What Is Black Jasmine Song Tea?
Black Jasmine Song is a naturally scented black tea from Anhui province in eastern China — not a jasmine-flavored tea, but a traditionally scented one. The distinction is fundamental: flavored teas apply flavoring compounds to the dry leaf; naturally scented teas use real jasmine flowers to transfer their fragrance to the tea leaves through direct contact before the flowers are removed.
The "Song" in the name refers to Song Luo Mountain in Anhui province — a high-altitude growing area in a region that has produced celebrated teas for centuries. The base black tea is grown at altitude, hand-rolled, and fully oxidized before the scenting process begins. The jasmine scenting transforms the already-excellent black tea base into something that occupies a unique position in the catalog: the depth and body of a premium Chinese black tea with jasmine's extraordinary floral character as a second dimension alongside it rather than replacing it.
Why Black Jasmine Song Is Scored 98
A score of 98 from 161 customers represents one of the most consistent quality signals in the Adagio catalog. Unlike teas with thousands of reviews where the score represents a statistical average across enormous variance, 161 reviews at 98 means that almost every person who has tried this tea has given it a near-perfect or perfect score. That kind of consistency typically indicates a tea with a very specific, very achieved flavor profile rather than a broadly appealing but slightly imperfect one.
What makes Black Jasmine Song specifically exceptional is the combination: the Song Luo Mountain growing altitude, the hand-rolling, the full oxidation, and the traditional multi-cycle jasmine scenting together produce a cup that none of those elements achieves alone. The red fruit and spice character of the base tea, the subtle jasmine lift, and the smooth finish create a layered experience that stands apart from both plain Chinese black teas and the more familiar jasmine green tea tradition.
Natural Jasmine Scenting vs. Jasmine Flavoring: Why It Matters
The jasmine character in Black Jasmine Song comes from real night-blooming jasmine flowers (Jasminum sambac) rather than jasmine flavoring compounds. This distinction matters for three specific reasons:
- The fragrance is living — jasmine flowers release their fragrance most intensely at night when they open. Traditional jasmine scenting layers fresh, unopened jasmine buds with tea leaves in the evening and allows the flowers to open overnight, releasing their natural fragrance into the tea leaves as they do. The flowers are then removed in the morning before their fragrance begins to fade. Multiple cycles of fresh flowers are applied for premium grades, building the jasmine character gradually rather than applying it all at once.
- The character is more complex — natural jasmine fragrance contains over a hundred volatile aromatic compounds, many of which are present only in the live flower and absent from any synthetic or extracted jasmine flavoring. The resulting scent in naturally scented tea is warmer, more complex, and more genuinely floral than artificial jasmine ever achieves.
- The character persists across steepings — natural jasmine scenting impregnates the tea leaf with fragrance compounds that have bonded to the leaf material. A naturally scented jasmine tea produces a recognisable jasmine character on the second and even third steeping; artificially flavored jasmine teas lose almost all jasmine character after the first steep.
Black Jasmine Song Flavor Profile
- Mahogany-hued liquor — the visual character before the first sip. Deeper and richer in color than standard Chinese black teas, reflecting the hand-rolling and full oxidation of the Song Luo Mountain base.
- Red fruit notes — a warm, slightly jammy fruitiness in the mid-palate that comes from the Anhui black tea base rather than the jasmine. This is the natural character of well-grown, properly processed Chinese black tea from high altitude — similar in origin to the Yunnan teas in the catalog but with a distinctly Anhui expression.
- Hints of spice — a gentle, warming spice note that gives the cup complexity beyond the fruit-and-jasmine combination. Not assertive; present as a background dimension that deepens the overall profile.
- Soft, subtle jasmine — the defining character of the tea, but deliberately restrained. The jasmine in Black Jasmine Song is a dimension of the cup rather than the entire cup — it scents the tea rather than flavoring it. The first sip tastes of Chinese black tea with jasmine; subsequent sips reveal the way the jasmine and the tea base have integrated into something neither would produce alone.
- Smooth finish — the cup ends cleanly and softly, with the jasmine character lingering slightly longer than the black tea base's more immediate presence. The finish is one of the most pleasurable qualities of naturally scented jasmine tea and the quality most difficult to replicate with flavoring.
Black Jasmine Song vs. Jasmine Phoenix Pearls
Two naturally jasmine-scented teas exist in the Adagio catalog, and the comparison clarifies what each offers:
- Black Jasmine Song (scored 98, 161 reviews) — black tea base from Anhui's Song Luo Mountain. Full oxidation produces a medium-bodied cup with red fruit, spice, and subtle jasmine. Richer, more full-bodied, and better suited to any context where a black tea's depth and caffeine level is appropriate. The jasmine as a complementary note on a robust black tea base.
