19 Tasting Notes

Had a sample of this in my stash for 1.5 – 2 years in pretty lazy storage so very young. Gaiwan, 1g:15ml. Did 8 solid steeps, then one where I forgot about it for 15min or so.

Big aroma throughout: citrus zest – grapefruit?, dampened dried wild grasses & flowers, slightly woody like hardwood in the later steeps. Reminded me of late summer nights when the damp night air rehydrates the dried grasses and flowers and it’s got that heady floral quality.

Flavor was pretty solidly young sheng: crisp greens, artichoke, toasted grasses, and some fruitiness. Not a total gut bomb, definitely still bitter and astringent but manageable. Good sweet aftertaste. I could drink this, but I wouldn’t pick it often.

The last “wildcard” 15min steep was a real winner, big stonefruit/apricot aroma and flavor, hardly bitter. Was very light though, not sure the tea had much more to give.

I’m not really familiar enough with (young) sheng to really confidently evaluate it or how it might age, just trying to write more tea notes.

Flavors: Artichoke, Citrus Zest, Hay, Lettuce, Stonefruits, Wood

Preparation
Boiling 3 g 2 OZ / 50 ML

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90

Bright, sweet, fruity. Love this one. Way more than the Dian Hong you might expect. This is the daily tea that I actively avoid drinking because I would demolish my stash so quickly. You can come back to this tea multiple times and find something new each time.

Flavors: Berry, Malt, Toasted

Preparation
3 g 9 OZ / 266 ML

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Take it from me: Guy Who Has Not Has Much Raw Pu-Erh™, this is a pretty good cake. By now it’s lost nearly all of its astringency and has a fruity, bright character. A good amount of depth and complexity.

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80

Hits all the right notes for a daily driver black tea (for me.) Malty, light scent of fresh tobacco, a rich, floral (in that way autumn leaves are floral, y’know?), and bright background. Complex on its own but plays a wonderful second fiddle to a pastry or snack. Wonderfully toasty at heavier ratios, though that dies off in the later steeps. Quite sweet with brown/raw sugar flavor, not the sweetest I’ve had but significant. Toes the line of too sweet for me (I prefer roastier/toastier -sweet to sugar-sweet).

Flavors: Brown Sugar, Floral, Malt, Toasty, Tobacco

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85

Update:
This turned into my daily driver and I fell into an easy rhythm with it brewing it western style. 5.5g:300ml, 10-15s rinse, 2:00, 2:20, 2:50. It doesn’t get bitter or astringent, but steeping too long can make it too thick and undefined. You get really clear, sweet sugary notes with the first steep that evolve into more defined floral, malty, and fruity notes in the later steeps.
I’ve gone through it in a handful of months so I can’t say it’s really aged. It is a little more aggressive these days, but I think that’s due a higher ratio of broken leaves and dust as I reach the bottom of my bag.
Cold brews into a great, but a bit light, iced tea.

Flavors: Brown Sugar, Floral, Malt, Plums, Sweet Potatoes

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 2 min, 15 sec 5 g 10 OZ / 300 ML

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75

Initial impressions. On opening the bag I was greeted with a funky, fruity smell like maybe a nectarine or plum that gave way to hay, spring/summer grass, and almost meatiness. The brew was intensely savory with a solid returning sweetness. Spinach, sweet grass, seaweed, and a ton of umami. Broccoli crowns that have been steamed until soft. Buttery mouthfeel. Even though the leaves don’t have much of an intense green going on like a gyokuro, I would suspect a relatively high theanine content based on the taste.

Update:

I found this tea to get too astringent too quickly brewed in a gaiwan, even after dropping the temp and time. However, it’s quite good brewed western, ~5g to ~330g water, 180’F, for 2 minutes. Brewing this way really tames the bitterness and astringency but keeps the brothy and crisp brew.

Flavors: Hay, Sweet, warm grass, Umami

Preparation
185 °F / 85 °C 0 min, 15 sec 6 g 3 OZ / 88 ML

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85

Just received this tea so this is initial reactions.

Wow this tea is sweet, like turbinado and a touch of light brown sugar. Not too caramelly, a very clean sweetness. I would genuinely believe someone had sweetened this tea if I hadn’t brewed it myself. A little lighter and more floral than other dian hong; reminds me of oolongs on the more oxidized end. A touch peppery; sweet potato that comes and goes in middle steeps; just enough astringency to keep things interesting. Sweetness not as present in later steeps and opens up to more floral flavors. Lacks some of the nutty, peanut shell notes that give other dian hong some depth and I like, but holds its own, especially for the price. I bought this as a daily drinker and it fits that bill perfectly.

I think this tea will do well iced, cold brewed, and carbonated.

10s rinse; 10, 15, 20, 30, 45, 1min, 1min

Flavors: Brown Sugar, Malt, Pepper, Sweet Potatoes

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 0 min, 15 sec 6 g 3 OZ / 100 ML

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90

A decent bargain (though i bought it during their 2 for 1.) I wasn’t sure what to expect with this tea as there’s no date on it (and it’s a cake) but it tastes really fresh. Somewhat earthy like sweet potatoes but mostly lower floral and stonefruits. It’s not overly floral like getting hit in the face with an orchid but there’s enough there to keep you going back for more. Light enough that it’s easy to drink many cups at a time but you still feel like you’re drinking tea. Very, very little astringency, just a bit in the back of the throat. Perfect darkness in my opinion. Very glad i bought as much of it as i did.

It’s a chilly, rainy day today and this tea is perfect.

Flavors: Apricot, Orchid, Stonefruits

Preparation
195 °F / 90 °C 1 min, 15 sec 4 g 4 OZ / 118 ML

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Bio

I enjoy Dian Hong mostly, but have been venturing further into puerh, and anxi and dancong. I tend to focus on daily drinkers and teas that do well grandpa/western as I don’t have the time or caffeine tolerance to gong fu frequently.

90 – 100: Fancy daily, special occasion, teas that I carefully ration.
80 – 89: Ideal daily drinker range, very good and/or hits an excellent cost:quality. Would reorder.
70 – 79: Not an absolute favorite tea but I would pick often, or hits a certain flavor profile I like. Might reorder.
60 – 69: Generally disfavorable, but not actively bad.
<59: something has gone terribly wrong.

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