Yunnan Sourcing

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Recent Tasting Notes

98

Thanks to Charles Thomas Draper for mentioning this sheng. I bought a sample (cakes are very expensive) and immediately fired up my little pot and steeped it three times: at 30 seconds, 1 minute, and 2 minutes. The first steep was exquisitely smooth, with a light camphor taste and a more pronounced mandarin orange flavor. Things got pretty wild on the next two steeps; the orange remained, and was joined with chestnut and what reminded me of a perfect black bean sauce. This is a high energy tea that had me buzzing along way into the night, right through an excellent set by the Futurebirds at the Press Room in Portsmouth, NH. I’m going to try and conserve this tea; as good as it is now, it will be even better when some of the bitterness fades away over time.

TheTeaFairy

Glad to know their live performance did not disappoint :-)

Charles Thomas Draper

I’m drinking it now. It is sublime….

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94

Wow, best Sheng ivé tried so far.
I did a comparisonbrewing in hopes of finding a suitable tea that works well with Zini yixingpot.
Shu seems to work well, and is the only type of tea that ive tried sofar that taste better in a Zinipot (brownish purple) then a neutral vessel. (darjeeling, yunnan, japanese, green, white, young sheng)
But however.
5g / 90ml celeadon gaiwan @ 100C
5g / 100ml Zini Yixingpot @ 100C

wash/5s/5s/10/10s/15s/20s added 5-10s per following steeping to about 12 :)
First steeping was bland, this tea obviously needs to be washed twice.

Second steeping surprised me. It was kind of intense, very little of the earthy tones i expected. More ripe fruit and a very noticable charred taste. Probably from the panfrying.
This subsided after a few infusions. But it kept it´s vigor to the end. 12 infusions is quite enough with dual brewing….

This older sheng worked somewhat better in the Zini but it didn´t improve the taste, more like it was equal to the gaiwan. Perhaps abit stronger aftertaste.

Will order a few samples from older sheng to try them out. I must say i miss that dry astringency from younger sheng, but the intensity was very nice! When i find that combination i will get a cake right away :)

Since im relatively new to pu-erh, i´d welcome some pointers.

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec
Asaf Mazar

I have read good things about this tea, particularly the over 10 year old vintages.
http://listeningtoleaves.blogspot.co.il/2011/02/2000-vs-2003-yong-pin-hao-yi-wu-zheng.html

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90

Free sample from my last YS order.

Today I woke myself up at six in the morning, packed my gear into the car, and drove out about fourty five minutes northwest to Clermont, which is sort of the Mecca of longboarders and cyclists in Central/South Florida. While most of Florida south of Gainesville is pretty darn flat, Clermont and the surrounding areas have big, rolling hills a bit like Kentucky, but well… bigger. The fastest I’d ever gone before was about 30 mph, today I made it up to 45, and man that felt great.

I spent most of the day riding down said hills and then walking back up them, which is, as far as I’m concerned, what they do up in heaven (When they’re not drinking tea, of course.) By noon I was completely exhausted and pretty much swimming in my own sweat. So, I headed back towards Orlando and (after a nice cold shower) decided to wind down with a nice session of tea, and was especially craving some sheng :)

This is just the second “fairly old” sheng that I’ve tried, and I really enjoyed both. Even with two quick rinses, the taste started out pretty mulchy and musty, but by the third steep it was much cleaner and delicious. Raisin, clove, and walnut were the main flavors I picked up on. A bit of bitter, but not enough to be off-putting. Despite it’s flavors not really being “fresh” ones, it still has the refreshing qualities of younger sheng. I got lot’s of relaxing, stimulating feelings drinking this, and by the time the leaves puttered out I was about as tea drunk as I’ve ever been.

Between the endorphins from exercise and the qi from this tea I’m feeling pretty darn good right now. I’ll probably make something for dinner and then head to bed early. Today was a pretty great day (albeit slightly hermitic), and exactly what I needed in a weekend.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 15 sec

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78

5g / 90ml celadon gaiwan.
wash/5s/10s/15s/20s kept ca 20s infusions
Typical Sheng taste with pleaseant astringency.

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec

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89

5g / 90ml celadon gaiwan.
5s/5s/10s Kept at ca 10s as the tea seems to stay potent.