- Jasmine Phoenix Pearls (from the green tea catalog) — green tea base, naturally scented with jasmine. Lighter, more delicate, and more purely jasmine-forward than Black Jasmine Song. The jasmine character is more prominent because the green tea base is subtler. Better suited to afternoon contexts and anyone who wants a primarily jasmine experience with tea as support.
The choice between them comes down to what role the tea base plays: if you want jasmine tea with genuine black tea body and depth, Black Jasmine Song. If you want jasmine tea at its most purely floral and delicate, Jasmine Phoenix Pearls.
Song Luo Mountain and Anhui Province
Anhui province in eastern China is one of the most celebrated tea-producing regions in the country — the home of Keemun (Qimen) black tea and several of China's most famous green teas. Song Luo Mountain (松萝山) specifically has a centuries-old reputation as a premium tea-growing site: the mountain's elevation, misty conditions, and mineral-rich soil produce tea leaves with the natural complexity and aromatic potential that makes them well-suited to the jasmine scenting process.
High-altitude cultivation on Song Luo Mountain means cooler temperatures and slower leaf development, which concentrates the natural aromatic compounds and flavor precursors in the leaf — the same conditions that make high-mountain oolongs from Taiwan so valued. The altitude is part of what gives Black Jasmine Song's base tea its natural red fruit and spice character before the jasmine scenting begins.
How to Brew Black Jasmine Song Tea
- Water temperature — 212°F (100°C), fully boiling. The fully oxidized black tea base needs boiling water for proper extraction.
- Leaf quantity — one teaspoon (2–3g) per 8oz cup. The hand-rolled leaves are dense; measure by weight rather than visual volume for consistency.
- Steep time — 3 minutes for the first steep. The jasmine character is most vibrant at the shorter steeping end; extended steeping at boiling temperature can progressively diminish the more delicate jasmine aromatics while the black tea base continues to extract. Three minutes is the sweet spot where the jasmine and the base tea character are most fully and equally expressed.
- Multiple steepings — Black Jasmine Song yields 2–3 good steepings. The second steeping typically shows more of the red fruit base character and slightly less jasmine intensity; the third brings out the spice dimension most clearly. The persistence of the jasmine across multiple steeps is one of the distinguishing qualities of natural scenting over flavoring.
- Plain — strongly recommended. The layered red fruit, spice, and jasmine profile is best appreciated without milk, which would mask the more subtle dimensions of a tea scored 98 specifically because of those subtleties.
- Glass vessel — a glass teapot or clear glass mug allows the dark, hand-rolled leaves to be seen during steeping and the mahogany liquor to be appreciated before the first sip.
Black Jasmine Song Tea Caffeine Content
Black Jasmine Song contains approximately 40–70mg of caffeine per 8oz cup — the standard black tea range. The jasmine scenting process does not affect caffeine content; caffeine comes from the black tea base only. As a fully caffeinated black tea, Black Jasmine Song is best suited to morning and afternoon consumption for anyone who monitors evening caffeine intake.
Black Jasmine Song as a Gift
Black Jasmine Song is the most impressive single-tea gift in the Adagio black tea catalog for a specific type of recipient: anyone who appreciates quality tea at the finest level — where a score of 98 is the most honest signal of what the tea delivers. The naturally scented jasmine character, the Song Luo Mountain origin story, and the distinctive mahogany cup are all elements that serious tea drinkers immediately recognise as exceptional.
For anyone who already drinks and enjoys jasmine tea in any form — jasmine green tea, jasmine pearls, or any jasmine blend — Black Jasmine Song is the step-change upgrade that demonstrates what naturally scented jasmine tea from a premium origin can be. The 3oz pouch at $29 (makes approximately 37 cups) is the right gift size: substantial enough to allow the recipient to explore multiple steepings and brewing approaches, premium enough to communicate genuine investment in the gift. Pair with a glass teapot for a complete gift that lets the hand-rolled leaves and mahogany liquor be seen as well as tasted.
Buy Black Jasmine Song Tea Online
Order Black Jasmine Song loose leaf tea online — naturally jasmine-scented black tea from Song Luo Mountain, Anhui province, scored 98 by 161 customers, from 47¢ per cup. Free shipping on qualifying orders. Available in sample, 3oz, and 16oz loose leaf pouches and in pyramid teabag format. Delivered from Adagio's New Jersey warehouse within one business day.