May 6th, '13, 10:53
Posts: 637
Joined: Apr 11th, '09, 12:39
Location: UK
by apache » May 6th, '13, 10:53
lordsbm wrote:apache wrote:Yes, do PM me and I will have a look.
I don't have ££££ or $$$$ or ¥¥¥¥ for high end stuffs.
Talking about online group trading, since just over a week ago, there some frantic activity on HK Tea Forum. Some of the stuffs are $$$$$$$.
http://www.hkteaforum.com/forum.php?mod ... 3D1&page=1
I find it entertaining to
watch. How could they still call it "小賣部"?
pm you.
I avoid HK forum cos dun really get what some said in Canto
60K HKD = 10K SGD for 1 tuo
The prices seems a bit too crazy for me. Paying such prices for something you can't be 100% sure, worst to a stranger
I stick to low end stuffs, especially buying from TB. My agent only send food products via sea. Anything can happen to the tea. Especially during China custom inspection.
It's in HK, that's the de facto lingo.
I think those people know each other as they meet at tea gatherings regularly.
May 6th, '13, 10:57
Posts: 238
Joined: Feb 20th, '13, 19:13
by lordsbm » May 6th, '13, 10:57
apache wrote:It's in HK, that's the de facto lingo.
I think those people know each other as they meet at tea gatherings regularly.
学习了
May 6th, '13, 19:22
Posts: 2299
Joined: Oct 23rd, '06, 19:46
Location: Seattle Area
by tenuki » May 6th, '13, 19:22
1998 Fuhai from urchin. Does anyone else have this cake or tried it? Curious what you think.
May 6th, '13, 20:53
Posts: 2299
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Location: Seattle Area
by tenuki » May 6th, '13, 20:53
moving on to 2006 boyou 0506. yup, decent shu. still shu.
May 6th, '13, 21:04
Posts: 553
Joined: Nov 19th, '08, 13:37
Location: US (mid-Atlantic)
by TokyoB » May 6th, '13, 21:04
From EoT - 2010 Mr. Feng Shi Rei - tried the last of my sample. I found this tea very floral. The soup was orange but it still has the astringency of a fairly green tea. I quite enjoyed it though. It didn't have the thickness of the 2007 FD or the 2008 XT. The XT clearly had some more age on it but it was very quiet in terms of flavor. The ShiRei seemed to have a Menghai base with some Jingmai flavor on top. I think someone suggested this could be Mengsong. I did indeed have a Mengsong similar to this before.
May 6th, '13, 21:45
Posts: 2061
Joined: Mar 15th, '06, 17:43
by MarshalN » May 6th, '13, 21:45
Just had this myself recently, from the same source too, I think. I thought it was pretty decent. Not the greatest tea ever, but there are far worse ways of spending 600 RMB on a cake (say, on the Dayi Year of the Snake). How did you store your cake? Could it be you leaving it out for a year left it a bit less interesting?
http://www.marshaln.com/2013/04/two-teas/
May 6th, '13, 22:02
Posts: 2299
Joined: Oct 23rd, '06, 19:46
Location: Seattle Area
by tenuki » May 6th, '13, 22:02
apache wrote:2006 Douji "Shengtai Gushu" spring version
I had a sample of this from YS and was very impressed by it. Then I ordered a cake on TB
I got this same cake in 2008 for 34 bucks ( either YS or PS, can't remember ) and rather liked it enough to get a few more. Sampled it the other day with some friends and it's aging nicely. I can't say for sure but I think my liquid was a bit redder/oranger than yours, been stored in a clay beeng jar the whole time with some other good quality shen.
May 6th, '13, 22:41
Posts: 2299
Joined: Oct 23rd, '06, 19:46
Location: Seattle Area
by tenuki » May 6th, '13, 22:41
Oh man, how did I not know you had a blog?! ~adds to reader~
Good post, very interesting, I'll have to check my cakes next time I have them out to make sure they are spring.
May 7th, '13, 01:31
Posts: 118
Joined: Apr 2nd, '13, 20:59
by saxon75 » May 7th, '13, 01:31
2011 Jing Gu Mini Cake from YS. I like this one. Nicely smoky with a thick, creamy mouth feel. I think I pushed it a little too fast as it got more bitter in the middle infusions, but that mellowed out and was replaced with a pleasant huigan. I think I will pick up a tong of this, it's very nice and quite inexpensive.
May 7th, '13, 01:46
Posts: 2299
Joined: Oct 23rd, '06, 19:46
Location: Seattle Area
by tenuki » May 7th, '13, 01:46
Keiki wrote:I am drinking
Hey, you play Go?
May 7th, '13, 04:30
Posts: 637
Joined: Apr 11th, '09, 12:39
Location: UK
by apache » May 7th, '13, 04:30
MarshalN wrote:
Just had this myself recently, from the same source too, I think. I thought it was pretty decent. Not the greatest tea ever, but there are far worse ways of spending 600 RMB on a cake (say, on the Dayi Year of the Snake). How did you store your cake? Could it be you leaving it out for a year left it a bit less interesting?
http://www.marshaln.com/2013/04/two-teas/
Yes, it is from the same source. I get it a few weeks before you so storage in my place shouldn't be a major factor. I find all the edges are gone but with nothing more interesting to replace them. I will put it inside a cardboard box for a few months see if it recover. I do question if Douji cakes would age well or could be just me don't like their aged taste profile.
Regarding the Snake cake, I got it soon after it been released, so it was a bit less than 1/3 of 600 rmb.
May 7th, '13, 04:35
Posts: 637
Joined: Apr 11th, '09, 12:39
Location: UK
by apache » May 7th, '13, 04:35
tenuki wrote:apache wrote:2006 Douji "Shengtai Gushu" spring version
I had a sample of this from YS and was very impressed by it. Then I ordered a cake on TB
I got this same cake in 2008 for 34 bucks ( either YS or PS, can't remember ) and rather liked it enough to get a few more. Sampled it the other day with some friends and it's aging nicely. I can't say for sure but I think my liquid was a bit redder/oranger than yours, been stored in a clay beeng jar the whole time with some other good quality shen.
I'm always interested in other people storage results. This is encouraging.
May 7th, '13, 04:38
Posts: 637
Joined: Apr 11th, '09, 12:39
Location: UK
by apache » May 7th, '13, 04:38
tenuki wrote:
Oh man, how did I not know you had a blog?! ~adds to reader~
Good post, very interesting, I'll have to check my cakes next time I have them out to make sure they are spring.
I think this should be:
"Oh man, how did we all not know you had a blog?!"
May 7th, '13, 04:51
Posts: 2061
Joined: Mar 15th, '06, 17:43
by MarshalN » May 7th, '13, 04:51
apache wrote:tenuki wrote:
Oh man, how did I not know you had a blog?! ~adds to reader~
Good post, very interesting, I'll have to check my cakes next time I have them out to make sure they are spring.
I think this should be:
"Oh man, how did we all not know you had a blog?!"
I dunno, it's only been around for seven years
May 7th, '13, 05:24
Posts: 637
Joined: Apr 11th, '09, 12:39
Location: UK
by apache » May 7th, '13, 05:24
MarshalN wrote:apache wrote:tenuki wrote:
Oh man, how did I not know you had a blog?! ~adds to reader~
Good post, very interesting, I'll have to check my cakes next time I have them out to make sure they are spring.
I think this should be:
"Oh man, how did we all not know you had a blog?!"
I dunno, it's only been around for seven years
"ONLY seven years"
I wonder how many of us living in the West were already drinking puerh seven years ago. Seven years of pu history might not be long in HK, but in the West it was the "Jurassic Period".