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Posts Tagged ‘jasmine dragon pearl’

The Tea Farm, located in Hawaii, explains that jasmine tea is made by layering green tea leaves and fully opened jasmine blossoms over each other. Apparently it takes six layers of alternating leaves and petals to effectively merge the scent of the jasmine with the tea leaves.

I have to confess that I did not know this. Previously I had been drinking jasmine tea with jasmine petals in it, and I had assumed that the petals in the tea did the scenting.

I decided to test Tea Farm’s Jasmine Dragon Pearl against the company’s description of the tea:

This jasmine pearl tea got its name from the shape of the tea leaves, where each individual leaf is hand-rolled and dried.

Actually it’s three leaves attached to a piece of stem that is rolled and dried. It definitely is hand rolled as I found a long black hair impaled in one of the pearls.

Back to the description:

Once you open the package you will be mesmerized with the beautiful aroma and this continues when brewed.

So I opened the package and took a whiff, and I do belive that I was indeed mesmerized.

This company’s instructions for brewing usually seem to be for the gong fu method; in this case they say to use 1 tablespoon per 8 ounces of water. I used half that much, and I was still able to make multiple   successful infusions.

The pearls opened slowly in the hot water, eventually revealing what I said above: this tea is composed of the first three leaves picked just below the third leaf.

I brewed the tea directly in my tea cup. The liquor was amazingly clear, and as the leaves were held together with some stem there was no fear of accidentally drinking them.

Now for that all important question: Did the mesmerizing aroma continue once the tea had been brewed?

For the first infusion the answer was definitely, “yes”. Even the second and third infusions had decent jasmine flavor.

In conclusion, I am a jasmine dragon pearl convert, in spite of the hair.

Roland Petrov

Dragon pearls are produced in China by hand rolling green tea leaves into pretty round balls that resemble oyster pearls in shape and size.

When infused with the scent of jasmine flowers, you get Jasmine Dragon Pearl.

Dragon pearls are best brewed in glass since part of the experience is to watch the pearls open up during the brew. Some claim that jasmine lowers cholesterol; whether or not this is true probably doesn’t matter much as studies have shown that tea itself has this effect.

When it comes to tea, Jasmine Dragon Pearl seems to have it all: it’s healthy, has a heady sweet scent and a beautiful floral flavor, and it’s visually interesting.

Roland Petrov

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