2007 Xiaguan 8613 raw - The shop found one box of this in their warehouse. It was a forgotten stock. So they took out and sell. It tasted flowerish. Smokyness has gone away. Very cheap cause they said they are selling it at year 2007 price without market up just to get rid of the stock.
2011 Dayi Pu Zhi Wei Raw - Revisit. When the 1st time I drank it, it gave a unique taste. Today not much unique but smoky. For the price we get for preorder, it is very worth the price for such a taste.
I haven't had very many either. I just never thought it was anything other than an easy-drinking slightly wet-stored 7542. I really liked the dense taste and aroma of pine and musk, but thought that the power was really lacking. My sample was certainly lacking in qi, compared to other 7542 I've had, and it didn't have too much in the way of huigan...
According to the magazine it says Liu-An has stopped production in 1943 and starts production back on 1988. There are many years in between missing and some said there shouldn't be any productions in between.
Someone explained it to me that there are many factories producing it, so it is very possible to have liu-an in between the years non production as per the magazine list of factories.
Day 2 of HouDe's 2003 Hong Kong Henry 7542. Taste of young sheng. Piney. Intense. I'd give it 15 more years in good storage.
It is beginning to even out around brew # 10. I'd swear this has some Liu An thrown in!
2011 Local Brand Raw Bulang Early Spring - Another product of this year. IIRC they introduced about 7, and this year all are from Bulang different area.
According to them, all taste differently. This is also from early spring harvest. 500 years old tree. Fresh. Tasty. Light. Good aroma. Not bitter. Not astringency. But smoky taste is quite obvious. The smoky is very acceptable to drink. The aftertaste is good. Saliva keeps flowing out.
This shop's tea are quite popular in malaysia and taiwan branch among their customers who appreciate single estate old tree tea. The owners will personally go to the farm and select their own raw materials. Only the best to their standard would be introduced. Early spring harvest and also traditional processed. They have been doing this since 2004. I have heard a few times from their customer saying 'After drinking their pu, there is no turning back'
This is an Early spring harvest in one of the Bulang area. 500 years old tree. Fresh. Tasty. Light. Good aroma. Not bitter. Not astringency. Ready to drink.
Last edited by auhckw on Aug 19th, '11, 12:52, edited 1 time in total.
Some have asked me to look for Liu-An, so I have gone around researching/tasting them. In short, not all Liu-An are pleasant to drink. Some are really disgusting (especially new). Today I tasted 5 types of Liu-An.
Unknown year, most probably new Not nice. Greenish awkward taste. Yuck.
90s Greenish, but at least sweet. Not nice.
80s Taste much better than the first 2. Pleasant aroma. A bit woody taste. Acceptable to drink but the time is not right to enjoy yet.
70s I am not even sure there are 70s Liu-An (cause I thought it started to produce back in the 80s), but it was written there as 70s. Ignoring the year... taste wise... very much enjoyable. Nice aroma and Woody taste. Sweet. A bit medicine taste. This is shortlisted as one of the good Liu-an that can be enjoyed now. I am getting seniors to confirm the taste. May introduce this as KLP.
Liu An Sticks 1920s I have wrote about this before. It is still very very very extremely good. So good that even 2g is enough to be drank and enjoyed up to 15 brews. The woody has turned into medicine (ginseng) taste. So sweet. Ahhhhh.... too bad... no more stock.
After many brews... it was boiled, cause we don't want to waste it. Taste is oh so very good
Last edited by auhckw on Aug 13th, '11, 10:25, edited 1 time in total.
2010 Bang Wai from EoT, a sample from a tasting, that sat in dry temp-controlled storage in the sealed pouch for many months since my last sips, and it is really mellowing nicely, despite the poor conditions for aging. Sweet and spicy and anise, mmmm. A delicious contrast to days of greens and green oolongs.
Today I am steeping a 96 menghai toucha from Bana tea. I am enjoying it much more than when I first puchased it. I have been recieving this lesson alot lately as I am going back and trying a few other 90's teas that I was unimpressed with when they are fresh out of the mailbox. Recently I revisited Nada's small yellow label and was really amazed buy the change after being aired out for a few months.
I just remembered that I have a dong dao cup, and decided to bring it to tea shop from now on to use it. I want it to have crackle... last 2 tea photos above is the cup.