I've recently tried a hei cha (Hunan brick tea) that reminded me of another different type of compressed tea (Yunan black) for having an unusual underlying mineral taste range. It's quite hard to describe, and odd that the other flavor profile for both teas share some common ground but aren't really similar in some senses.
From this post, about the Hunan hei cha:
http://teaintheancientworld.blogspot.co ... brick.html
The taste range from the scent is there, figs, an old version of dried hay, not really dry, light bright tones but earthier and sweeter range, with some depth to it. It's clean in effect, not off in any way. That part of the range sort of reminds me of the Yunnan compressed black tea but it's the underlying tone that really does. It includes layers of molasses earthiness and sweetness with an unusual mineral tone, like the scent of an artesian well that draws up minerals from deep in the ground. I really like that part, although I suppose that maybe not everyone would. It's not off in any way, not difficult to appreciate, but it is different.
I never really did do justice to the mineral tone in the first "shai hong" compressed black tea review; I compared it to the scent of volcanic soil in that. I just tried that tea again in the past few days and liked it even more, and interpreting that common ground does seem justified, but if anything the rest of the flavor range varies more than I remembered.
It's interesting thinking through how any of this is similar or different from other versions of mineral aspects in Taiwanese oolongs or Wuyishan (roasted Fujian) oolongs. And also to consider to what extent minerals really probably are taste aspects picked up by tongue, versus feel elements (like astringency, or the different types of thickness described), contrasted with aromatic flavor aspects identified by nasal passages sensation. There's lots more I could say about that since it's a subject I've been researching but adding a paragraph or two would probably make things less clear rather than more clear, especially considering the limited value in my own interpretation of all that.