15 Years Aged Golden Melon Ripe Pu-erh Tea Tuo

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Cocoa, Cream, Nuts, Wood, Bitter, Broth, Dark Bittersweet, Earth, Mushrooms, Savory, Wet Rocks, Bamboo, Grain, Metallic, Sugarcane, Sweet, Compost, Smoke, Wheat, Hay, Leather, Decayed Wood, Dried Fruit, Plum, Smooth, Spicy, Anise, Apple, Camphor, Clove, Eucalyptus, Fruity, Vanilla
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Mateusz
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 30 sec 6 g 5 oz / 149 ml

Currently unavailable

We don't know when or if this item will be available.

From Our Community

1 Image

0 Want it Want it

31 Own it Own it

  • +16

13 Tasting Notes View all

From Yunnan Sourcing

This tea was pressed 15 years ago (in 2005) by a small Menghai tea factory. These are 25 gram Golden Melon tuo cha (金瓜沱) made from a blend of Gong Ting, Te Ji, Grade 1 and 3 ripened tea leaves. They were stored in Kunming for 12 years in relatively dry conditions.

The dryish aging conditions have preserved the character of this tea, while allowing it to mellow and gain complexity. The tea is sweet, creamy and very thick and expansive in the mouth. It’s a very active and textured ripe tea that has all attributes a good aged ripe pu-erh should have.

Each melon is roughly 25 grams, and can give you 3 to 5 good sessions.

Each Melon is individually wrapped in off-white gold-flecked paper.

About Yunnan Sourcing View company

Company description not available.

13 Tasting Notes

80
167 tasting notes

Very earthy. Soil and compost flavors are predominant, with a little camphor that adds body and dimension. A more palatable cereal flavor is also present. Some earthy, woody sweetness arrives in the aftertaste.

Overall, not bad, but you have to be a fan of really earthy flavors to appreciate this tea.

To be honest, this is where I start to wonder about the real value of aging beyond a certain point. This just goes a little too far into the compost category for me to really think very much about it. I feel like it would have been better when it was younger, where the cereal aspects of it could take center stage and not be overwhelmed by the dirt flavors.

One thing you don’t get with younger teas is the camphor note; so if that’s what you’re after, this has it, although not overwhelmingly so. Anyway, I wasn’t disappointed with this tea – it was nice to drink, and the aftertaste especially was pleasant. However, I was not as wowed with it as some of the reviews on YS.
*
Dry leaf – dirt, pond flora (how’s that for a descriptor!). In preheated vessel – cocoa, chocolate, and camphor noticeable.

Smell – composted leaves, grits, cream of wheat, hints of chocolate and camphor

Taste – dirt, mulch, composted leaves primary notes. Substantial camphor notes, but not overwhelming or assertive. Finishes with grits and cream of wheat savory sweetness. Aftertaste has some very mild cherry wood sweetness and just a hint of cherry chocolate cordial.

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

90
42 tasting notes

This tea came as a Christmas gift from my wife, and what a great way to warm up on a snowy Christmas morning! This tuo was very tightly compressed and hard to break apart, so I ended up with a lot of dust — next time I’ll have to have at it with a sharp cooking knife to keep it more intact. Because of that I got a fairly short session of 10 steeps from 5g, starting with 10 seconds and ending up at 2min 30sec.

However, what a session it was! The first steep was light, but already you could feel the creaminess of the soup, and the flavor was so well balanced. First impressions are sweet with notes of vanilla and apple, but as the flavor lingers in your tongue there’s a contrasting note of earthy bitterness which causes tingling in the mouth.

Once the tea starts to open up on the second brew it really starts to come into it’s own. The liquor is dark but has no cloudiness (despite all the dust I created during breakage). The texture is now thick and dances on the tongue with tingling sensations. Highlights this early on are a musty vanilla, pleasant bitterness on the back of the tongue, and a juiciness that is vaguely reminiscent of various fruits. The qi is as interesting and contrasting as the flavors — a bit energizing at first, but falling down into mellow calm and a foggy head.

Continuing into the session the earth and must notes wash away and reveal the spicy characters of clove, allspice, and a dab of anise. This pairs perfectly with the apple cider scent. This spice turns into a more medicinal note of eucalyptus and camphor in later infusions, which mix with the alternating impressions of vanilla and apple that continue until the end.

This is pretty much the ideal I’m looking for in a shu at the moment — a harmony of sweet, spicy, and earthy notes in a tea that still presents itself with energy. Looks like it might be time to graduate on from the Verdant teas that introduced me to shu puerh and explore more of the enormous and well curated selection from Scott.

Flavors: Anise, Apple, Bitter, Camphor, Clove, Earth, Eucalyptus, Fruity, Sweet, Vanilla

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec 5 g 4 OZ / 118 ML
mrmopar

Smart wife you have!

lteg

Hehe, she may have gotten a little bit of a push in the right direction from me, but I was quite pleased with her final selection! :)

Login or sign up to leave a comment.