2006 Hong Xuan "Yi Wu Zheng Shan" Raw Pu-erh Tea Cake

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Apricot, Chestnut, Raisins, Sticky Rice, Sweet, Tangy, Wood, Bitter, Bourbon, Celery, Coffee, Earth, Fireplace, Plants, Tannic
Sold in
Bulk
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Togo
Average preparation
Boiling 0 min, 30 sec 5 g 3 oz / 100 ml

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2 Tasting Notes View all

  • “NOTES FOR NEXT TIME: Use 5g to 100ml water OR Yixing clay pot Date drunk: 31 Mar 2023 4g in 100ml gaiwan This section of the sample had quite a few large stems. Dry leaves smell like raisins,...” Read full tasting note
    69
  • “Pretty boring tea that’s nevertheless pleasant to drink. It has a lighter body, cozy taste that is bitter, savoury and sweet, and an expansive aftertaste. Aroma reminds me of celery, garden cress,...” Read full tasting note
    71

From Yunnan Sourcing

We are very excited to offer this aged Yi Wu raw pu-erh tea! The tea was harvested in Spring 2003, and then stored as loose leaf “mao cha” in Yi Wu before being purchased by the Hong Xuan Tea Factory at the end 2006 when it was pressed. Since then it has been stored in the mountainous area to the north of Kunming.

This is well aged tea that will surprise many with it’s aged character. Warm, thick, sweet, and complex to drink.

About Yunnan Sourcing View company

Company description not available.

2 Tasting Notes

69
261 tasting notes

NOTES FOR NEXT TIME: Use 5g to 100ml water OR Yixing clay pot

Date drunk: 31 Mar 2023

4g in 100ml gaiwan

This section of the sample had quite a few large stems. Dry leaves smell like raisins, slightly musty, wood. Rinsed once. Wet leaf smells like yellow honey jujubes and sweet fragrant wood.

1st infusion (100˚C, 0:15):
Subtle sweet flavour – jujubes, white fungus, mineral-y, chestnut, unidentified floral (maybe lotus?), sweet rice and lotus leaf notes. Reminiscent of cheng tng. Not much body, quite thin but still enjoyable. Bit of sharp metallic aftertaste.
Rating: 77

2nd infusion (100˚C, 0:15)
Wet leaves smell of Asian pear. Stronger, starchier notes of jujubes and sticky rice. A bit astringent / bitter now. Not as sweet as previous. I get some tangy and fruity notes when liquor cooled – notes of apricot or pomelo. Body still quite thin.
Rating: 74

3rd infusion (100˚C, 0:20)
Flavour is smoother but even more muted now. I think these leaves aren’t very strong, or maybe it’s because of the stems in this portion. Still getting jujube faint sweetness, floral. Astringent, dry aftertaste.
Rating: 73

4th infusion (100˚C, 0:45)
Stronger now but still has this dry papery note to it, probably from the ageing. Unfortunately not my favourite. It’s a not a good sign when I feel like ditching these leaves and switching to brew a new tea for the rest of the day. Oh man it reminds me of the tea that Gong2’s relatives gave us in Guangdong – now I realise that was probably an aged raw Yi Wu pu-er as well. But well, still don’t like it.
Rating: 65

Flavors: Apricot, Chestnut, Raisins, Sticky Rice, Sweet, Tangy, Wood

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec 4 g 3 OZ / 100 ML

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71
994 tasting notes

Pretty boring tea that’s nevertheless pleasant to drink. It has a lighter body, cozy taste that is bitter, savoury and sweet, and an expansive aftertaste.

Aroma reminds me of celery, garden cress, fireplace, and bourbon. The taste is a bit tannic and has notes of wood and coffee.

Flavors: Bitter, Bourbon, Celery, Coffee, Earth, Fireplace, Plants, Sweet, Tannic, Wood

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 30 sec 6 g 3 OZ / 100 ML

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