At the moment I am sipping 2015 Chawangpu Hekai Gushu Xiao Bing. Since I bought it in May it has turned a very nice sweet aftertaste.
http://www.chawangshop.com/index.php/20 ... -200g.html
Re: Official Pu of the day
Admiral,AdmiralKelvinator wrote:The ZPH is a tea I've enjoyed a lot as well, though I've had trouble nailing it down. There are times when it comes out incredibly smoky-like Islay Scotch levels of peaty smoke. Luckily I enjoy me a dram or two of the good stuff from time to time as well, otherwise I might be quite put off.gasninja wrote:I had a really good session with Wisterias 03 ZiPinHao.
I have been using a new water for my older Puerh lately. Mountain valley spring water. It is from Hot Springs national park in Arkansas. It is a little heavy for younger teas but it really works well with older stuff. It is pretty expensive though so I have only been using it for special teas.
If you don't mind sharing, I would love to hear more about how you brewed this. Do you brew in a gaiwan or a yixing? By heavy water, you mean it has a high TDS yes? Might be worth a shot!
A good technique for dissipating smoke in Puerh is to shake or swirl the pot with boiling water for 30 sec or so. Sometimes twice is necessary. While it doesn't remove the smokiness totally, it will dissipate it enough to where the tea actually starts to introduce itself, some teas sooner than later.

Re: Official Pu of the day
The ZPH is a tea I've enjoyed a lot as well, though I've had trouble nailing it down. There are times when it comes out incredibly smoky-like Islay Scotch levels of peaty smoke. Luckily I enjoy me a dram or two of the good stuff from time to time as well, otherwise I might be quite put off.gasninja wrote:I had a really good session with Wisterias 03 ZiPinHao.
I have been using a new water for my older Puerh lately. Mountain valley spring water. It is from Hot Springs national park in Arkansas. It is a little heavy for younger teas but it really works well with older stuff. It is pretty expensive though so I have only been using it for special teas.
If you don't mind sharing, I would love to hear more about how you brewed this. Do you brew in a gaiwan or a yixing? By heavy water, you mean it has a high TDS yes? Might be worth a shot!
Nov 16th, '15, 15:38
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Re: Official Pu of the day
I had a really good session with Wisterias 03 ZiPinHao.
I have been using a new water for my older Puerh lately. Mountain valley spring water. It is from Hot Springs national park in Arkansas. It is a little heavy for younger teas but it really works well with older stuff. It is pretty expensive though so I have only been using it for special teas.
I have been using a new water for my older Puerh lately. Mountain valley spring water. It is from Hot Springs national park in Arkansas. It is a little heavy for younger teas but it really works well with older stuff. It is pretty expensive though so I have only been using it for special teas.
Nov 16th, '15, 10:24
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Location: Hong Kong
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jayinhk
Re: Official Pu of the day
I really don't know all that much about pu erh really. I'm but an amateur and learning as I go. I think you probably know more than I do! 

