This 2016 Yang Qing Hao Wujin Cang ($250.00 for 400g cake or
$0.63/g) came as a part of a sampler from Liquid Proust Teas he is currently
selling it separate for those who are interested here. Description on site is “Early
spring production from old trees in deep forest areas around Yiwu. Limited
production with only 1277 cakes produced.”
I was in the mood for a cooling younger type puerh at work
and I decided to go for this sample on this unseasonably hot day. It turned out that this puerh? was straight
up fire…
Dry leaves have a sugary creamy odour almost but not quite
fruity and a lingering faint storage smell of almost woods. The odour is changing and hard to pin down.
First infusion starts with a creamy buzzing pungency onset
with a soft almost ripe banana taste. There
is a low register pungency which expands in the mouth with a cool pungent
sweetness. The taste is bright and vibrant
tasting. The mouthfeeling is creamy and
chalky and reasonably thick for the first shot.
The throat feel is mid to deep.
This is a nice gushu thing I think to myself…
The second infusion has a creamy sweet almost floral quick
but smooth and vibrant punch there are some coco tastes that emerge and distant
fruity edges there is a light honey nuance as well. There is a certain fullness of the taste and
vibrancy that feel complete and really satisfying. The taste is quite complex with cream
sweetness, coco bitter, strong pungency and long sweetness. There is a deep throat presence and a nice
vibrant enlivening but comforting Qi.
The third has a thick fast fruity creamy coco bitter onset
that feels very full and satisfying and deep.
The mouthfeeling is chalky and fully coats the mouth. The throat opens to a mid-to-deep depth and
lets the significant pungency reverberate in there. The Qi is strong and pushes me into a sweat
there is a strong warming energy in these leaves that is immediately
apparent. The bodyfeel is opening the
sternum and making the arms light. The
mind feel alive and I feel an invigorating motivating energy throughout. The Qi of this “deep forest” puerh is quite
nice. The complexity of the sweet,
bitter, pungency and fullness in the mouth and depth of throat make this very
satisfying.
The fourth infusion has a slight bitter coco onset with a
syrupy sweet woody almost canned apricot syrupy, and malty taste. There bitterness is moderate and is more
integrated with a thick syrupy sweetness and seems to enhance it nicely. This infusion is not as pungent or sweet and
is more balanced with biiter coco, underlying storage woods tastes, lower
lingering pungency with some coco almost creamy but muted syrupy
sweetness. The big Qi pushes another warming
sweat out… this is not the cooling puerh I sought out…
The fifth infusion has more of a woody integration of syrupy
sweetness and bitter. There is less coco
and less creamy or even faint fruity sweetness now. The thickness of the liquor is keeping this
complete and interesting. This infusion
is bitterer and has a lingering underlying ghostly sweetness. The mouth and throat feeling are natural and
simulating not over the top but quite full.
The Qi races the heart and opens the chest. There is a vibrancy to this Qi I like.
The sixth has a thick creamy insistent sweatness that turns
to wood and almost mushroom then a pungency bursts through and there is
sweetness that is fruity then pungent creamy.
The thick chalkiness in the mouth is nice. There is this underlying soupy coco mushroom
almost woodiness in the distance that gives it a lot of depth. It’s weird that this is Yiwu I would have
guessed a blend of different regions due to its complexity. It’s maybe a Yiwu blend? This deep forest is hard for me to form a
reference…
The seventh has a creamy fruity almost banana mushroom
taste. There is a pungency then a long
fruity turning to creamy sweetness. The
thickness and leathery taste remind me of Mengku. The long pungent and creamy sweet fruity of
Yiwu. There is a certain coco bitter in
here that’s notable.
The eighth is more bitter a thick full bitter coco in the
mouth. The sweet flavours are pinned
under the bitter.
The ninth has a fruity bitter coco vibe with peachy
fruits. The bitterness is moderate not
strong in this puerh but offers a nice balance.
The flat coco taste has a mild pungency in the mouth with a coco and
slight creamy sweetness. The
mouthfeeling is full but more sandy chalky.
The throat opens to a mid level.
Nice invigorating Qi.
