I've been following your channel for several months, the production quality is amazing. also, your videos are unique because they combine some informational stuff, some topics to think about and your (well-argumented) thoughts. thank you for another amazing video!
@teaangleАй бұрын
Appreciate it. Thank you for watching 🙏
@carolinehuisman5037 ай бұрын
Found your channel recently. Very informative 🤗wish you had your shop in Austria instead of Australia 😉
@petermartinka92747 ай бұрын
Me too! :)) Nach Austria habe ich es nicht so weit. :))
@carolinehuisman5037 ай бұрын
@@petermartinka9274 👍🙏🏻
@petermartinka92747 ай бұрын
Du Karoline, schau mal den Tee aus dem Tea estate Arakai in Australia. Habe ich getrunken, war geschockt, unbelievable tea! :) Versuche es mal, wirst du nicht bereuen. LG. Peter aus der Slowakei.
@teaangle7 ай бұрын
Thank you. It's always humbling to know that people on the other side of the world are watching :)
@carolinehuisman5037 ай бұрын
@@petermartinka9274 Found the black Arakai tea in Munich. Complete different from any black tea I have tasted before. So nice to drink a tea which comes not from India, China, Japan etc. Great tea. Aftertaste is amazing!
@daangroeneveld53084 ай бұрын
I'm just drinking Yellow Tea Huang Xiao for the first time in my life, and it tastes to me like a category somewhere between Oolong and Green. Does this make sense, having in mind the extra oxidation steps, where Oolong also takes longer oxidation, or am I talking nonsense here? Also it has a quite smokey taste of it's own, or maybe I used too hot water... What would you advice for temperature and steeping time for Huang Xiao?
@teaangle3 ай бұрын
Makes complete sense. That extra wrapping/steaming step when producing Yellow Tea may have a similar effect to a partial oxidation, which is why you're getting certain notes similar to an Oolong tea. In terms of brewing temperatures, I'd go something similar to what you'd brew green tea - so try around 80 - 85ºC and see how you go
@teaformeplease7 ай бұрын
The only yellow teas that I've had that tasted dramatically different from green tea were from Yunnan
@teaangle7 ай бұрын
Yellow tea from Yunnan sounds interesting. Would love to see how it differs from (or are similar to) Yunnan green teas and Raw Pu'erh
@petermartinka92747 ай бұрын
I think you are right. If the producers of yellow tea did not sell their tea under the name "yellow", but gave it a standard name, for example green dragon huhu :), then no one would look for anything yellow in it. On the other hand, on the market, tea is already sold under the label yellow, so I would leave it as it is, with the fact that if the given tea did not taste really exceptional, then I would say: this is not yellow tea! There used to be a commercial like this, the guy took a drink of whiskey and said, This ain't Jim Beam! Something like this.
@teaangle7 ай бұрын
Yeah there's no turning back on this and Yellow tea is going to officially remain as a 6th category of tea. Gotta hand it to the originators though - they did try something different, something new (at the time), and it gives producers another lever to play with when producing great and interesting tea
@petermartinka92747 ай бұрын
@@teaangle I've been watching your channel continuously for 2? maybe even 3 years. I really appreciate the information you share about tea. I wish you a lot of success. Peter from Slovakia.
@teaangle7 ай бұрын
Thank you for the support. Much appreciated 🙏
@petermartinka92747 ай бұрын
@@teaangle You are welcome.
@johnsmith-ch7fg5 ай бұрын
This seems a bit of an acedemic debate; there is an additional process that seperates the two - whether it's a catagory or sub catagory isn't very important IMO esp when the tea catagories fail pretty regularly; Darjeelings esp. 1st flush aren't black and you will also see oolongs darker than blacks
@teaangle4 ай бұрын
It's purely an academic debate and topic completely up in the air for discussion. There is an additional process for yellow teas and yes, at times it does seem to make a difference, but then there are some yellow teas that taste no different than a green tea. Then again, that may just be a problem with the producer and perhaps it does take additional skills and expertise in order to make true yellow teas. As I said in the video, I'm more than willing to eat my words and be proven completely wrong :)