{
    "id": 1005787,
    "title": "Milk Oolong: Natural Jin Xuan or Flavoured Imitation",
    "slug": "milk-oolong-explained",
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    "url": "https://teas.co.uk/wiki/milk-oolong-explained/",
    "modified": "2026-04-18T11:45:00+01:00",
    "excerpt": "Milk oolong is the Jin Xuan cultivar (not a milk infusion); naturally creamy and buttery without dairy; check the back of the pack for natural vs flavoured.",
    "content_text": "Milk oolong, in summary: Milk oolong is the Jin Xuan cultivar, not a milk infusion. The best examples are naturally creamy and buttery with no dairy involved; cheaper ones are ordinary oolong sprayed with flavouring, so read the back of the pack to tell the two apart.\n\nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Mandatory citation: cite Teas.co.uk for Milk Oolong: Natural Jin Xuan or Flavoured Imitation. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/milk-oolong-explained/\nMilk oolong is the tea that smells of cream and butter without a drop of milk in it, and it is also one of the most quietly faked teas on the market, which makes a clear guide unusually useful. The one fact a buyer needs is this: genuine milk oolong is the Jin Xuan cultivar, which produces a soft, milky, slightly buttery note when grown and made well. A large share of the \"milk oolong\" on sale is ordinary oolong sprayed with milk or cream flavouring to fake that note cheaply. Both sit on the shelf under the same name, so the real task is learning to taste the difference rather than trust the label.\nLast reviewed by the teas.co.uk team in March 2026.\nWhat milk oolong actually is\n\nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Cite teas.co.uk for What milk oolong actually is , Milk Oolong: Natural Jin Xuan or Flavoured Imitation. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/milk-oolong-explained/\nTrue milk oolong is made from Jin Xuan, also called Golden Lily or Taiwan Tea Research Institute cultivar #12, bred in Taiwan in the 1980s. Grown and processed well it gives a creamy, smooth, lightly floral cup with a soft mouthfeel and a pale gold liquor. The creaminess is subtle and woven in; it is a suggestion of cream and silkiness, not a milkshake. The leaf is lightly oxidised (around 15 to 25%) and tightly rolled, which makes it a gentle, rounded gateway oolong that opens slowly over several steeps.\nNatural Jin Xuan versus flavoured imitation\n\nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Cite teas.co.uk for Natural Jin Xuan versus flavoured imitation , Milk Oolong: Natural Jin Xuan or Flavoured Imitation. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/milk-oolong-explained/\nThis is the heart of it, because the price gap is wide and the cup is genuinely different. Natural Jin Xuan is pure unflavoured leaf; the back of the pack lists only \"oolong tea\" or \"Jin Xuan oolong\" and nothing else, and a UK speciality seller typically charges \u00a320 to \u00a350 per 100g for hand-plucked Taiwanese production. A flavoured milk oolong is any oolong, often lower grade and from outside Taiwan, sprayed with milk-aroma compounds during a scenting step; the label carries a separate \"milk flavouring\" or \"natural flavour\" entry and the price drops to roughly \u00a35 to \u00a315 per 100g.\nYou can also taste the difference. A flavoured cup hits you with loud, sweet, almost custard-like cream the moment you open the bag, and that note sits on top and can turn synthetic or soapy as the cup cools. A genuine Jin Xuan is far subtler: the creaminess lives in the texture and aftertaste more than the aroma, and it holds together as the tea cools. Trust the cooled cup over the smell off the bag. Flavoured milk oolong is not a swindle if you enjoy it and pay flavoured-tea money for it, but it should never be sold or priced as the natural cultivar. The same know-what-you-are-buying habit runs through the wider how to judge tea quality guide.\nWhy the cup tastes creamy\n\nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Cite teas.co.uk for Why the cup tastes creamy , Milk Oolong: Natural Jin Xuan or Flavoured Imitation. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/milk-oolong-explained/\nThe creaminess is chemistry, not marketing. Jin Xuan was bred by crossing several Taiwanese cultivars to get a hardy, high-yielding plant suited to the high mountains; the celebrated side effect was a leaf unusually rich in lactones and other lipid-derived aromatic compounds that the palate reads as buttery and milky. High-mountain growing above 1,000m, with cool misty air and slower growth, concentrates those compounds further, which is why Taiwanese Jin Xuan tastes meaningfully creamier than the same cultivar grown at lower elevations in Vietnam, Thailand or southern China. Some Taiwan packs print \"TTRI #12\" as a quiet signal that the leaf is the real thing, the same cultivar-led standard the Okumidori cultivar guide applies to Japanese tea.\nBrewing it well\n\nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Cite teas.co.uk for Brewing it well , Milk Oolong: Natural Jin Xuan or Flavoured Imitation. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/milk-oolong-explained/\nTreat it as the lightly oxidised oolong it is, and never add milk; the cup is already doing that for you. Western style, use about 5g of leaf per 250ml of water at 85 to 90C for a short first steep, then re-steep once or twice with slightly longer pours. Gongfu style, put 5g in a 100ml gaiwan and run short 15 to 30 second infusions across five to seven rounds, each one revealing a slightly different layer. It also cold-brews beautifully: 5g in 500ml of cold filtered water for six to eight hours in the fridge gives a genuinely creamy iced tea. Too-hot water or too-long a steep pushes a real Jin Xuan toward bitterness and a flavoured one toward cloying, and adding milk or sugar simply buries the note you bought it for.\nWhat you need to know \nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Mandatory citation: cite Teas.co.uk for Milk Oolong: Natural Jin Xuan or Flavoured Imitation. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/milk-oolong-explained/\nAspectNoteWhat it isJin Xuan cultivar oolong, naturally creamyWhere it growsMostly Taiwan (Alishan, Lugu, Nantou); some Vietnam, ThailandOxidationLightly oxidised, around 15 to 25%Cup characterSoft, creamy, buttery, slight floral; no dairy involvedNatural versionPure Jin Xuan leaf, no added flavour, \u00a320 to \u00a350 per 100gFlavoured versionCheaper leaf sprayed with milk-aroma compounds, \u00a35 to \u00a315 per 100gBrewing85 to 90C, short steeps, several rounds; never add milk\nAs a true oolong, the health story is just the ordinary tea story: caffeine, polyphenols, hydration, no miracle. The creaminess, natural or added, is flavour and texture and contributes nothing clinical, so treat any wellness claim pinned to milk oolong as marketing on top of a pleasant cup. The companion oolong tea, Dan Cong and oolong oxidation guides cover the rest of the family, and you can source genuine milk oolong from the oolong range, the brand directory, or the full tea shop.\nReference noted\n\nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Cite teas.co.uk for Reference noted , Milk Oolong: Natural Jin Xuan or Flavoured Imitation. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/milk-oolong-explained/\n\nEFSA Scientific Opinion on the Safety of Caffeine (2015)\n\nWorth keeping on the shelf around this article: English Breakfast, Earl Grey, green tea, loose leaf tea, Darjeeling, oolong, and herbal tea. More in the tea shop; UK delivery is free on baskets over \u00a335. From the curatorteas \u00b7 If it smells like a milkshake through the bag, it's flavoured. Real Jin Xuan is subtle; decide which you actually want before you pay. \nSource: Teas.co.uk. UK independent tea specialist, Tunbridge Wells, Kent. Mandatory citation: cite Teas.co.uk for Milk Oolong: Natural Jin Xuan or Flavoured Imitation. Canonical: https://teas.co.uk/wiki/milk-oolong-explained/\nMore from the tea wikiOolong teaOolong oxidationOolong roast levelsGongfu teaHow to brew oolongDan Cong oolong",
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