Jan 30th, '13, 15:45
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debunix
Re: Official Pu of the day
The verdict was unanimous this morning: earthy tea was requested by the office gang for a snuffly winter day, so out came the 2007 Rui Cao Liang sheng from Yunnan Sourcing, comforting, friendly, earthy, and mellow. Happy campers up and down the hallway now--today's tea distribution included 5 colleagues, including one new person who now has an official tea cup.
Re: Official Pu of the day
Oh man, I want to work where you work!debunix wrote:The verdict was unanimous this morning: earthy tea was requested by the office gang for a snuffly winter day, so out came the 2007 Rui Cao Liang sheng from Yunnan Sourcing, comforting, friendly, earthy, and mellow. Happy campers up and down the hallway now--today's tea distribution included 5 colleagues, including one new person who now has an official tea cup.
Jan 30th, '13, 21:13
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Re: Official Pu of the day
I second that!Devoted135 wrote:Oh man, I want to work where you work!debunix wrote:The verdict was unanimous this morning: earthy tea was requested by the office gang for a snuffly winter day, so out came the 2007 Rui Cao Liang sheng from Yunnan Sourcing, comforting, friendly, earthy, and mellow. Happy campers up and down the hallway now--today's tea distribution included 5 colleagues, including one new person who now has an official tea cup.
Feb 2nd, '13, 22:22
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TIM
Re: Official Pu of the day
2009 Yi Dao high mountain Sheung Puerh tonight. 'Oolong Puerh' processing... Good material, not time proven process (modern). High aroma, flat in the body, and not aging well so far.
Feb 3rd, '13, 00:09
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Feb 3rd, '13, 00:17
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Re: Official Pu of the day
Those high aromatic new style Puerh which goes stale in 8 plus years. They can't age and a total waste of time and money.debunix wrote:"Oolong puerh" processing???
Re: Official Pu of the day
Some of them are fine (if a little tragic because they were made of really good material).
But yes, most puerh that are oolonged to the point that the top taste is rather flat in a year or two are probably going to make for relatively boring tea in the long run. If it's done right, it's only a little oolonged. The other real danger of oolonged puerh is that they become harsh in the throat after a few brews.
Right now, I can't really tell oolong puerh by aroma. Better puerh in general have stronger, higher aroma. TIM, how would you tell a oolonged puerh from a really good puerh by aroma? Is it extra fruity? Extra floral? I'd have to go by whether the taste is lively and how it feels in the throat.
But yes, most puerh that are oolonged to the point that the top taste is rather flat in a year or two are probably going to make for relatively boring tea in the long run. If it's done right, it's only a little oolonged. The other real danger of oolonged puerh is that they become harsh in the throat after a few brews.
Right now, I can't really tell oolong puerh by aroma. Better puerh in general have stronger, higher aroma. TIM, how would you tell a oolonged puerh from a really good puerh by aroma? Is it extra fruity? Extra floral? I'd have to go by whether the taste is lively and how it feels in the throat.
Re: Official Pu of the day
I hope you guys don't mind if I chip in. IMHO, when I choose pu for aging or even for drinking now, I normally don't pay much attention of floral aroma, I go for body, texture, durability, huigan and feel. I'm a bit like my chosen avatar, complete opposition of TIM's, don't have much sense of smell. A very aromatic tea like oolongs or most green tea would be wasted on me. Most of them also don't have that thick texture I find in pu which I crave. Having said that, occasionally I do notice some tea have some interesting youthful taste, e.g. 2011 Dayi Jin.
Re: Official Pu of the day
You are correct, another Jin Dayi ’11 review…
I bought a cake when it was $40, just because of all the hype. Now it’s $60 and I wouldn’t buy another bing at such a mystical price. I wonder why dayi didn’t make a nice shu bing of these leaves, maybe something like a higher quality dragon pole ?
I was a bit more inspired by the dayi longyin ‘12 but I need to try it again. It was more homogeneous and much more brewable, if I remember correctly.
- Wet leaves aroma: burnt pine wood, thyme, a hint of leather
Taste: very particular. smoked taste, thyme, pepper, spices... not much chenwei for a ’11 dayi of this kind, or is it me? Tastes bada area plantations [Edit] blended with some mengsong/baotang [/Edit]
Huigan: yes… a few good “intoxicating” effects for a young sheng (if it means something...)
Aftertaste: sweet bitterness, smoke, a hint of garlic butter(?). Not very longlasting.
Mouthfeel: some astringency which doesn’t last too much, some slight salivation effect.
Soup: from gold yellow to orange
Qi: I have no idea… so, probably not much...maybe a bit of calming qi after a good while, i don't know
I bought a cake when it was $40, just because of all the hype. Now it’s $60 and I wouldn’t buy another bing at such a mystical price. I wonder why dayi didn’t make a nice shu bing of these leaves, maybe something like a higher quality dragon pole ?
I was a bit more inspired by the dayi longyin ‘12 but I need to try it again. It was more homogeneous and much more brewable, if I remember correctly.
Last edited by fdrx on Mar 8th, '13, 12:09, edited 1 time in total.
Feb 4th, '13, 01:50
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nada
Re: Official Pu of the day
Tim, I'm curious to understand. What do you mean by Oolong Puerh processing? Is it simply a puerh tea that has been withered for longer, and hence oxidised more, or is there another process you're referring to?TIM wrote:...'Oolong Puerh' processing... Good material, not time proven process (modern). High aroma, flat in the body, and not aging well so far.
You were very specific in stating that it goes stale after 8+ years. I don't doubt it, but do you mind sharing why you think this is the case?
Feb 4th, '13, 11:23
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Re: Official Pu of the day
Perhaps should start a new topic Nada? How are you doing?nada wrote:Tim, I'm curious to understand. What do you mean by Oolong Puerh processing? Is it simply a puerh tea that has been withered for longer, and hence oxidised more, or is there another process you're referring to?TIM wrote:...'Oolong Puerh' processing... Good material, not time proven process (modern). High aroma, flat in the body, and not aging well so far.
You were very specific in stating that it goes stale after 8+ years. I don't doubt it, but do you mind sharing why you think this is the case?
Re: Official Pu of the day
80s maocha puer from teamasters. Randomly found a sample floating around in a box.
Feb 5th, '13, 04:19
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Re: Official Pu of the day
I'm well thanks Tim.TIM wrote: Perhaps should start a new topic Nada? How are you doing?
Good idea to separate out the discussion. I've started a new thread here:
http://www.teachat.com/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=18208
Re: Official Pu of the day
2003 Sun Yi Shun Liu An from Finepuer. This has a nice sweet aftertaste that lingerers for awhile, I enjoyed this tea.