While I enjoy subtler teas occasionally, I often find myself shying away from most white teas because I find them to be too delicate for my taste. So when T Ching featured this Indian white tea as part of its August online tasting, I reserved my opinion until I tasted it.
From Doke Tea in Darjeeling comes this 2nd flush white tea from the Kishanganj district of north eastern Bihar. This was to be my first white tea from the Darjeeling region, and it was a truly pleasant encounter.
The faces of Doke Tea (at least on the internet) have been its proprietor Mr. Rajiv Lochan and his nephew, Ankit Lochan. Before this tea, however, I have never known about Doke's own product line. This is partly because in addition to managing Doke, the uncle-nephew team is also in the wholesale business of other producers' teas through their Lochan Tea Limited enterprise. T Ching has in the past featured selections from the Lochan Tea Limited’s portfolio.
In addition to being in the tea business, they also manage a charitable organization, The Indus Foundation, which aims to improve the living conditions of the surrounding local districts.
Tasting Notes
2007 Doke "Kashanganj Snow Bud"
White Tea, 2nd Flush, Organic
Output: 50 kilograms per annum
Available for sale at T Ching Store
Dry leaf's appearance: Whole buds. Medium green and silver in color due to being covered in silvery down.
Nose: Refreshing. Of muscatel, passion fruits and exotic spices.
Taste: This Kashanganj white tea delivers a more upfront and assertive nose and taste than any Chinese white teas I have ever tasted. One smell and you can't miss that Darjeeling signature muscatel quality. Slightly grassy. The high notes and the judicious amount of acidity is refreshing and lively, giving oneself an energized feel after drinking it. It is medium to full bodied and smooth. Plenty of astringency and a touch bitter if brewed in a higher temperature water (90' C and above). The aftertaste is lingering and sweet in the back of the throat.
Wet leaf's appearance: Dark green with red streaks that indicates some oxidation was allowed to happen before halted.
Overall impression: This is a fine white tea with the unmistakable Darjeeling characteristics. It is also a white tea that stands well to high temperature brewing (> 90’C), as long as it is given a much shorter steeping time. Based on quality of the white tea sample that I received, I dare say that it is a tea worth pursuing and watching for in the future.
One of the attributes of Darjeeling tea that I find very pleasing is its acidity, which seems to bring liveliness to a tea. It also makes the tea highly compatible with many types of food, especially the rich tasting ones, by providing a juxtaposition of tastes.
4+ stars (vg - ex)
The following excerpt is by Mr. Rajiv Lochan:
On 1st June 1999 Indian Tea Board declared Kishangunj district of north eastern Bihar as a non-traditional tea growing area, though we had started planting tea little earlier in 1998 in Pothia block of this district.
Last month I was called by the Deputy chief minister regarding land and labour policy matters and came to know that Kishangunj was known as “poor man’s Darjeeling” since people who could not afford to go to Darjeeling in olden days could enjoy the beauty of Kanchenjunga from a little distance, that is Kishangunj.
Doke plantation, where these teas are grown is south of Jhapa and Illam districts of Nepal and south west of Darjeeling and snow capped mountains are about 25 kilometers as the crow flies, though the foothills are only 7 kilometers away. On a clear day one can have a panoramic view of Himalayas and if one is lucky evening setting sun lights up Mount Everest to be visible from Doke.
We have found burnt clay pottery broken pieces buried as deep as two feet all over the planting area and a legend says that during the ancient times of Virat kings who had Viratnagar as their capital and Thakurgunj as their river port on the banks of Mahananda river, there was a potters village in this location, which legendary Shrawan Kumar visited along with his blind parents and stayed overnight.
Bihar being the land of Buddha and full of ancient history, it seems history is repeating itself here in Doke and we wish to make full use of it."
Images, with the exception of the tasting session photos, were provided by and used with prior permission from Mr. Ankit Lochan of Doke Tea.
Other excellent reviews at: MarshalN, PalatabiliTEA, Perplexitea, T Ching
5 comments:
In those early years of 1990s when Dinajpur area was being opedup for tea planting by all the major or minor tea companies, a quirk of fate brought me in here, though personally I was so sad to be transferred from the cooler heights of Darjeeling mountains. My China soujourn taught me the art of making white teas and I tried this in Dinajpur which had nothing but clonal plantations full of very healthy and large buds with lots of pubescence,
Ankit did the wonderful job of presenting them thru T Ching and marketing them thru T Ching, Cargo & James, Wuyimountain Teas, Lotus Tea House etc.
Lets look for a bright future for these teas and thanks for your wonderful post which is a trendsetter in itself.
Today a team from China Tea Marketing Association visited us and its Vice Chairman leader Zhan Li Tan, who is also President of Fujian Province Tea association, appreciated these teas very much though at heart I am sure they will see these teas as grim compititor to their fujian white teas.
I too noticed the red streaks in the tea leaves, but they were all in the main vein of the leaf. For this reason, I regarded it as a phenotype of the leaf prior to processing. Do you think it suffered oxidation? Then it wouldn't be a white tea, I would think.
Mr. Lochan: I sincerely hope that your Doke white tea project will gain a following and success, as it deserves. It's unique and fine.
Also, mayhaps you could help by informing me and Perplexd of the oxidation level of your white tea. I remember the explaination you gave on Darjeeling's complex geo-biological (?) factors that lend the oolong's a certain oxidized appearance (red streaks), even though the tea was not subjected to high oxidation. I wonder if it applies here as well with your white tea. Thank you.
Perplexd: I think the rule of thumb is that white teas still receive a slight oxidation (10%-15%?), whereas green teas ideally do not (0%). There are conflicting opinions out there, and I will need to look into this matter. In the meantime, I hope Mr. Lochan can explain better about his tea. Thanks.
Oxidation starts the moment the leaf is plucked and the wound is exposed to the atmoshpheric oxygen. This is a natural process with any vegetation, and progresses with time before it is arrested by firing or drying in case of tea. Every tea - be it white, green, oolong or black - has some degree of oxidation. Even the finest has them.
So we can not shy away from some degree of oxidation in our whites too. Since there is no scientific way of ascertaining exact degree of oxidation, I am unable to give you a concrete answer, but it may very arount 5 to 10%.
Rajiv Lochan
Rajiv,
I would strongly agree with the oxidation comment. The moment the 'distressed' or broken leaf is exposed to oxygen the process of Oxidation begins. Personally, I feel the Doke White Tips and Buds are unique and very special! Keep up the great pioneering work.
Not only is the product great, you are doing GREAT things for the people of Bihar. Thanks! Tim Grover
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