Rui wrote:kuánglóng wrote:Have you tried the 2001 version, Rui?
I'm thinking about getting another 2003 Feng Qing Jia Ji Er Deng. Storage has been a bit more humid but on a nice day this tea blows me away like not much else.
Sipping some of William's 2015 Jingmai gushu over here. Life's sweet
No idea, Rui. There's not much left here. Nice tea in its own way, doesn't have too much in common with the 2002 though, different harvest, more humid storage, ...No I have never tried the 2001 yet. Is it still available?
.At home I have the 2005 Yong Pin Hao "Bamboo House" Raw Pu-erh tea cake of Yi Wu Mountain which is also great.
Don't know what turned you on, Rui, but a buddy and I liked it for the vanilla custard notes (custard from a wooden bowl while sitting in an old, dusty library, lol).
Yeah, got the mail as well. We've exchanged some emails lately and he seemed to be pretty happy about the move.Yes William's teas I pretty good. From the 2016 tea cakes my favourite was the Jingmai Gulan. By the way I got an email a couple of days ago telling that they have a new website. Did you get that as well?
I don't know though how long he'll be keeping his french shop up. I better hurry and get some more cakes before it's too late since larger orders from China are a major PITA over here, we've talked about it.
I don't know, but it's my favorite semi-aged cake from the greenteaguru and I've tried them all (me thinks). I've never experienced such intense and beautiful balsamic, perfumy leng xiang in the aroma cup and it stayed there for days - pure joy, the rest isn't bad eitherThe 2003 Feng Qing Jia Ji Er Deng I have only sipped the sample and I had to make purchasing choices and I still have not bought a full cake. Maybe I should revise my decision.

BTW, I recently stumbled across a shop in Finland:
http://www.teatrail.net/puer-dark-tea/y ... pu-er.html
Some of their tea looks pretty interesting. I'll probably shoot them a test order these days (Kunlu, 'Bingdao', Bulang).