This 2000 Essence of Tea Camphor Aroma is apparently a plain
old white paper, Ba Zhong puerh that was dug up in Malaysia. That doesn’t sound that exciting on the
surface of things, does it? Maybe that
is why even after a few years after being released this tea hasn’t gotten that
much attention.
However, I imagine David and Yingxi tasting hundreds, if not
thousands, of such common aged sheng that are so common in Asia. Then finally, one day, “this is the one!” They stumble upon some Zhongcha puerh that is
actually pure, vibrant, very aged, maybe of old tree material or at least
blended in. This $179.00 for 350g cake($0.51/g) is that very puerh… come on… that’s exciting now right???
Dry darker humid stored leaves are surprisingly void of any strong
odour they have been dried out from the humid Malaysian storage. They seem like they are factory chopped
material and maybe pretty compressed, hard to tell from this sample. The dry leaf has more of a very distant muted
odour of library, distant dirt, not really plum, dry odour. Not very Camphorous nor very aromatic. Feeling that these leaves will probably need
pushing I dump a generous amount of them into my teapot.
The first infusion has a dense and viscus very oily and
stimulating mouthfeel. In it are oily
dirt tastes as well as a distinct prune juice like flavor. Of course, there is a long dense sweet prune
camphorous aftertaste. I am pretty
surprised at how dense the taste is considering the dry leaf was so inert. The qi on the first infusion is enough warm
energy to break me into a sweat.
The second is even thicker this puerh is packed full of
oily, thick, viscus deliciousness, a deep woody, dirt and prune flavor. I continue to sweat. There is a finish of almost sour, almost tart
dark cacao now but overshadowed by dirt, camphor and prune tastes. The mouthfeel on this tea is very very nice.
The third infusion is much the same as above with more of a
sweetness than previous steepings. A very very dense, oily, prune, and camphor
taste is very strong. The qi very
warming. I admit defeat and remove 1/3
of the leaves from the packed tea pot.
The power of this puerh has me checking on the price about right now but
maybe it is just the fact I over-leafed it initially…
The fourth infusion with less leaf has much more nuanced
plumb/ prune tastes almost floral note seems lingering in the heavy, deep fruit
taste. The Qi hits the head with a
dizziness almost spacy feeling. The body
is full of combustible warmth.
The fifth infusion is denser, cloying, oily fruit tastes
initially. As this tea goes on, I feel
like the complexity and nuance of this fruit taste improves. The mouthfeeling is very thick. There seem to be lighter fruit suggestions
under the heavier fruits. The Qi is big
and makes the head really float and energizes the body a good balance of strong
sensations.
The sixth has a more woody camphor taste now with the fruit
tastes underneath. There are edges of
vanilla date, prune, wood. A returning
camphor with hits of cinnamon. The qi is
a big one. Very much in the head and
mind. It brings a joyful feeling. The Lungs can feel the deep effects and I
breathe deeper.
The seventh infusion has a deep plumb fruit onset buried
within. The long camphor taste is there
as well. Dirt notes reside within. The
warmth is very nice. The mouthfeel is
thick and oily and somewhat stimulating.
The eighth infusion is very berry light fruity tasting
now. It has a long camphor base taste
and almost brandy taste to it. This
puerh reminds me of a rich brandy.
The ninth has an almost mushroom like taste with initial
fruits and woods underneath. The camphor
cooling aftertaste is long and woody now and less fruity and sweet. The mouthfeel is sticky now as well as oily
and rich.
The tenth infusion has a woody profile throughout a dark
sweet honey note in there as well a fruit taste is more underneath things
now. The woodiness dominates there are
suggestions of something fruit and honey something else a touch interesting underneath.
The eleventh infusion starts with a plumb like taste and
then slowly transitions to woody notes and coolness in the aftertaste.
I add a few seconds to the flash infusions but this tea
seems to have great stamina and still lots of flavor here. In the twelfth infusion there are lots of
deep aged wood notes along with a jujube, Chinese date taste. There starts to a grain like taste in there
as well.
The thirteenth is still full of deep aged fruity tastes
backed by cooling woods. The qi in the
head is something wonderful, clarifying, illuminating. I am a little surprised about the stamina of
this puerh. Getting late in the day, now
I rest this tea until tomorrow morning.
The next morning I continue to squeeze out a handful of date
fruity, woody, aged tasting steeps with a low menthol finish.
Overall, the deep fruitiness reminds me of aged blended Eastern
Xishuagnbanna something with some smaller leaves in the blend pressed relatively
tight and with medium- heavy humidity. The
fruitiness and slight tart with no bitter taste profile somewhat reminds me a
bit like 2006 Yang Qing Hao Qi Xiang (the reference has also been made to other
more famous Yang Qing Hao cakes by others).
Interestingly, both the 2006 Yang Qing Hao Qixiang and this 2000 Essence
of Tea Camphor Aroma are priced similarly- this cake tastes much more aged
though. For the price you would have a
harder time finding something of this quality and being and tasting this aged
from Western puerh vendors. The Qi
profile of these two teas are quite different and the age gap but both tend to
be on the warming side of things something in this one reminded me a bit of the
Qixiang though.
Also an interesting comparison can also be made to the 2006
“Rustic Zhongcha” from Teas We Like that is very similar in price- although
they are really very different Zhongchas.
This 2000 Essence of Tea “Camphor Aroma” has a much more humid,
traditional Malaysian storage where the 2006 “Rustic Zhongcha” has a dry
Malaysian storage the difference is obvious as is the aged feeling between the
two. The 2000 “Camphor Aroma” has fully
developed aged notes like date, aged woods, and aged camphor, it has a rich
brandy or whisky like depth to it. The
2006 Rustic is just starting to develop hints of this but I believe will have a
much more distinct sweet date taste than this one. The Qi is different too with this one being a
balance of relaxing and energizing where the 2006 is still very energetic
feeling. They both have really good
mouthfeels but the 2006 has much more going on in the throat. They both have not super great stamina but
enjoyable while they last.
The last time I tasted something this aged with anything
close to this taste profile was a Zhongcha cake in Korea from the 1990s. It reminds me of this experience very long
ago. Thanks David for sending this free
sample in my last order and gifting me this familiar experience. This is a nice aged puerh for its price.
Peace
1 comment:
Mmmmm, your tasting notes are so much more thorough and detailed than mine, but reading them over I'm reminded once again of this tea which I also pulled out recently to enjoy. So good -- good age and such sweetness!
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