I decided to bask in the continuous rain we have been having
for the past few days and cycle the long distance to work early in the
morning. When I get there and dry off I
decide to open the next sample alphabetically and a warm aged odour greets me…
a perfect sample to cozy up to I think…
Dry iron like tight compressed leaves smell of aged humid
storage with a distinct dirt peaty odour but also there is a sweetness to it as
well. It kind of smells of dry-ish natural
Taiwanese storage. You can observe the
distinct iron pressed straight edge which is a signature of such cakes. Right away you know we are likely dealing
with a Xiaguan 8653 Iron Cake until we can rule out otherwise… I give it a 30
second rinse then 30 minutes of rest in the warm teapot.
First infusion has a sweet hay and grass like taste with a
rich creamy sweet woody taste with a returning not to sweet maple syrup subtle
sweetness. The mouthfeel is lubricating
and nicely oily.
The second infusion starts with a spicy woody, vaguely
smoky, and a sweet hay/grass like sweetness there is a cooling breath and
throat then a returning sweet woody, almost spicy/forest, and not that sweet
maple syrup finish. The mouthfeeling is a
thin sticky dense fine mossy mouthcoating.
Mild heart racing and energetic feeling but also soothing feeling Qi. There is a hay kind of sweetness that lingers
minutes later.
The third infusion has a slightly syrupy rich hay sweetness with
a faint smoky incense mid-body and a sweet dry talc cherry medicinal nuance
finish after mild cooling in the mouth.
The mouthfeeling is a bit mossy-dry on the tongue with not much throat involvement. Nice mild-moderate curbed energetic feeling
Qi.
Oh man… my workday got crazy fast and it takes me a few
hours before returning the tea table… The fourth infusion has a smoky hay sweet
woodsy onset there is a medicinal cooling finish that has a bit of sweetness
and woodiness and incense. The smoke
lingers on the breath afterwards.
The 5th has a sweet hay and smoky onset with a
sweet woody incense medicinal finish.
The mouthfeel is thin and mossy and faintly drying. There is a sweet rich woody taste that
appears throughout after a cooling mouth.
Nice mild alerting energy.
The 6th has a syrupy medicinal woody smoky
sweetness that descends into a woody incense taste and returns as a dry leaf
and not-so-sweet maple syrup taste. The
taste is really condensed and syrupy here.
The mouthfeel is thin and mossy.
Nice mild alerting energy.
The 7th has a watery hay woody taste upfront
which then slowly transitions to a woody incense after a cooling mouth. Nice mossy slight dry coating. Nice mild alerting energy.
The 8th has a malty hay sweet woody kind of initial
taste. There is a cooing medicinal finish to it, a bit sweet. The thin mossy mouthfeeling seems to
harmonize nicely with the aged tastes.
Nice mild alertness is getting me through this day today with a level
head.
The 9th was left to cool and gives off a robust mildly
sweet hay and muted maple syrup yet reasonably condensed cool medicinal almost
dry woody camphor kind of taste. The
mouthfeeling is mossy. Qi is softly
alerting.
The 10th has a medicinal woody faint sweet hay
onset with a lingering woody incense follow through. The mossy mouthfeeling supports this
all. Nice harmonizing slightly alerting
Qi here.
The 11th has a rich woody taste to it with a
cooling which comes with a woody medicinal finish. The mouthfeeling is a bit dryer here. There is an incense like taste left in the
mouth, a bit smokier in the finish now. The wet leaves in the pot smell like delicious
raison.
12th infusion has a mellow sweetness to it of hay
and almost bread before turning to cooling and medicinal in the mouth over a
thin mossy tongue coating. There is a
lingering sweet woody nuance.
13th infusion has a woody incense onset that has
an underlying sweet woody taste that turns cool and incense medicinal. There is a soft thin mossy almost drying
mouthfeeling.
14th is really nice sweet peat woody almost spicy
incense woody taste with the main taste being sweet. The mouthfeel is soft fainter moss here.
The slow release of the iron pressed cake allowed for a hand
full of more sweet, rich, woody, incense, tasting infusions. Then slowly the complexity started to wane
and the bitterness started to take over.
The bitter infusions lasted past 20 before it weakened into bitter woody
water. Very nice!
Guess: 2001-2004 Xiaguan 8653 Iron Cake. It looks like Teas We Like has a lot of these
listed on its site here. The description
of the storage matches my experience with this cake- drier natural Taiwanese
storage. I had consumed the 1990s
Xiaguan 8653 once in a while in the puerh tea shops in Korea many years ago. They were much more humidly stored than this
sample. I love the way the session
slowly progresses as the compression loosens from these iron bings. Although
Peace
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