2010 Yunnan Sourcing "Jing Gu Yang Ta" Raw Pu-erh Tea Cake

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Brisk, Floral, Gardenias, Orchids, Vegetal
Sold in
Bulk, Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by TeaEarleGreyHot
Average preparation
Boiling 3 min, 0 sec 5 g 8 oz / 236 ml

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From Yunnan Sourcing Brand Pu-erh

Jing Gu Yang Ta village is in Jing Gu county of Simao prefecture (景谷秧塔寨). It is well known for it’s “Da Bai” (大白 – Big White) tea. Actually the tea here is not Camellia Sinensis rather another varietal called Camellia Taliensis. Camellia Taliensis growing in Jing Gu’s red soil has prominent large fat leaves and hairy white buds. Tea from this region is well-known for it’s beautiful appearance, and tea sellers have been know to blend this tea with Yi Wu tea to make it (Yi Wu tea) more beautiful and bright in appearance while at the same time bolstering it’s sweetness and thickness.

We visited this tea garden in mid-February (Chinese New Year time) and made contact with the village leaders who manage this village cooperative tea garden. When we went the weather was dry, and the soil had been mulched and turned just two weeks before. This tea garden contains trees between 60 and 350 years old, it is near the village and has been tended for hundreds of years. This year because of dry conditions water was brought in and ladled at the base of these trees by hand. It is a lovely example of a cooperatively run and owned tea garden and one that has been tended lovingly by its participants. The tea here is sought by many producers and the Yang Ta co-op is able to sell all of its tea at prices that allow them to live a comfortable lifestyle. We were lucky enough to be able to convince them to reserve 70 kilograms of their wild and ancient arbor tea for us.

First Flush of Spring 2010 material * Stone-Compressed

250 grams per cake (7 cakes per bamboo leaf tong)

Region: Yang Ta Village, Jing Gu County, Lincang Prefecture

About Yunnan Sourcing Brand Pu-erh View company

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1 Tasting Note

70
98 tasting notes

Post-CoVid Tasting Note: It has now been two months since I recovered from Covid, and my senses have returned to normal. So, as promised, I am reevaluating this tea. After a 5-second rinse of a 5g portion of tea cake in boiling water, I brewed the leaf in 8 oz. boiling spring water for 3 min., which produced a straw-yellow infusion. To my nose there was a pungent aroma of young sheng puer in the hot infusion. There was some astringency on the back of my tongue, but the taste was not bitter. Nor did I detect the strong floral notes and sweetness of typical of other C. taliensis teas. I have enjoyed those flavors in jing gu white pekoe silver needle and jinggu sun-dried sun-dried silver needles white pu-erh tea, but here they did not present themselves until the infusion had cooled to ambient, and even then were subtle. While hot, there was a lingering aftertaste of gardenia flowers. I think this tea would make a very refreshing iced-tea brew! I find that even 10 min after my last sip of the cold tea, there is a lingering taliensis flavor. As a hot tea it may still be a bit young to fully enjoy the puer qualities. The leaves are still a light olive-green in color and the cake was loosely compressed. A second infusion of 2 min. was less astringent, but equally flavorful. This is a bargain-priced and unique puer that is certainly worth trying, which purists may find either delightful or, at least, surprisingly unusual.

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Bought this in spring 2022 from the YS “.us” site. [UPDATE: I have deleted most of this very negative review because it appears I have Covid, and have lost most of my sense of taste. Not fair to slam this tea under that circumstance! Look for a fresh review in a month or so, assuming I survive.]

….If Camellia taliensis intrigues you, please please buy the 25g sample size first.

Disclaimer: I am one of those individuals for whom stevia sweetener tastes bitter instead of sweet. If the reputed sweetness of this tea comes from a similar compound, it is possible that my taste buds simply don’t taste it the same way as other peoples’ might. Again, start with a sample size instead of a whole damn cake!

Flavors: Brisk, Floral, Gardenias, Orchids, Vegetal

Preparation
Boiling 3 min, 0 sec 5 g 8 OZ / 236 ML
ashmanra

Oh no! I hope you feel better soon and get your sense of taste back quickly!

mrmopar

Quick recovery to you.

derk

Well wishes to you and your olfactories.

TeaEarleGreyHot

Thank you all, I’m feeling good after a somewhat lousy Saturday. Got the PCR positive result today and a script for antiviral (thanks CVS test-to-treat minute clinic). I can taste some salt and sour now, still waiting on the rest. Since I still need my caffeine kick, I’m swilling down the smoky teas I dislike, along with low grade (fishy/composty) ripe pu-erhs that are far easier to drink without functional taste buds! I told myself it’s the priciest 400 year old raw puer, and enjoy it… Because it tastes like… Hot water. :-)

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