Meng Song Village "Emperor's Golden Pu-erh" Ripe Pu-erh Tea

Tea type
Pu'erh (shou) Blend
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Alkaline, Dry Grass, Earth, Mineral, Musty, Roasted Barley
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by DrinkingTeaAgain
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 2 min, 0 sec 5 g 8 oz / 250 ml

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From Yunnan Sourcing

This “Emperor’s Golden Pu-erh” 茶皇 is an incredibly laborious tea to produce. A wet pile batch made from Meng Song Village spring harvested tea leaves (Menghai County) was graded and then the golden pu-erh was hand-separated from the various grades. Then the tea was aged for one year in Menghai, giving it an incredibly smooth and sweet taste without much wet pile taste. Further aging will bring this tea into a state of smooth perfection!

Smooth, creamy, sweet, velvety and thick ripe tea. Totally unique and worthy of the title “Emperor!”

Meng Song Village harvested tea (Menghai County of Xishuangbanna)

2020 Harvested and wet-piled

About Yunnan Sourcing View company

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2 Tasting Notes

86
4 tasting notes

I’ve tasted quite a few different takes on this style of golden pu-erh over the past 6 years, ranging from restaurant gong fu styles to teavana’s westernized take.
They typically pack a very high intensity of musty flavors, with a comparatively minor astringency, even after several steeps, and this is very true for this tea.

This version delivers that punch of earthen goodness with the gentlest, softest kid gloves – impressively smooth.

After it cools down a bit, it can get slightly bitter, but this can be easily obscured with a few grains of salt – only a very amount will help with bitterness for most people.

Flavors: Alkaline, Dry Grass, Earth, Mineral, Musty, Roasted Barley

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 2 min, 0 sec 5 g 8 OZ / 250 ML

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83
18 tasting notes

Two sessions with this tea: One in a purple clay pot, and one in a gai wan. I’m still getting a sense of how this particular clay affects the tea, so I wanted to compare them.

Clay:

First steep: Super soft, lubricating, rich experience. Fairly light brew, so deceptively textured in the mouth. Indeed, very much texture-driven for me, which is nice. The taste was a rich fermented taste; hard to describe to those not familiar with fermented tea. Not quite chocolatey. A rich, almost starchy, almost sweet, kind of interesting taste. A clean fermented taste. You know it when you taste it.

Steep 2 – 4: The same as the above, which was nice, though slightly less texture each time. Naturally, as it’s loose leaf. A sweetness did start to come through as the richness gradually faded.

Ceramic:

First steep: Very lubricating, soft, velvety texture, with a rich fermented taste. Oil slick on the top. I wouldn’t say sweet at all. I know rich doesn’t say much, but that’s really what it is to me: rich, clean fermented taste. I didn’t wash it this time, just straight into the first steep. (Cha Qi hit me nice at this point). Texture was I think more pronounced from the gai wan.

Second steep: More of the same, which was delightful. Again, very texture-driven and non-specifically rich in taste. Slight sweet chocolatey taste, too.

More of the same in subsequent steeps.

Ceramic brought out more character. It’s already a soft tea by nature, so ceramic is probably ideal as it doesn’t need clay to slightly mute the harsh notes and bring out the texture. There aren’t any harsh notes. Very good tea in my opinion. I love clean young rich smooth (thick, though this one wasn’t thick) ripe tea. Does run out of the goods on the quicker side, though.

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