And to go with the tea, i watched some big bang theory :)

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec

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89

Tonight i was in the mood for raw pu-ehr and The big bang theory :)
I did a comparisonbrewing.
1: 90ml celadon gaiwan
2: 100ml ZiNi yixingpot.

5g / 100C
Quick wash/5s/10s/15s/10s….
15s infusion resulted in heavy astringency, enough to dry the tounge, so I went with 10sec infusions.

Both vessels produced good tea, however the yixing was more mellow with a slightly fuller flavour.

Astringency, slightly earthy with undertones of something.. cant really describe it but a tiny bit sweet and fresh. vegetable or ripe fruit perhaps..

Found it to be quite pleasant!

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 30 sec
Terri HarpLady

Sheng & the Big Bang Theory…sound like a good combo! :)

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95

2 heaping tsps in 12 oz

Have had this a few more times since my last note. It is soooo good. I’ve decided that the texture reminds me of miso soup. It is so rich and comforting.

Preparation
190 °F / 87 °C 3 min, 30 sec

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95

2 heaping tsps in 12 oz

Wow, now I don’t know if I prefer this one or the Imperial Mojiang. The leaves are gorgeous. Perfectly straight needles. Not a single one broken. It has a very rich, heavy mouthfeel. And perhaps for the first time, I am finding a tea pleasantly astringent. Usually when I find a tea astringent, I consider it a negative, but this one has a very slight astringency which balances well with its “thickness”. Hope that makes some sense.

BTW, this note is for the Spring 2013 plucking.

Next up will have to be a side by side taste test of these two marvelous teas.

Preparation
190 °F / 87 °C 3 min, 30 sec
El Monstro

I’m gonna have to put in an order with this company, I remember thinking they have a nice selection of teapots awhile back. What is the deal with the .com site vs the .us site, is one overseas and the other here?

looseTman

YS has a site in China as well as one in the US. The shipping cost less from the US site, but the selection is not as large.

Rachel J

Oh, I didn’t even know about the 2 sites. I used the .com. Will have to see if these teas are available at the other one!

Rachel J

Just checked, and they aren’t. Interesting… Shipping from China was only about 10 days, but I recall it being quite expensive. On the other hand, the tea itself was priced very low for the quality, so it all balances out.

Doug F

I go back and forth with these two. I just love the thick rich taste that I don’t find in many other teas.

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81

First time trying ripe Pu-erh.
Infuses very well, washed a few seconds and water was already brown.

I did aprox 15 infusions in 100ml Yixing Zini Pu-erhpot.
The 12th infusion started to get lighter in color. And im certain i could have gone on for quite awhile. However since i was drinking by myself… :)

The taste was earthy, thick. Since i dont have anything to compare to i really cant say much other than it had a very complex taste.
I do prefer raw pu-erh to this, by far.

Ziniclay went rather well with ripe Pu-erh.

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec

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96

sweet and fruity
Beautiful cake glistens with shiny silverish golden buds. Distinct, whole leaves are easy to pry apart, as expected from a stone pressed production.
Review is based on a few sessions using approx 6g/100-150ml water in 180ml duan ni pot.

Dry leaves in warmed pot exude a strong ripe fruit aroma. Certainly the most intensly fruity sheng I have come across. Sweet, golden infusions with a tangy apricot/orange character with a slight hint of tobacco and honey. It’s somehow more like a phoenix dan cong oolong than a pu er.

Clean and crisp with zero smokiness/storage smell. There is some astringency with longer steeps.

Seems to have a gentle qi and to be relatively low in caffeine. It does not appear to deliver as intense a shift in awareness and body sensations, and is not as not as thick/rich/complex as the better (older and pricier) shengs I have tried. All factors considered, In its age and price range I would say its solid choice.

In summary, this is a sweet, tasty, clean, very drinkable sheng. A great everyday tea and a sure bet for those used to sweet drinks and who are new to pu erh. I wonder if it will develop more qi, complexity and thickness as it ages.