The tenth is much the same with a very robust coco mid-level
bitterness with a low pungency and faint creamy sweetness. The mouthfeeling is more fine sand and less
thick oily chalkiness now. The throat
feeling is still deeper but a development of complex flavours can no longer
materialize. Good head buzzing Qi.
Darn ran out of time in a day… will return to it tomorrow…
11th is creamy and peachy sweet Yiwu. The bitter
coco has dropped in the leaves overnight.
The 12th has a creamy peachy onset with a faint
undercurrent of bitter coco and slight woody tastes. There is still a nice sunny vibrancy to this
puerh.
13th starts very creamy sweet with a thick chalky
presentation. There is a building
bitterness and mouthfeeling now as these leaves keep giving out. There is a lubricating juiciness in the mouth
along with mild coco bitter. The
aftertaste is faint sweet creamy sweet.
The Qi is felt in the chest again as the infusions compound in the body
once more.
14th has a thick creamy fruity onset with a faint
bitter coco woody underneath. There is like
a returning splash of juicy fruit then a faint pungent slight bitter
creaminess. The taste is full and satisfying
but I’m not sure if the bitter coco would throw some people off. When the bitterness is present, it’s a much
fuller mouthfeeling and flavor presentation.
15th has a more flat bitter onset without much of
a fruity splash of flavours that follow it.
The Qi expands in the chest, makes the head feel heavy, and sharpens the
mind. Nice Qi here.
This tea also has excellent stamina too.
16th, 17th, 18th… still
quite strong bitter coco with fruit to finish.
The base taste is almost leathery.
My impressions of both the 2012 Yang Qing Hao Ye Gu and this
2016 Yang Qing Hao Wujin Cang are very favorable… but the problem is I have no
reference point to other “deep forest” puerh… I guess my previous tastings of
forest puerh were not deep??? I have no
idea, but I find this super interesting and even proof of how deep and
complicated the breadth of puerh tea can be.
I would have pegged this in the “wild tea” category if Shah8 hadn’t
clued me in that it is something a bit different. Its amazing that I’ve been drinking puerh for
decades now and have tried literally thousands but have not had this or not
know it was this in the past… that’s what makes puerh so interesting to me…
Anyway…
This 2016 Yang Qing Hao Wujin Cang deep forest yiwu is like
a cheaper and less good 2012 Yang Qing Hao Yehgu. I think it’s like %60 of the 2012 Yegu better
bang for your buck if you are into “Deep Forsest”. Or maybe you have a 2012 Yegu and want an
everyday drinker Deep forest… that would be another reason. The bitter and coco taste is very much the
same as well as the fruit but it’s just not as concentrated or complex or
intense or bitter as the 2012 Ye Gu. The Qi is really a
big and very warming thing in both of these which is why I like them both and why they remind me
of wild tea. They both have very good stamina. From my two samples the
2011 Yehgu is much smaller compressed leaf and much more brilliantly
purple. This leaf is less purple, seems
larger, and less compressed. I’m only
going off the samples I received so hard to say. Both share a lot of similarities. The 2012 Ye Gu was different in that it had
much more subtle complexity but the 2016 has a deeper leathery body to it which
the 2012 didn’t have.
Overall, this one surprised me. I am getting to know what “deep forest” means
at least to Yang Qing Hao. I still haven’t
purchased a cake of either of these but it’s at least on my radar.
I highly recommend ordering both the 2012 Ye Gu and 2016 Endless possession samples from Liquid Proust Teas together and sampling them next to
each other to get an idea of what “deep forest Yiwu” means to Yang.
Shah8’s tasting notes.
Shah8’s tasting notes.
Peace
1 comment:
Hi Matt, I've become increasingly curious about the 2016 Wujin Cang and wanted to ask what you believe "deep forest" to actually mean? Do you believe these teas to be truly wild varietals, or do you think this is a marketing term for gushu/wild-cultivated teas? They remind me somewhat of the 2007 Qizhong which can be both smooth and intensely bitter, but their character is much different from other 5-year old teas that I've tried. The intense bitterness makes me curious if they are Camellia taliensis. Thanks!
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