2011 Menghai "Xin Hai Bai Nian" Premium Ripe Pu-erh Tea Cake

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Camphor, Caramel, Cherry, Chocolate, Vanilla, Wood, Apple Skins, Bitter, Mushrooms, Oak, Red Apple, Coffee, Creamy, Dark Chocolate, Mineral, Rice, Roasted, Sweet, Butterscotch, Fruity, Musty, Sour
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Bulk
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Togo
Average preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec 9 g 4 oz / 133 ml

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7 Tasting Notes View all

  • “This is an incredible shou. Vanilla,aged whisky barrel,cherries,caramel/butterscotch, and a little camphor too. Qi is also hearty and warming. This is a tea that deserves your undivided attention,...” Read full tasting note
    95
  • “This is a nice woody shou with a very interesting mouthfeel. However, given its price, it is not one that I am considering getting a cake of. It has an interesting anise aroma, which is soon...” Read full tasting note
    83
  • “I’ve had a cake of this ever since Yunnan Sourcing listed it back in 2017. I’ve had one casual session with it a couple months back, but didn’t review it at the time. The bing is very pretty and...” Read full tasting note
  • “So I ended up buying a cake of this tea (at US$76! so funny to look back at my notes and complain that it was expensive at US$60+) and I’ve drunk / given away 100g of it already but realised I...” Read full tasting note
    90

From Yunnan Sourcing

Special production just for the year 2011. This is made of a tippy blend of Menghai area wet piled ripe pu-erh tea. The blend likely contains some already aged (at the time of pressing) teas, which gives it a fruity sweetness and long lasting camphor and wood taste and aroma. The tea is very thick and permeates the mouth with it’s creamy character. The mouth-feel is comforting and long-lasting. Cha Qi is notable, but not aggressive.

With so many Da Yi productions to choose from this is a sure bet for aging or enjoying now!

Xin He Bai Nian refers to the 100th Anniversary of the 1911 Revolution which marked the end of Qing Dynasty and the start of China’s post-dynasty era (modern era).

357 Grams per cake

Batch 101

About Yunnan Sourcing View company

Company description not available.

7 Tasting Notes

95
6 tasting notes

This is an incredible shou. Vanilla,aged whisky barrel,cherries,caramel/butterscotch, and a little camphor too. Qi is also hearty and warming. This is a tea that deserves your undivided attention, and even commands it every time you take a sip. It did take two 10 second rinses to really open up, once it did though it was immediately awe-inspiring. It invokes the feeling of drinking an ultra fine whisky. Each progressing steep gives you a little something more to think about as you move through it.

It’s also my first foray into Dayi/Menghai tea factory and I don’t think I could have picked a better tea to start with. They very clearly know what they are doing! You cannot go wrong with this tea if you enjoy shou. An instant classic.

Flavors: Camphor, Caramel, Cherry, Chocolate, Vanilla, Wood

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec 6 g 3 OZ / 90 ML

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83
999 tasting notes

This is a nice woody shou with a very interesting mouthfeel. However, given its price, it is not one that I am considering getting a cake of.

It has an interesting anise aroma, which is soon overpowered by the woody notes. The taste is somewhat bitter with flavours of oak, incense, red apple skin, camphor and mushrooms. In the sweetish aftertaste, I get more of chocolate and cherry. For me, the main selling point of this tea is the mouthfeel though. It is extremely bubbly and foamy. The medium bodied liquor is very active in the mouth.

Flavors: Apple Skins, Bitter, Camphor, Cherry, Chocolate, Mushrooms, Oak, Red Apple, Wood

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 30 sec 8 g 4 OZ / 120 ML

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123 tasting notes

I’ve had a cake of this ever since Yunnan Sourcing listed it back in 2017. I’ve had one casual session with it a couple months back, but didn’t review it at the time. The bing is very pretty and the dry leaf aroma wonderful. I brewed 12.3g in a 160ml Jianshui clay teapot and drank the tea from a cup made from the same material. I rinsed the leaves briefly for under ten seconds and let the moisture soak in for five minutes before I began brewing. The aroma of the freshly rinsed leaves was very clean and comforting. I did a total of nine steeps, the timing for these being 10s, 10s, 12s, 15s, 30s, 50s, 90s, 2.5 min. and 6 min.

I’ve been experimenting with brewing ripe pu’er with slightly heavier leaf ratios and that in conjunction with the fairly small average leaf grade of this tea means it brewed quite strong (for a shu pu’er). There was a lot going on in the first infusion, with flavor notes bouncing around my mouth. I could taste rich notes of wood and something that reminded me of wine, with a pleasant bitterness in the finish with hints of chocolate. The aftertaste was long, rich and rewarding. While the tea itself wasn’t super thick, I liked the feel of it in my mouth. This was a wonderful start to the session.

The next brew offered deeper, darker notes. Very rich. I don’t know if I got any notes I would refer to as earthy, but eventually I began tasting dark, bitter chocolate, one that had melted and was flowing all over my tongue. The bitterness was wonderful. The tea was now really big and active in the mouth. It caused the lower half of my mouth, jaw in particular, to tingle. Damn this is good tea.

The third infusion presented more bitter and roasted notes. There was also a faint sweetness which in conjunction with the roasted notes made me think of nougat. The bitterness leaned more towards coffee now, and the lingering bitterness that was left in your mouth was REALLY wonderful. I could drink this tea just for that bitter aftertaste. The mouthfeel wasn’t as great as before, but still enjoyable and active in the mouth, mainly around the tongue.

