Jasmine Silver Needle White Tea in Biodegradeable bags. Marrying the finest white tea with the fragrance of jasmine, this is a fantastically fresh and soothing tea.

 

Silver Needle is China’s finest white tea. Its perfect, downy buds are picked and sun dried in April, in the mountains of China’s Fujian Province. In August, the tea is laid beneath a bed of fresh jasmine flowers for seven consecutive nights, marrying the sweet white tea with fresh, fragrant jasmine aroma.

If you're looking for a great jasmine tea bag then these are the answer.

Use 1 tea bag per cup.
Infuse for 2-3 minutes.
Longer infusion may result in too strong a taste.
Due to its high quality, the tea may be infused 2-3 times.

Each bag is sealed for freshness in an individual envelope and contains the perfect amount of tea for a great cup.

China
Fujian
Jing
Tea Bags
Type
White, Scented
Region
China
Taste
Fragrant, Refreshing
Drink
Lunchtime, Afternoon
Caffeine
Moderate

Use 1 tea bag per cup, infuse with 80°C water for 2-3 minutes.
Due to its high quality, the tea may be infused 2-3 times.

Glass Tea Cup and Saucer

Glass Cup and Saucer

Glass Tea Cup and Saucer (300ml)

Our newly designed, hand-blown, exquisite glass cup and saucer. 

From £9.25 for Glass Tea Cup and Saucer

More Details

  • Delightful

    Ms Niamh Whiteley, 24 Mar 10

    5 stars rating
    Somebody bought these teas for the office and I discovered the Jasmine Silver Needle White Tea with glee!! The only problem I'm facing now is that it's proving horribly popular and I don't want to be forced to steal..but..??? So Jing: I'll hold you responsible for any eventualities! Super delicious tea in a bag (and it's true, you really can use the bag at least twice as I'm doing it now and it doesn't loose the deliciously soft smooth flavour) Will be ordering soon once stocks here deplete! thanks :-)
  • Brewing for this was simple....

    Geoff @ Teaviews.com, 8 Jul 10

    5 stars rating
    So proud are JING of their jasmine-scented offerings that the flower actually has its own category listing. Now that is love. While I can't share their adulation for jasmine in general, I will nod in approval at the combination of jasmine and Silver Needle. Past blends of these two I've tried met with palate approval. The two flavors just mix well. The aroma of the pyramid sachet plumed its blunt, blossomy goodness. Luckily, it wasn't overbearing like some jasmine greens I've had the misfortune of coming across. (Note to Tea Blenders: Strong jasmine scenting does NOT cover a poor-grade, vegetal green tea. It makes it worse.) I couldn't smell the Silver Needle aspect at all, but honestly, white tea doesn't have much of a scent to begin with. Especially Yinzhen. Brewing for this was simple and laid out per the vendor website; 1 teabag to 1 cup (likely 8oz) of hot water for up to three minutes. They did not stress a temperature observence, but to be on the safeside I went with 165F. Jasmine - if done wrong - could be powerfully pungent. Some like that sort of thing, I don't. I prefer it understated, and as such, brewed 8oz for two-minutes-thirty. After the conservative steep time, it brewed to a..."kinda" green color. One would have to really be looking to see it. I had my glasses on, thankfully. Silver Needle usually yields a pale infusion, but this was alarmingly so. The scent, however, was the exact opposite. It was a wallop of jasmine petal potency. Even by scented green tea standards, let alone white. The taste relieved me quite a bit. It, of course, had the floral "Falcon Punch" to it but settled into a berry-ish tone that was rather pleasant. White teas sometimes do take on fruit or berry notes alone with some residual nuttiness, usually when brewed exactly right. Going with the two-minute-thirty median paid off perfectly. This is the second (or third?) JING bag I've given a nine (or above?) to. I'm starting to look biased. Cut it out, guys.

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Produced in Fujian

map-china-fujian.gif

Fujian Province, China