I arrived at work a few weeks ago to my administration staff
at work gathered around a package they had opened that arrived from Emmet. In it was a tong of 2007 Huangshan Qizhong, a complimentary sample (next post my friends), and this 500g single Qingbing of 2006 Yang Qing Hao Qixiang. The
staff was pretty much ignoring the tong and sample (I was more curious about
what sample arrived) and were handling and discussing the sealed clear Mylar
bag which contained the Qixiang cake.
They made comments like “it feels so solid and heavy”, “it
looks like it should be framed and put on the wall”, “this is like art”, “it’s
like something out of an old Chinese movie”.
I found these comments interesting because none of them had ever tried
puerh tea. They were simply giving me
their honest opinions on the look and feel of the wrapper. In their innocence, I think they pretty much
summed up the Yang Qing Hao brand without even trying or knowing anything about
the tea. This is why I think Yang Qing
Hao’s wrappers, tickets, packaging is the most brilliant of all.
Yang Qing Hao wrappers are, to me, some of the most
interesting in all of the puerh world. They
purvey a sense of grandiose, elegance, classic and timelessness, preciousness,
solidness, something worthy of appreciation or appraisal. The above comments attest to this feeling. From what I know about graphic design, having
so much going on in one wrapper without looking like just a wrapper full of
random words and designs is very hard to pull off.
But, pull it off they did. Genius.
Anyways, let crack this cake and find out how it’s doing,
shall we?...
The dry leaves smell of, well, Yang Qing Hao storage smells,
and a nice floral and distinct plummy aroma.
First infusion has a mellow juicy fruity overtone which
hangs in the mouth and throat over a slightly viscus and salivating
mouthfeel. A mild returning camphor
coolness sweeps by but then leaves more fruit to be enjoyed. A return of fruit tastes ensues even hits at
warmer notes of cinnamon which barely penetrate the lighter display of fruit
tastes.
The second infusion has a more active and intensely fruity
onset which turns into a mild cooling then there is a nice frosty sweetness
which arrives later. Fruit tastes
return. The tongue is mildly stimulated
like a very fine beach sand. It is
enough to give these tastes traction despite of an almost complete lack of
bitterness. The depth of fruity tastes
is interesting, complicated enough, and deep.
There is just a mild astringency in here as well. Qi is a very relaxing one, pleasant and
happy.
The third infusion the fruit tastes become more mixed in
with very mild pleasant astringency almost tartness. They splash the back of the throat which
seems very mildly stimulated. Then a
mild sweep of cooling washes over the taste then more complicated interplay of
fruits. The mouthfeel is filling out
here and becomes stickier and slightly sandy on the tongue tip. Qi is in the head, floating, wobbling, good
head feeling. Relaxing Qi.
The fourth starts with some mild astringency mixed with
intense layered fruit it traverses to a mild icing sugared sweetness along with
mild camphor coolness. There is a touch
of woody notes in there too. The icing sugar
and wood are new here as the character is changing. The mouth and throat feel is stickier. The tongue is especially stimulated.
The fifth infusion has a chalky fruit sweetness
initially. There is a powdery feeling in
the mouth- a cool returning sweetness reverberates. Saliva is pushed from the throat into the
mouth. It finishes with a slight floral
suggestions and sweet dates and cherry finish.
Overall, this tea has a nice full impression in its profile and in the
simulation of the mouth, throat, and tongue.
The sixth infusion starts with a slightly sourish, barely
astringent, almost tart, dominating fruit taste. It becomes a bit pasty almost
chalky and almost woody but mainly fruity.
There is a fainter icing suragy sweet returning taste and now the
aftertaste shares woody and fruity notes.
The qi is becoming pretty big here- it pushes me into a fine moist
sweat. I feel warm. I feel spaced out, things slow but I’m not detached. Overall, I feel calm. The relaxation is very profound- I start to
feel heavy headed, warm.
The seventh infusion starts with a fruity, woody mix, this
is classic Yiwu stuff here. The mild
returning cool sweetness is there followed by fruity tastes.
The eighth and ninth is much the same slight sour/
astringent mainly just good deep fruity, some woods, cooling returning
sweetness. Lots of significantly dense
fruitiness. Sometimes there is different
fruitiness but none is too overly light nor is it the deep dried fruit tastes
either. The qi is profound for me. Would be better if I could just stare at the
wall instead of work under its influence… remember to do work today, I note.