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec
Charles Thomas Draper

I just received a shipment from YS that has a sample of a 2010 Hai Lang Hao “Cha Wang” that is from what I’ve read absolutely intense. At $210.00 a cake it better be…

Asaf Mazar

Looking forwards to your review on that one. Ys seems to be generous with their samples though on this last order there was none. I am gravitating towards older’ circa 1990’s vintage these days as they are much mellower. Great stuff at essence of tea esp. 92 da ye loose leaf.

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95

4g / 220ml yixing
3m @ 85C

First try for a single infusion. Good result, powerful smoth cup with heavy body. Almost feels creamy ^
Sweet hints of honey and potato? Malty with a slight astringancy.
Perhaps i will try 2.5m next time ^ or somewhat less leaf.
Anyways this is a very nice cup. Will have to try gong-fu as well :)

Preparation
185 °F / 85 °C 3 min, 0 sec

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95

6g / 220ml zhuni yixing
1m/2m/3m @ 85C

AH how i missed this flavour! Not really a breakfasttea for me. I prefer a tea with a bit more briskness/astringency in the morning. Something that really packs a punch! I feel i really have to start exploring assam teas for this purpose. Pretty much never tried assam varieties.
first cup: Brownish golden with a heavy maltiness and sweetness. There is lots of honey and ripe fruit in there.
Since i usually do consequtive steepings to prevent cooloing of the leaf with yunnan blacks second and third steeping is mixed in a pitcher.
This tea in particular turns earthy/woody if leaf is allowed to cool.
second/third cup: Now there is a hint of astringancy with less sweetness than the first cup. Still a strong malty flavour mixed with dried fruit. Perhaps now more citrus fruit.
Next time i will use a cup for all steepings to avoid mixing. Or perhaps mix all three steepings to even out the flavour more.
All in all a superb tea!
And the dry leaf is among the most beutiful ivé ever seen. long straight golden needles, none broken.

Preparation
185 °F / 85 °C 1 min, 0 sec
Terri HarpLady

I’ve really been enjoying the teas I’ve gotten from YS!
:)

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95

Ah, after finishing the black bi lou chun i turned to some higher quality tea. The leaf is ong needles, yellowish and black. The smell is very malty.

6g / 220ml zhuni yixing.
1m @ 80C
2m @ 90C
consequitive steepings so leaf doesnt cool in between.

first cup was divine. loads of honey blended with some malty chocolate. no astringany at all.
Second cup was less sweet and more malty. Very nice strenght.

This is a tea i will be sure to restock come spring.

Preparation
180 °F / 82 °C 1 min, 0 sec
Doug F

One of my favorites that I always restock too!

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95

Wow. This tea is just super. It will be along with feng qing dragonpearls my staple yunnan black teas.

This time around i did westernstyle brewing in 220ml Zhuni yixingpot.
1: 1m @ 80C
2: 2m @ 85C
3: 2.5m @ 85C

First cup was devine, full of honey chocolate malty delight with very little astringency.
Second was a bit to strong. 1.30m would be better. But next time i will use 6g leaf.
Third i let the leaves cool down and forgot to remove lid. Kinda killed the taste. :/

A Beutiful tea!

Preparation
175 °F / 79 °C 1 min, 0 sec

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95

6.5g 220ml zhuni yixing
3 infusions @ 85C
1/2/3 min.

A perfect blend between the usual yunnan sweetness and a very slight astringency.

Malty, sweet, creamy. :)

Preparation
185 °F / 85 °C 1 min, 0 sec

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78

8g / 200ml glaspot @ 75C

Several infusions.
First 45s then add 15s per infusion.

Fruity fresh with a bit of nuttiness. Like green teas in general.
I rather enjoy it. However i do prefer Bi lou chun.

Preparation
170 °F / 76 °C 0 min, 45 sec

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95

1 1/2 tsp for 8 oz

Fantastic, like I said before. This is stronger than I brewed it last time. It does gain a hint of astringency this way, but just a teeny bit. I think I’ll try 3:30 next time.

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 4 min, 0 sec

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95

2 heaping tsp for 12 oz

The best Dian Hong I’ve ever had. Thanks to Doug F for turning me on to this. It has all the classic Dian Hong flavor that I’ve come to expect with zero astringency and a very smooth, rich mouthfeel. Love love love…

I might brew it a little stronger next time to see how that goes. It is so smooth, that I bet I could get even more flavor out of it without risking too much astringency or bitterness.

