89

Bravo on these nugs, got 300 g and dunno if I have enough. I reviewed these somewhat on my blog, but now today after steeping a small amount of this tea for 3 days, 20+ steeps, I’m gonna boil the leaves. Five minutes of a boil in an enamel pan. I got a thick coffee colored brew that tasted very minerally.

Gushing on these nuggets because they taste great, and are an incredible value at $5.50 for 50 grams, 3 days of steepings plus a boil or two after that!

I’ve been (tea) Pimped!

I took photos of the boiling, I don’t know how to post links, I’m new to tweeters and Grammies but I’m cwynsdeathbytea on Instagram.

Flavors: Chocolate, Mineral, Plums

Cwyn

No, I didn’t. When I encounter sour in puerh it is very often a situation where the puerh got dried out in the middle of a stage of fermentation. In that case I would add some humidity to the cake and store it a few months. That usually takes care of the sour.

looseTman

" … today after steeping a small amount of this tea for 3 days, 20+ steeps, I’m gonna boil the leaves."
Cwyn,
We purchased a quantity of these nuggets during Paul’s moving sale.
1. We’ve been enjoying this excellent Lao Cha Tou. Using 10g in a 3 oz. Ru Kiln gaiwan, how many infusions are likely?

2. About how many of the initial infusions contain enough caffeine to be used as a invigorating breakfast tea?

3. After how many infusions, is this tea essentially caffeine-free, suitable as a relaxing evening tea?

4. After how many infusions do you recommend boiling the leaves? What are the instructions: How many grams or cups of used leaves boiled in what quantity of water for how long?
Thanks!

Cwyn

I think I steeped a smaller amount, just a few nuggets. I also rested it over night for the duration. These are rather tight and they have more on the inside that takes awhile to break up. I boiled them for 5 minutes. They were yielding only very light reddish water before the boil. I have photos on Instagram of the boil, at the bottom/beginning of my photos.

As for caffeine, I’m not sensitive to the amount in shou. When I drink shou, I fall asleep. I would say just try 3 nuggets in 100 ml and go from there to adjust to your taste.

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Cwyn

No, I didn’t. When I encounter sour in puerh it is very often a situation where the puerh got dried out in the middle of a stage of fermentation. In that case I would add some humidity to the cake and store it a few months. That usually takes care of the sour.

looseTman

" … today after steeping a small amount of this tea for 3 days, 20+ steeps, I’m gonna boil the leaves."
Cwyn,
We purchased a quantity of these nuggets during Paul’s moving sale.
1. We’ve been enjoying this excellent Lao Cha Tou. Using 10g in a 3 oz. Ru Kiln gaiwan, how many infusions are likely?

2. About how many of the initial infusions contain enough caffeine to be used as a invigorating breakfast tea?

3. After how many infusions, is this tea essentially caffeine-free, suitable as a relaxing evening tea?

4. After how many infusions do you recommend boiling the leaves? What are the instructions: How many grams or cups of used leaves boiled in what quantity of water for how long?
Thanks!

Cwyn

I think I steeped a smaller amount, just a few nuggets. I also rested it over night for the duration. These are rather tight and they have more on the inside that takes awhile to break up. I boiled them for 5 minutes. They were yielding only very light reddish water before the boil. I have photos on Instagram of the boil, at the bottom/beginning of my photos.

As for caffeine, I’m not sensitive to the amount in shou. When I drink shou, I fall asleep. I would say just try 3 nuggets in 100 ml and go from there to adjust to your taste.

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Bio

I’m a tea drunk with baggage and issues. Convent trained, PhD, strong background in herbal infusions during those years. Started drinking green teas almost 20 years ago to address a kidney issue, now in remission, and never looked back. Seeking friends and curators with interests in premium and small batch teas. I drink all greens, and maintain a small collection of sheng and shu cakes. I am interested in first flush, wild leaf, ancient leaf, teas for and by monks and nuns, and difficult teas. My appreciation is high for subtle palates, though my own is rather average. Always interested in unique teas, brewing and storage issues.

Blog: http://deathbytea.blogspot.com/

Location

Midwest US

Website

http://deathbytea.blogspot.com/

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