Re: Official Pu of the day
Sipping the last 6gms of 2014 Yunnan Sourcing Autumn Qing Mei Shan Old Arbor raw pu'er. I enjoyed ths tea's sample of 25gms.
Re: Official Pu of the day
2004 Xiaguan Jia Ji Tou cha. The edges are smoothening out. Used to be a very strong tea for my liking. Now it is better 

Mar 12th, '15, 18:41
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Mar 12th, '15, 18:49
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Joined: Jan 10th, '10, 16:04
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debunix
Re: Official Pu of the day
2007 Menghai Dayi "Silver Premium" Sheng, still a lot of smoky with the earthy, but nice for a mellow afternoon.
Re: Official Pu of the day
My first Pu, a 2005 Changtai Yi Chang Hao "Heng Feng Yuan" RIPE, a 100gm Tuo from Ebay, shipped ex Hong Kong and arriving here before the cheap Aliexpress one ordered the week before which is still in transit.
First brew about 8 seconds, may have been a little long, first wash was 20 seconds and discarded. A strong not quite sweet taste, not sour, more Umami. No "fishy" flavour I have read of on the forums. Done in a glass pot and decanted into a glass cup.
The colour comes as a dark reddish amber, the smell reminds me of a thick leaf litter under a beech forest following a rainstorm, full, woody, musty but not composty. There are woody notes, some mushroom hints in the aftertaste, like Shitakii or golden Oyster, not the average button type, complex.
Feels thicker in the mouth than greens, a velvety feel to the liquor, flavours still working in the back of the throat after swallowing, an interesting drink.
I need more types, more factories, more years
to try different puers. 
First brew about 8 seconds, may have been a little long, first wash was 20 seconds and discarded. A strong not quite sweet taste, not sour, more Umami. No "fishy" flavour I have read of on the forums. Done in a glass pot and decanted into a glass cup.
The colour comes as a dark reddish amber, the smell reminds me of a thick leaf litter under a beech forest following a rainstorm, full, woody, musty but not composty. There are woody notes, some mushroom hints in the aftertaste, like Shitakii or golden Oyster, not the average button type, complex.
Feels thicker in the mouth than greens, a velvety feel to the liquor, flavours still working in the back of the throat after swallowing, an interesting drink.
I need more types, more factories, more years


Mar 14th, '15, 03:38
Posts: 5896
Joined: Jan 10th, '10, 16:04
Location: Los Angeles, CA
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debunix
Official Pu of the day
Happy first-puerh-day!
So many teas, so little time to explore them all....pleasing to think I won't run out of interesting possibilities for new things to try, though.
So many teas, so little time to explore them all....pleasing to think I won't run out of interesting possibilities for new things to try, though.
Re: Official Pu of the day
06 Changtai Old Mr. Chen's Bada -
Mostly wood and grain with a touch of some storage flavors. A bit on the thin side but still tasty enough to be enjoyable.
Mostly wood and grain with a touch of some storage flavors. A bit on the thin side but still tasty enough to be enjoyable.
Re: Official Pu of the day
2014 Yunnan Sourcing Autumn Jiu Tai Po village raw pu'er tea. Really enjoying this 25g sample.
Re: Official Pu of the day
Yesterday I enjoyed an ineresting afternoon session with a 1990’s Ding Xing Hao sheng (The Chinese Tea Shop). Good complexity. Solid character and flavor profile – sweetness and bitterness work nicely together to achieve a firm base upon which the subtleties of the additional flavors – hay, camphor, old book leather and stonefruit – reveal themselves throughout the tea session. Most noticeable is the strong Qi in this one – an “energy” that makes me feel very alive and rather happy. Lingering aftertaste. Decent endurance and steep longevity (10-12 infusions). Not the most flavorful sheng I have enjoyed but an interesting find indeed.
Re: Official Pu of the day
if you're interested in it this cake is $30 on taobao.mam2431 wrote:Yesterday I enjoyed an ineresting afternoon session with a 1990’s Ding Xing Hao sheng (The Chinese Tea Shop). Good complexity. Solid character and flavor profile – sweetness and bitterness work nicely together to achieve a firm base upon which the subtleties of the additional flavors – hay, camphor, old book leather and stonefruit – reveal themselves throughout the tea session. Most noticeable is the strong Qi in this one – an “energy” that makes me feel very alive and rather happy. Lingering aftertaste. Decent endurance and steep longevity (10-12 infusions). Not the most flavorful sheng I have enjoyed but an interesting find indeed.
Re: Official Pu of the day
04 Tong Chang Huang Ji Yiwu Chun Jian -
Wood, leather and old books. This had a bit of a humid nature to it initially. It seems that the storage notes have mostly abated. The chaqi is slight. Seems a bit less complex right now, but still good overall.
Wood, leather and old books. This had a bit of a humid nature to it initially. It seems that the storage notes have mostly abated. The chaqi is slight. Seems a bit less complex right now, but still good overall.
Re: Official Pu of the day
Having a 2004 Yiwu sheng from Tribute Tea tonight.
Bought this a while back as my tastes are gravitating to the older stuff sometimes lately.
I opened the pack and got the aroma of soft hay like we used to stack in the barns in Summer.
The leaf was in good shape. Long twisty and wiry looking. i put it in the easy steeper to start out with. I gave a very quick rinse and the musty aroma of a tea of this age appeared.
I did two very quick steeps under 5 seconds each to start out. The brew gave a nice amber gold glow that spoke of it’s age. The sips gave a touch of mustiness of the old book many of these had that left quickly. The sweetness of this one came out very quick in the sips. The notes hinted at white peaches and stone fruits. I plan to steep this a while and sit back and relax a while with this one. No off notes of excess humidity or off storage. Just the hints at first that tell the story of this teas age. Nice, sweet with the fruit notes that make you keep sipping away. not an aggressive one but the nice subtle notes keep you going on this one.
Flavors: Hay, Peach, Smoke, Sweet
Bought this a while back as my tastes are gravitating to the older stuff sometimes lately.
I opened the pack and got the aroma of soft hay like we used to stack in the barns in Summer.
The leaf was in good shape. Long twisty and wiry looking. i put it in the easy steeper to start out with. I gave a very quick rinse and the musty aroma of a tea of this age appeared.
I did two very quick steeps under 5 seconds each to start out. The brew gave a nice amber gold glow that spoke of it’s age. The sips gave a touch of mustiness of the old book many of these had that left quickly. The sweetness of this one came out very quick in the sips. The notes hinted at white peaches and stone fruits. I plan to steep this a while and sit back and relax a while with this one. No off notes of excess humidity or off storage. Just the hints at first that tell the story of this teas age. Nice, sweet with the fruit notes that make you keep sipping away. not an aggressive one but the nice subtle notes keep you going on this one.
Flavors: Hay, Peach, Smoke, Sweet
Mar 23rd, '15, 00:55
Posts: 702
Joined: Sep 4th, '10, 18:25
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Re: Official Pu of the day
Beautiful sheen on that pot friend.the_economist wrote:TU's 2012 Guafengzhai, Spring.
Re: Official Pu of the day
2012 Yong De Zi Yu Certified Organic Shu -
This has shaped up nicely. Wish I would have bought a couple of these. Deep earthy notes with a good hit of sweetness. No fermentation funk. Good stuff.
This has shaped up nicely. Wish I would have bought a couple of these. Deep earthy notes with a good hit of sweetness. No fermentation funk. Good stuff.