It’s that time of year when our beloved puerh vendors have
to decide when to release their newly pressed puerh. One thing that I often read is that you
shouldn’t evaluate a very freshly pressed puerh or maocha. Some vendors even hold back their cakes for a
few months before release. Others tell
customers that they shouldn’t base their decision on whether they like the
puerh until a few months have passed. I
totally disagree with these statements.
Although I do understand that changes do take place pretty
rapidly in this early month or two. There
is actually lots we can learn from very fresh maocha or newly pressed puerh
cake. In my experience of making green
tea and compressed ddok cha in the mountains of Korea, very freshly made tea
does have a different quality to it.
However, when you try enough very fresh tea you develop a taste for it
and can easily determine quality.
If the puerh is of quality in these first few weeks, even 6
months later it will taste above the rest, regardless if some qualities
change. One of the best characteristics
to look for in very young puerh is its energy, Qi, and the way it makes you
feel. This dimension doesn’t really change
as much as the taste. I find thickness of
the tea liquor and a bit of the taste change the most during this early period.
However, the change is somewhat predictable. If you couldn’t determine quality from these
early picked tea, then how could our vendors and producers select the best
fresh maocha to press into cakes?
I don’t hold it against vendors who wish to release a more palpable
tea especially as rubbery, smokey, and overly bitter qualities often dissipate
over this time. I see this very early
stage as part of the lifespan of puerh.
If puerh is to be appreciated as it ages, then why are we not appreciating
puerh infancy?
Peace
I just reviewed a couple of very young maocha versions, tied in part to your recommendation of Chawang Shop as a vendor, although a few different mentions of them taken together served as a good reminder and prompt. I don't have the experience to place that well, how I expect the versions to change further over a few more months, but the unique character was interesting.
ReplyDeleteJohn B,
ReplyDeleteThanks for your notes on these:
http://teaintheancientworld.blogspot.com/2019/05/guangbie-and-hekai-2019-maocha-from.html
I hope to post comparison notes on some fresh maocha I sampled last year and the pressed cake versions a year later.
Peace