Re: Official Pu of the day
Thank you very much for all the info. It is very useful to learn from people who has been drinking pu'er for a longer period than me.jayinhk wrote:Nothing too fancy--just cakes that sound interesting and/or have good reviews. I feel like buying older, dry stored cakes is a waste unless the base material is exceptionally good. Tea just comes along so quickly here, I'm better off buying good new cakes and letting them do their thing.
2013 Yunnan Sourcing "Hui Run" Ripe Pu-erh tea cake of Bu Lang Mountain
2013 Yunnan Sourcing "Jing Mai Mountain" Wild Arbor Raw Pu-erh
2008 Menghai Dayi *Nu Er Gong Bing* Raw Pu-erh - 200g
2008 *Menghai Spring* Raw Pu-erh tea cake
2008 Menghai *8582* Dayi Raw Pu-erh Cake
Taobao and SF Express don't seem to allow tea shipments from China anymore--seems like if I want to go cake shopping, I should head up to China. Maybe it's time for that trip to Kunming
Yes, it is my dream to go to Yunnan one day as well.
Nov 16th, '15, 09:35
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Joined: Aug 28th, '12, 08:12
Location: Hong Kong
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jayinhk
Re: Official Pu of the day
Nothing too fancy--just cakes that sound interesting and/or have good reviews. I feel like buying older, dry stored cakes is a waste unless the base material is exceptionally good. Tea just comes along so quickly here, I'm better off buying good new cakes and letting them do their thing.
2013 Yunnan Sourcing "Hui Run" Ripe Pu-erh tea cake of Bu Lang Mountain
2013 Yunnan Sourcing "Jing Mai Mountain" Wild Arbor Raw Pu-erh
2008 Menghai Dayi *Nu Er Gong Bing* Raw Pu-erh - 200g
2008 *Menghai Spring* Raw Pu-erh tea cake
2008 Menghai *8582* Dayi Raw Pu-erh Cake
Taobao and SF Express don't seem to allow tea shipments from China anymore--seems like if I want to go cake shopping, I should head up to China. Maybe it's time for that trip to Kunming
2013 Yunnan Sourcing "Hui Run" Ripe Pu-erh tea cake of Bu Lang Mountain
2013 Yunnan Sourcing "Jing Mai Mountain" Wild Arbor Raw Pu-erh
2008 Menghai Dayi *Nu Er Gong Bing* Raw Pu-erh - 200g
2008 *Menghai Spring* Raw Pu-erh tea cake
2008 Menghai *8582* Dayi Raw Pu-erh Cake
Taobao and SF Express don't seem to allow tea shipments from China anymore--seems like if I want to go cake shopping, I should head up to China. Maybe it's time for that trip to Kunming

Re: Official Pu of the day
Wow Jay you are on a roll!jayinhk wrote:I just bought five more good cakes (Menghai and Yunnan Sourcing) for future consumption!

Is it possible to tell us which ones did you buy now?
Nov 16th, '15, 00:32
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Posts: 3124
Joined: Aug 28th, '12, 08:12
Location: Hong Kong
Contact:
jayinhk
Re: Official Pu of the day
2012 Dayi 201 Spring cake. This tea was cheap (38 RMB?) when I bought it on Taobao and was bitter and smokey (undrinkable, really). After only three years of storage in my home in Hong Kong, it brews red and is surprisingly pleasurable to drink. No smoke, much less bitter and has lovely floral aromas, with just a touch of wetness from storage. I've been so impressed with how my cakes have improved in the last two-to-three years that I just bought five more good cakes (Menghai and Yunnan Sourcing) for future consumption!
Re: Official Pu of the day
Its toward sweet fruity brown sugar as the round went on. The first couple of infusions were not as nice though. A bit rough and bitter.shah82 wrote:bankung, was the EoT Bingdao cedar/forest/spice or fruit/oil/brown sugar?
Re: Official Pu of the day
bankung, was the EoT Bingdao cedar/forest/spice or fruit/oil/brown sugar?
Re: Official Pu of the day
It seems to me that 2-3 yrs old puerh stored in BKK is not really the best period to drink. I also have a similar experience on so many teas of this age. freshness gone, flavour still not developed.Tead Off wrote:2013 Bingdao from Teadezhang. The initial smokiness seems to have dissipated quite a bit, however, the tea seems to have gone underground at this stage, unwilling to open its character. Astringent and drying, little flavor or aroma. Certainly quite different than my 2009 Bingdao from a different producer. Back it goes into the cave and will not reappear in the near future.
Re: Official Pu of the day
EoT Bingdao 2006 - yummy. very strong in character and flavour. super thick and strong leaves.
Re: Official Pu of the day
2013 Bingdao from Teadezhang. The initial smokiness seems to have dissipated quite a bit, however, the tea seems to have gone underground at this stage, unwilling to open its character. Astringent and drying, little flavor or aroma. Certainly quite different than my 2009 Bingdao from a different producer. Back it goes into the cave and will not reappear in the near future.
Re: Official Pu of the day
Had the Spring Tips yesterday at Sunsing causeway bay as well. I was expecting a far lesser tea. It was nice.gasninja wrote:Big tea day
2000 green peacock
2012 BHYJ Wan Gong (pesticides)
1997 Heng Li Chang Bulang
2001 thin paper Mengku YYX
1986 Yi Wu spring tips YUM!
Also White 2 teas Qi Lan "Fire" Yancha