Steep number four was one of those roll your eyes back into your head moments. Man, that mouthfeel. I just wanted to let the tea rest on my tongue. It was thick, lubricating and felt great going down the throat. Taking a sip made you want to smile. The flavors were taking a backseat for this round, but I didn’t care. I could taste familiar bitter woody coffee notes, but they weren’t as strong or good as before. Afterwards you could feel the tea in your chest.

I accidentally brewed the tea a bit too long for steep number five and the tea ended up almost too thick for me. Even though I pushed it quite a bit, the resulting flavor was surprisingly weak. This was actually not due to a weak extraction but the flavors themselves being light. I could taste some generic woody notes, which became much clearer in the aftertaste. This infusion was really warming in the chest. I actually liked the tea better once it had cooled down completely. This brought forth a really nice mineral taste and I didn’t really get any of the woody notes.

The tea got back into gear in the sixth steeping. The flavors took the backseat again while the liquor felt wonderful and active in the mouth. Woody notes were still present, but the tea was now also a bit creamy and there was some slight sweetness and mineral taste. While I could tell the tea was entering its late steeps, there was still a fair bit going on and the thickness was still good and the aftertaste actually more potent than the tea itself. The aftertaste was rich, creamy and aromatic.

The color began dropping in the next steep. The taste was now that of sweet rice, like the rice drinks you can buy at the store. It even had the slight graininess those drinks have. The tea was also really thick. I mean, really, really thick. It was very pleasant and enjoyable to drink. The color continued to fade quite dramatically in the eighth steep. The tea was also considerably thinner. The immediate flavors were basic sweetness and some weak woody notes, while you could taste the sweet rice and minerals in the finish. The lingering sweetness intensified over time as you drank the tea, however, ultimately becoming incredibly sweet. There was also a slight numbing sensation on my tongue.

I attempted one last long extraction, but the resulting tea was really light. There was a creamy mineraly taste of berries, but also a slight unenjoyable tinge to the tea. The aftertaste was nice though and super sweet. I decided the tea was done.

I’m glad I didn’t review this tea back when I first tried it. I recall it coming across as a solid ripe, but nothing as wonderful as the session I had this time. The problem with (and wonderful thing about) tea is that no two sessions are ever alike. I may not have had the clay teacup yet when I first had this tea, I don’t recall, but it may have made a huge difference. In any case, this tea was fantastic. I wish all my ripe sessions were like this. This may have very well been the best shu pu’er I’ve had to date. I would most definitely recommend leafing this tea a bit harder than usual to ensure a rich brew, long aftertaste and that you bring out the wonderful bitterness it holds. The longevity of a tea like this is never going to be very impressive, and you’ll just have to accept that.

Looking both at the dry leaf and the brewed leaves, I can buy this being from higher grade material than your average ripe. While I’m hardly knowledgeable about these kind of teas, the leaves, although small, look intact and like fine pickings. To me this tea comes across as perfectly ready to drink now. Unless you are a thousand times more sensitive to fermentation taste than me, you should be fine. While not necessarily cheap, for what you get I think the price is actually quite reasonable. Like I said, wish all ripes were this good.

Flavors: Bitter, Coffee, Creamy, Dark Chocolate, Mineral, Rice, Roasted, Sweet, Wood

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec 12 g 5 OZ / 160 ML

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90
261 tasting notes

So I ended up buying a cake of this tea (at US$76! so funny to look back at my notes and complain that it was expensive at US$60+) and I’ve drunk / given away 100g of it already but realised I never did a proper review with tasting notes. Brewed 8g in my 160ml gaiwan with boiling water.

Rinse. Wet leaf smells sweet and musty, like a sweet underground spring. Or clean peat moss. Second rinse: more spicy and herbal notes – savoury, mushrooms. Gorgeous.

1st infusion: Body a bit thin. Flavour is sour and fruity in the silly jade bowl I got as a gift, but not in porcelain mug (curious!). Porcelain mug portion is fuller, tastes savoury and flavourful, even slight bitterness (in a good way).

2nd: Smells of sour plums, mineral-y like pool water / chlorine. Nothing chocolatey about this pu-erh (unlike other ripes like my Elephant Mtn) but sweet and so intoxicating. It just tastes very satisfying.

3rd: I hit it harder, so the liquor is richer and more substantial and now becoming slightly chocolatey – not a sweet caramelly milk chocolate or deep bitter chocolate but the brighter, sour-fruity artisanal chocolate from Madagascar… but still with a rounded creamy fullness at the end. The finish is so satisfying – now one gets more butterscotch and stout notes. Ughhhh love this tea.

4th & 5th infusions: Busy; didn’t record.

The 6th or 7th infusion I let it steep for like 20 minutes to finish off the leaves. Still no bitterness, just a slight astringency. A nice chocolatey stouty richness.

Rating: 90

Flavors: Butterscotch, Creamy, Dark Chocolate, Fruity, Mineral, Musty, Sour

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec 8 g 5 OZ / 160 ML
mrmopar

I like this one a lot.

Yang-chu

I wonder what it’s like now?

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3 tasting notes

It smells like puerh, tastes like puerh, pretty much standard puerh. I got a bit high on the first brew. Brewed it gongfu style.

Flavors: Creamy

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