Baggy
An unpleasant taste, normally resulting from the tea being carried or wrapped in unlined hessian bags. Bakey
An over-fired tea with the result that too much moisture has been driven off the leaf while drying.Bitter
An unpleasant taste associated with raw teas.Body
A liquor having both fullness and strength as opposed to being thin.Brassy
Unpleasant metallic quality similar to brass. Usually associated with unwithered tea.Bright
Denotes a lively fresh tea with good keeping quality.Brisk
The most live characteristic. Results from good manufacture.Burned
Taint caused by extreme over drying during manufacture.Character
An attractive taste, specific to growth origin describing teas grown at high altitude.Coarse
A tea producing a harsh undesirable liquor with taste to match.Coloury
Indicates useful depth of colour and strength.Common
A very plain light and thin liquor with no distinct flavour.Cream
A natural precipitate obtained as the liquor cools down.Dry
Indicates slight over-firing or drying during manufacture.Dull
Not clear, lacking any brightness or briskness.Earthy
Normally caused by damp storage of tea but can also describe a taste that is sometimes climatically inherent in teas from certain regions.Empty
A liquor lacking fullness. No substance.Flat
Not fresh, usually due to age of the tea tends to lose its characteristics and taste with age, unlike some wines which age, unlike some wines which mature with age.Flavour
A most desirable extension of character caused by slow growth at high altitudes. Relatively rare.Fruity
Can be due to overfermenting during manufacture and/or bacterial infection before firing or drying, which gives the tea an over ripe taste. Unlike wines this is not a desirable taste in tea.Full
A good combination of strength and colour.Gone off
A flat or old tea. Often denotes a high moisture content.Green
When referring to black tea liquor denotes an immature raw character. This is mostly due to under fermenting and sometimes to under withering during manufacture.Hard
A very pungent liquor, a desirable quality in tea.Harsh
A taste generally due to the leaf being under withered during manufacture resulting in a very rough taste.Heavy
A thick, strong and colour liquor with limited briskness.High-fired
Over fired or dried, but not bakey or burned.Lacking
Describes a neutral liquor with no body or pronounced characteristics.Light
Lacking strength and depth of colour.Malty
Desirable character in some Assam teas. A full, bright tea with a malty taste.Mature
Not bitter or flat.Metallic
A sharp coppery taste.Muddy
A dull, opaque liquor.Muscatel
Desirable character in Darjeeling teas. A grapey taste.Musty
A suspicion of mould.Plain
A liquor that is clean but lacking in desirable characteristics.Point
A bright, acidic and penetrating characteristic.Pungent
Astringent with a good combination of briskness, brightness and strength.Quality
Refers to cup quality and denotes a combination of the most desirable liquoring qualities.Rasping
A very coarse and harsh liquor.Raw
A bitter, unpleasant taste.Soft
The opposite of briskness. Tea lacking any live characteristics and is caused by inefficient fermentation and/or drying.Stewed
A soft liquor with undesirable taste that lacks point. Caused by faulty firing, or drying, at low temperatures and often with insufficient airflow through the oven during tea manufacture or making.Strength
Substance in cupSweaty
Disagreeable taste. Poor tea.Taint
Characteristic or taste that is foreign to tea such as oil, garlic etc. Often due to the tea being stored next to other commodities with strong characteristics of their own.Thick
Liquor with good colour and strength.Thin
An insipid light liquor that lacks desirable characteristics.Weedy
A grass or hay taste associated with teas that have been under withered during manufacture and sometimes referred to as woody