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Description of a general impression of the tea
- Aromatic: this is said of a liqueur that is strong and high in flavour.
- Astringent: having a rather harsh and rough quality in the mouth, caused by tannins.
- Biting: this denotes a tea which is both astringent and sour and that leaves a strong and lasting impression.
- Bitter: one of the five flavours. Normal for some teas that are high in tannin. Bitterness has the tendency to develop if the tea is left to infuse for too long.
- Body: characteristic of a beverage that marries a good constitution (robust) with warm aromas.
- Complex: this denotes a very rich mix of aromas, of great subtlety.
- Creamy: see mellow.
- Delicacy: the quality of a delicate liqueur with many, subtle aromas.
- Flavourful: this is said of a liqueur with strong, rich flavours.
- Flowing: denotes a smooth, pleasant beverage, with no harshness. Used to refer to teas with a low tannin content.
- Frank: this denotes teas whose characteristics (colour, scent, flavours, aromas…) are well defined and express themselves unfailingly and without ambiguity.
- Fresh: this is said of slightly sour teas that give a feeling of freshness.
- Frivolous: this is said of teas that are both rich in aromas and short in the mouth. They give a feeling of fleetingness.
- Full in the mouth: giving a very pleasant sensation and filling the mouth well. See also round.
- Full-bodied: said of a beverage that has body.
- Generous: rich in aromas, while not being tiring, which can be the case with heady teas.
- Glutinous: one of the five flavours, never found in tea. It can be detected above all in a majority of Asian dishes since it is associated with the presence of glutamates in food.
- Greenness: a fresh and green quality.
- Harsh: a biting sensation, a little rough, caused by tannins.
- Heady: this is said of a beverage that is high in spicy and flowery aromas.
- Invigorating: a characteristic of young, green tea, where there is a pronounced sour note.
- Iodised: a note found in certain teas such as Japanese green teas.
- Light: this is said of a tea that is not very full-bodied, with a low tannin content.
- Lively: this is said of a tea whose characteristics are well defined, with a slight hint of sourness.
- Long in the mouth: this is said of a tea in which the aromas leave a pleasant and long-lasting impression in the front and the back of the mouth after tasting.
- Mellow: this is said of a tea that is both round in the mouth and slightly sour. See also creamy, silky.
- Mild: this is said of beverages whose flavour is slightly sweet, punctured perhaps by a hint of acidity, but which have no astringency. See mellow, velvety, silky.
- Odorous: this is said of a beverage or an infusion with many strong scents.
- Pointed: see sharp.
- Powerful: denotes a full-bodied, long-lasting liqueur.
- Raw: green and sourer than the average.
- Refined: this is said of a tea whose scents, flavours and aromas are both delicate and subtle.
- Robust: this is said of a predominantly tannic beverage, which fills the mouth well. See round, full.
- Rough: this is said of a tea that is very astringent, often of bad quality or else has been infused for far too long.
- Round: this is said of a liqueur in which the smoothness and mellowness give an impression of roundness in the mouth.
- Roundness: the quality of a liqueur that fills the mouth in a spherical way.
- Salted: one of the five senses. Non-existent in tea that contains absolutely no sodium.
- Sharp: this is used to refer to a very lively beverage, in which there is an obvious fresh and sour note, almost spicy, and in which each aroma is delicately expressed.
- Short in the mouth: leaving few traces in the front or the back of the mouth after tasting.
- Silky: this denotes a smooth and mellow tea, with a touch of harmony, bringing to mind the smoothness of silk.
- Slippery: see flowing
- Smooth: denotes a beverage without harshness, owing to the lack of tannins. See slippery, flowing.
- Sour: this is one of the five flavours. It is found in some green teas, Wu Long (oolong) and spring Darjeeling, to which it gives freshness and liveliness.
- Strong: a rather vague term, which usually denotes a full-bodied, highly coloured liqueur.
- Sturdy: denotes a tea whose constitution is very robust. A quality that can be softened with milk.
- Subtle: this denotes a tea with delicate and complex scents and aromas.
- Supple: this is said of a liqueur where the mellowness overcomes the astringency. See slippery, flowing.
- Sustained: this denotes an aroma that stays in the mouth for a long time.
- Sweet: one of the five flavours, which can be detected sometimes in certain very light, green teas from China. Rather rare, except in Ama Cha.
- Tannic: this is said of a liqueur with a high tannin content.
- Velvety: this is said of a smooth, velvety liqueur, almost sweet.
- Vigorous: this is said of a tea that is both astringent and lively, whose presence is immediately felt in the mouth.
- Vivacious: this is said of a fresh, light beverage with a hint of sourness that is slightly, but not excessively, dominant. All in all very pleasant.
- Voluptuous: used to refer to a beverage that is full, round and long-lasting in the mouth.
- Warm: denotes spicy, woody aromas married to flavour that is totally lacking in acidity; by extension it is used to describe beverages having these qualities.
- Young: this denotes teas that were plucked early and which have a green, slightly sour character.
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