• Can anyone identify this?

    From kludge@kludge@panix.com (Scott Dorsey) to rec.food.drink.tea on Wed Dec 9 16:28:39 2020
    From Newsgroup: rec.food.drink.tea

    What is this?

    http://www.panix.com/~kludge/tea_3.jpg

    The first character is clearly "gold" jin. But the other three I can't
    figure out. Boxwood?

    What am I drinking? It's some sort of light oolong.
    --scott
    --
    "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."
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  • From Lewis Perin@perin@panix.com to rec.food.drink.tea on Sat Dec 12 16:50:55 2020
    From Newsgroup: rec.food.drink.tea

    kludge@panix.com (Scott Dorsey) writes:

    What is this?

    http://www.panix.com/~kludge/tea_3.jpg

    The first character is clearly "gold" jin. But the other three I can't >figure out. Boxwood?

    What am I drinking? It's some sort of light oolong.

    ItrCOs Jin1 Tan2 Que4 She2, or [place name] Sparrow Tongue, which is a
    cultivar that I *think* is usually made into Long Jing style green tea.
    But IrCOm sure you can tell the difference between green and oolong.

    /Lew
    ---
    Lew Perin / perin@acm.org
    https://babelcarp.org
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  • From kludge@kludge@panix.com (Scott Dorsey) to rec.food.drink.tea on Mon Dec 14 14:45:32 2020
    From Newsgroup: rec.food.drink.tea

    Lewis Perin <perin@panix.com> wrote:
    kludge@panix.com (Scott Dorsey) writes:

    What is this?

    http://www.panix.com/~kludge/tea_3.jpg

    The first character is clearly "gold" jin. But the other three I can't >>figure out. Boxwood?

    What am I drinking? It's some sort of light oolong.

    ItrCOs Jin1 Tan2 Que4 She2, or [place name] Sparrow Tongue, which is a >cultivar that I *think* is usually made into Long Jing style green tea.
    But IrCOm sure you can tell the difference between green and oolong.

    Beautiful, many thanks! This is definitely an oolong, but it also might not
    be the original tea in this container either. I suspect now that it is not. --scott
    --
    "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis."
    --- Synchronet 3.21d-Linux NewsLink 1.2
  • From Warren Peltier@chuanming.chadao@gmail.com to rec.food.drink.tea on Tue Dec 22 10:24:35 2020
    From Newsgroup: rec.food.drink.tea


    http://www.panix.com/~kludge/tea_3.jpg
    ocaoYcocC*ei Jintan Queshe or Jintan Sparrow's Tongue.
    It's a green tea, not oolong. Fujian, Guangdong and Taiwan are the main (traditional) oolong tea producing areas. But now, other tea producing areas (Guizhou, for example) are starting to experiment with producing other tea types such as oolong.
    Here is the description of the tea on Baidu: https://baike.baidu.com/item/%E9%87%91%E5%9D%9B%E9%9B%80%E8%88%8C%E8%8C%B6/10102525?fromtitle=%E9%87%91%E5%9D%9B%E9%9B%80%E8%88%8C&fromid=655771&fr=aladdin
    It's produced in the Jintan District of Changzhou city in Jiangsu province. Here is a description of Jintan district on Baidu; complete with photo of the tea farm where your tea came from:
    https://baike.baidu.com/item/%E9%87%91%E5%9D%9B%E5%8C%BA/17540939?fromtitle=%E9%87%91%E5%9D%9B&fromid=4707410&fr=aladdin
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