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 3 min, 0 sec
Terri HarpLady

Sounds yummy!!

Terri HarpLady

The photo looks alot like Golden Fleece!

Rachel J

I haven’t had Golden Fleece, but this tea is amazing, and at such a reasonable price even with shipping from China. It is beautiful tea!

Doug F

Phew! I was hoping you would like it as much as I do. In terms of leaf measurement, I find it hard to use a teaspoon because the leaves aren’t compact. I pretty much just eyeball it. I usually steep it for four minutes.

Rachel J

Thanks, Doug! It is nerve wracking to recommend things to people. :)

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79

Sipdown. Backlog from yesterday.
This tea has been my pregym companion for some time. A good black yunnan that is as close to a “table tea” as it gets. not super quality but comforting. However since there is lots of better yunnan blacks i will not be restocking. Farewell!

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 1 min, 0 sec

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79

3g / 220ml zhuni yixing
Single infusion 2m @ 90C

Oh yeah! Best single infusion yet. Very sweet and smooth. Lots of honey but a little less malt. Nice when i want just one cup.

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 2 min, 0 sec

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79

6g / 220ml Zhuni yixing
1m/2m @ 90C

yummy! Been frinking way to many 2012 teas and greens in particular. Felt almost like coming home after a vacation to taste this sweet malty rich tea. :)

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 1 min, 0 sec

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79

6g/220ml Zhuni Yixing
1/2/3m @ just below boiling.

Felt nice with a yunnan black for breakfast. Been going through a massive amount of old clubteas lately. Some good some not so, none logged.

Anyways this tea delivers to expectation. Malty with a bit of sweetness. To me this tea is like a staple tea when it comes to yunnan teas. Kinda like a “table wine”.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 1 min, 0 sec

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79

7g /220ml yixing @ 90C
1/2/3 minutes

3 good infusions. A bit malty but without the usual sweetness that im used to in yunnan blacks. Instead there is some astringency.
To my taste this tea does not come near other yunnan blacks.

Id rather go for a moijang golden buds or feng qing dian hong anyday.
However it IS a quility tea that can hanle multiple infusions.

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 1 min, 0 sec

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77

Thank you shakirah1984 for this sample.

I had to call in sick today due to a sore throat and cough and the general feeling of crapiness. My boss (my mother) is going down to Wales tomorrow for the weekend to see my grandad after he had his pace maker fitted. He had to have it done twice because one of the tubes came out apparently after it was fitted, so two operations in two days. I don’t want to give him a cold so thought it was best I stay away from them and ergo stay away from him.

I do have the task of house and dog sitting for them though this weekend, it means I will take copious amounts of tea with me to review. That’s my plan anyway.

The raw leaves are large and long with some sticks/stems present. When held up into the light I can notice small hairs that glow like cats eyes. I haven’t seen a tea so shiny as this one since drinking Golden Monkey – Tea Palace which is a golden tip Yunnan tea.

They have a distinct smoky scent with sweet and thick floral tones. Very leathery and robust.

With a 20 second rinse and a 1 minute steep using my Gongfu for 5g of Pu Erh my tea soup is light yellow in colour with a smoky and sweet woody aroma.

Flavours are darkly floral and woody with subtle sweetness and some astringency. The dark notes gradually lighten and eventually leave a fresh, light, floral after taste. Reminds me of mild Lapsang Souchong, the smokiness is definitely the strongest character.

There is something magical about drinking tea from 100-300 year old trees from a tiny village in the middle of no where. It gives me a warm glow. :)

The leaves were large to begin with but once steeped they have doubled in size and unravelled, also lightened in colour and looks very fresh. Some leaves are whole, unbroken.

The second steep – 2 minutes – Very light and fruity with double sweetness in comparison to the first steep. Now there is little smokiness but the wood tones remain. A very different tea than it’s first steep…I’m finding it hard to pick which steep is my favourite.

It’s also much more delicate and I don’t think there would be much left for me after this steep. Detecting more dryness in the after taste now too.

Overall it’s a pleasant enough Pu Erh and I can finish the rest of my sample with ease. It was however smokier than I thought it would be and needs to be the type of tea I’m in the mood for before I drink it again. Not bad for the price at all. :)

Preparation
Boiling

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