Good jujube/plum shu?
Bought some 90s CNNP 7581 recently and I really like the taste profile. Planning on heading up to Shenzhen next week--anyone have any suggestions on good shu (brick or bing) with a similar taste profile? I may just stock up on Guangdong-stored 7581, but if anyone has other suggestions, let me know!
Re: Good jujube/plum shu?
Just went to the tea market here in Shenzhen and all the 7581 I tried tasted horrible! Fake tea all around. I'll stick to buying online or in Taiwan I think...yeesh!
Re: Good jujube/plum shu?
Ugh, sorry to hear that.... it's an interesting state of affairs when your best options are online?
Re: Good jujube/plum shu?
Will see what prices in HK are like tomorrow, but I don't want a traditionally stored 7581!
This tea market was something else...hundreds of tongs of crap tea!
This tea market was something else...hundreds of tongs of crap tea!
Re: RE: Good jujube/plum shu?
Where did you pick up your 90s CNNP 7581 from? I'd love to try it.jayinhk wrote:Bought some 90s CNNP 7581 recently and I really like the taste profile. Planning on heading up to Shenzhen next week--anyone have any suggestions on good shu (brick or bing) with a similar taste profile? I may just stock up on Guangdong-stored 7581, but if anyone has other suggestions, let me know!
Re: Good jujube/plum shu?
Lucid_Om, from a family-owned tea store in Taipei. I'm going to pick up whatever they have left when I get back to Taipei as the storage was perfect!
As for the tea market in Shenzhen, it appears they were trying to fake HK traditional storage (BADLY). There's an art to traditional storage and whoever is aging tea up there is more of a butcher than an artist. Either that or they were really selling cheap Guizhou tea that had been pile fermented. Yeesh! I checked out maybe six stores at the market, but there are tons I didn't check out there. I'll have to go back some time.
As for the tea market in Shenzhen, it appears they were trying to fake HK traditional storage (BADLY). There's an art to traditional storage and whoever is aging tea up there is more of a butcher than an artist. Either that or they were really selling cheap Guizhou tea that had been pile fermented. Yeesh! I checked out maybe six stores at the market, but there are tons I didn't check out there. I'll have to go back some time.
Re: Good jujube/plum shu?
I know that I'm expected to be jealous of millionaires traveling about in a private plane with nice cars and gorgeous women, but I have to say I'd much rather be going about Asia as you do on an endless and amazing tea adventure. Good tea and bad, just having that much tea in reach all the time would be nothing short of awesome!jayinhk wrote:Lucid_Om, from a family-owned tea store in Taipei. I'm going to pick up whatever they have left when I get back to Taipei as the storage was perfect!
As for the tea market in Shenzhen, it appears they were trying to fake HK traditional storage (BADLY). There's an art to traditional storage and whoever is aging tea up there is more of a butcher than an artist. Either that or they were really selling cheap Guizhou tea that had been pile fermented. Yeesh! I checked out maybe six stores at the market, but there are tons I didn't check out there. I'll have to go back some time.
Definitely keep me in mind if they happen to have enough to share!
Re: Good jujube/plum shu?
I guess I do have it good. I'll be in Yunnan in about two weeks. Going to try and find some older 7581 in the Menghai area (more humid), but prices in China tend to be higher for aged pu erh because of the high demand. I'm hoping the dealer in Taipei doesn't sell those bricks as the tea is so good I'm regretting not buying all of the bricks when I had the chance! They only had another 3-4 on the shelf, and some 2007 or so 7581 that might be good too. I have about 20 7581 bricks aging away, but it looks like they need 10-20 years to be as good as the Taiwanese-aged stuff I picked up! No shortage of 7581 in Taiwan.Lucid_Om wrote:I know that I'm expected to be jealous of millionaires traveling about in a private plane with nice cars and gorgeous women, but I have to say I'd much rather be going about Asia as you do on an endless and amazing tea adventure. Good tea and bad, just having that much tea in reach all the time would be nothing short of awesome!jayinhk wrote:Lucid_Om, from a family-owned tea store in Taipei. I'm going to pick up whatever they have left when I get back to Taipei as the storage was perfect!
As for the tea market in Shenzhen, it appears they were trying to fake HK traditional storage (BADLY). There's an art to traditional storage and whoever is aging tea up there is more of a butcher than an artist. Either that or they were really selling cheap Guizhou tea that had been pile fermented. Yeesh! I checked out maybe six stores at the market, but there are tons I didn't check out there. I'll have to go back some time.
Definitely keep me in mind if they happen to have enough to share!
I haven't come across a dry storage 7581 in HK yet--just traditional storage, and so wet I can't tell it was 7581 when I drink it!