Puer style tea I have tried, but if it were the only one it might have put me off the style. This is a review of an infusion after a 1 minute “rinse” infusion, which I discarded because it smelled like pile flavor.
This is another shou puerh, and it seems like it’s maybe not high quality given how cheap it was, $8.50USD for 227 grams at the Vietnamese grocery store, which should have been a red flag, but I have heard this brand being described as decentm. It comes in a big plastic bag that is not resealable. The leaves are pretty huge, which is odd.
Color of the liquor is very dark brown, almost black.
Flavor is okay. Not very complex. Smooth, mild flavor kind of like other shou Puerh I have tried, but not many of the more complex notes, at least on the first try. I would need to get to know this tea to say more. There is a slight rainwater or pondwater note to it, like the green and wet smell of water with algae in it, is maybe the worst aspect. But it is rich and soothing like other puerhs. It seems to have a fair amount of caffeine in it. The aftertaste is almost citrusy, from the tea oils.
Overall not a great tea, but perfectly serviceable. The tin says “Yunnan Pu Er” and it does indeed seem to be a Puerh style tea, that probably did come from somewhere in Yunnan province, although there is no other indicator of quality. If you gamble on this expecting a really high quality tea you will be disappointed, but if you temper your expectations you will probably enjoy this tea alright.
Flavors: Algae, Autumn Leaf Pile, Citrusy
Preparation
Found this Chinese Pu Er at a local Vietnamese market.
Package is cylindrical, ca. 7" tall and 4" in diameter.
Label colors are mostly dark yellow and burgundy/rust with a green and white oval sticker as a safety precaution to show that package has not been opened.
Lid pops off too quickly with a turn.
Mylar bag inside with loose tea. Nothing in package to reclose the mylar bag. Large leaves. Friendly, slightly inviting smell of a light brown, tiny bit fruity pu erh, and the smell of cardboard.
First sip. Mild. Tastes of cardboard.
Wonder how flavor- and smell-protective the mylar is. Cardboard is not.
Second more focussed sip.. Cardboardy taste is very there.
Reminds me of drinking tea made from tea bags that have been exposed to the air for weeks or months.
Gulping from the back of the mouth, to see if different taste buds change my impression. No. The tea still has and leaves a cardboard aftertaste.
There is another taste of a mild, pleasant, very-on-the-cheap-side pu erh.
Not completely undrinkable, but, if someone had a better choice, this one could be used for poultices or compost or ???
I rarely toss a tea after so few swallows. But, this one is now in the trash.
Flavors: Cardboard, Dirt, Dust, Fruity
Yeah, sometimes jasmine teas include the jasmine flowers, and sometimes it’s just an aroma-infusion. Both can be legit.