The ninth infusion has this interesting mix of vibrant
fruits and slight wood. This tea is
really nicely balanced. Very good Gushu,
definitely no plantation in here- guaranteed.
Its too Qi heavy, with no bitterness, full of flavor, interesting
blended stuff. Yummy.
The tenth is much the same.
I marvel at the Qi- it is really something. I can’t believe that some people can’t feel
this- it’s really unavoidable. The
mouthfeeling and throatfeeling are also solid enough to hold the flavor but are
not overdone or overly stimulating.
The eleventh infusion has some nice fruit but the returning
coolness is actually the strongest part of the taste profile here. This qi is also very very warming
energy. Without any bitterness in the
profile, this tea has a warming strengthening character to it.
The twelfth feel more light and fruity and less depth of
fruity if that makes any sense? The wood
is mild and slowly saunters very lightly beneath.
The thirteenth I still have at flash infusions here. When the pot is stuffed full of leaves and
the mouthfeel remains very full, pushing for longer infusions has a risk of too
much dryness in the mouth and throat.
But with no bitterness in sight I might just try this in the middle
infusions next time. The fruitiness here
is less more mellow with slight wood.
The fourteenth I add 15 seconds to the infusion. It pushes out a considerably more fruit
tastes than the last few infusions. The
fruitiness, sweetness, and cool returning taste is stronger but the mouthfeel
remains about the same. So I push again.
The fifteenth infusion with about 30 gives about the
same. This tea is fruity and the fruit
turns quite heavy with these longer infusion times here. The returning sweet coolness is longer too
now. The sixteenth is also much the
same. The fruit tastes are robust and
full.
Overall, this tea is a good example big gushu style qi in a
body of mainly fruity tastes. The qi really puts you in the clouds. The mouthfeel and throatfeel are solid
throughout. There is no bitterness in
here so the mild astringency and sour-tartness pull the tastes through the
profile. A nice tea. Close to some of the Yiwu blended stuff I
used to drink a lot of. Probably better
than what I’m used to.
I had another session and it was really savory and tart…. Very
interesting stuff. The second session I
had with this tea was very very different but interesting, more than just Yiwu
fruit and wood. Just on a 3rd session with this tea today and I find that using different water and teapot really brings out different qualities of taste but the Qi remains stable. This 2006 Qixiang is priced at $260.00 for a big 500g cake ($0.52/g), it is a bit pricy for some
budgets but I still feel like you are getting lots for that price- this is not
a simple standard puerh in qi or taste. It has something interesting to it that I’m
just beginning touch on in these first few sessions. It has only doubled in price over the last 7 years when Houde was selling it for $135. For what you are getting, the price is reasonable, if you compare to modern productions (which you probably shouldn't do), this tea is a deal.
The Qi of this tea seals the deal with me. Its qi is characterized by being focused on
the head, very relaxing, and quite warming in the body. I really like the qi in here- it is very
comforting. The second session I had was
first thing in the morning and it really woke me up but in a very gentle sort
of way. I really like the subtle warming
body feeling I get from this puerh. I
think this tea would be nice to drink in meditation, as I would do all the time
years back. Even after the first session
with this puerh, I’m convinced I will get at least a cake more, … I haven’t decided yet.
Peace
According to Hobbes' post, the tea is approx 30% Gushu. Therefore the remaining 2/3rds are?
ReplyDeleteThat 30% gushu claim was wrong information from Haode as the name it was sold as from them also was wrong...
ReplyDeleteThe lost info in translation... It's 30% yiwu then the remaining 5 mountains blended in different percentage.
Supposedly according to Yang tree ages of around 100-400 yr old
Cwyn N and Emmett g,
ReplyDeleteThis is part of the controversy surrounding the Qixiang. I wanted to make that decision for myself after trying it. Really, readers of this blog know that I have nothing against plantation/ terrace puerh but this puerh is not that.
Anyone who has experience with this sort of thing and has tried this puerh will understand it to be gushu, I think. It’s pretty obvious that it is, bare minimum, mainly all gushu, if not 100%. I cant find anything typically plantation about this one.
Peace
Yep, better to judge by the tea itself if it's good or not. Really all claims and descriptions from vendors are just that. Even from Yang that I trust more than others. Still always better to be skeptical and just figure out what's good and not.
Delete