Darjeeling tea

Darjeeling Oolong is a tea from India that basically imitates Formosa Oolong. The first experiment was made by Sumon Majumder of the HMP Group along with one of his tea friends, Karel Theima of Rotterdam Tea Trade, in 1991 at Namring Tea Estate in Darjeeling. The experiment took place for two weeks in the presence of Garden manager B. C. Tiwari. Sumon Majumder took some technical help from Theima and Tiwari and ultimately succeeded in making the ... more

Tea

Type:

Regions where grown:

top ↑

Similar topics in Freebase

  • Tieguanyin

    Tieguanyin

    Tie Guan Yin (simplified Chinese: 铁观音; traditional Chinese: 鐵觀音; pinyin: tiěguānyīn; Min Nan POJ: Thih-koan-im; Cantonese Jyutping: tit3 gwun1 yam1; literally meaning iron guanyin) is a premium variety of Chinese oolong tea associated with Anxi in Fujian province. Named after the bodhisattva...
  • Tieluohan tea

    Tieluohan tea

    Tieluohan is a Si Da Ming Cong and a light Wuyi tea. Tie Luo Han, all but unknown abroad, is the cultivar responsible for one of the four most famous yan cha, the great "rock teas" grown on cliffs in the Wuyi Shan area of Northern Fujian. Legend tells that this tea was created by a powerful warrior...
  • Jin Suo Chi tea

    Jin Suo Chi tea

    Jin Suo Chi (金鎖匙; literally "Golden Key") is a very rare Wuyi Oolong with a light taste.
  • Huang Mei Gui tea

    Huang Mei Gui tea

    Huang Mei Gui Oolong tea (黃玫瑰, pinyin: huáng méi guī) is a very new Wuyi Oolong tea, developed circa 2002. It has a highly aromatic fragrance and a lighter floral taste than most other Wuyi Oolongs. The colour of the steeped leaves is a very light green, much greener than other Wuyi teas.
  • Jin Fo tea

    Jin Fo tea

    Jin Fo is a very new Wuyi Oolong tea, developed around 10 years ago at the Wuyi Shan Tea Researching Center located in Fujian Province, China. It is a medium Wuyi Oolong showing both creaminess and a floral aftertaste. The tea leaves have a uniform emerald green colour.
  • Da Hong Pao tea

    Da Hong Pao tea

    Dà Hóng Páo (大红袍) is a very important Wuyi Red tea. Legend has it that the mother of a Ming Dynasty emperor was cured of an illness by a certain tea, and that emperor sent great red robes to clothe the four bushes from which that tea originated. Three of these original bushes, growing on a rock on...
  • Shui Jin Gui tea

    Shui Jin Gui tea

    Shui Jin Gui is a very characteristic Wuyi Oolong tea, whose name literally means Golden Marine Turtle. The tea produces a bright green color when steeped and is much greener than most other Wuyi Oolong teas. It is one of the four famous bushes of Wuyi, a Si Da Ming Cong.
  • Dong Ding tea

    Dong Ding tea

    Dong Ding (simplified Chinese: 冻顶; traditional Chinese: 凍頂; pinyin: dòngdǐng) is an Oolong tea from Taiwan, which comes from some tea plants that were taken from the Wuyi Mountains in China's Fujian province. The name of the tea means "Frozen Summit." Floral with hints of honey and very long,...
  • Fo Shou tea

    Fo Shou tea

    Fo Shou (佛手; pinyin: fó shǒu; literally "Buddha's hand") is a Yongchun (永春; pinyin: Yǒng Chūn) and Wuyi Oolong tea with a light and somewhat peculiar taste. It is also produced in Taiwan. According to Babelcarp (citation below), Fo Shou is an alternate name for xiāng yuán (香橼).
  • Bai Ji Guan tea

    Bai Ji Guan tea

    Bai Ji Guan (simplified Chinese: 白鸡冠; pinyin: bái jī guān) is a Si Da Ming Cong and a very light Wuyi tea. It is named after a rooster who gave up its life whilst protecting a child. Legend has it that the name of this marvellous tea (White Cockscomb) was given by a monk in memorial of a courageous...

These people have edited this topic:

Edit this topic
Edit and Show details

Add or delete facts, download data in JSON or RDF formats, and explore topic metadata.

Freebase Logo
What is Freebase?

Freebase is a huge collection of facts, built by people like you. Freebase connects facts in ways other sites can't, giving you new ways to explore millions of subjects.
You can help improve it!

Freebase Attribution

Freebase data is free for use under the CC-BY license.

The original description for Darjeeling tea was automatically generated from Wikipedia.org licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License.
[1]
Learn more about Freebase licensing and attribution