I am writing up this post in haste in an attempt to get it
out so readers can have a crack at getting this very good puerh at the lowest
price possible…
It is in my opinion an extraordinary example of very clean
single estate puerh with very powerful Qi sensation but particularly intense
bodyfeel. This type of bodyfeel and Qi
sensation is rarely, if at all, found in a puerh with such a low price. This 2018 Yunnan Sourcing Autumn Nan Po Zhai goes for $72.00 for 400g cake or $0.18/g.
Scott is going to raise the price of this one another 15% in his annual
price increase in about a month and this weekend (5 day sale) there is a 10%
off Yunnan Sourcing Raw puerh sale with the checkout code RAW10 . Waiting till Black Friday isn't going to get you more of a deal on this one and as soon as the word gets out on this one it will be sold out even before the sale. This is an extraordinary chance for beginner or
veteran to get something with the profile and bodyfeel that is often sold for
4X this price from other vendors without even being as intense…
Let’s see why I hit this one hard with a hammer…
The dry leaves smell of very very intense minty pungency
with a deep foresty sweetness. It has an
intense floral quality to it as well.
The dry leaf smell is the one you keep going back to the sample back to
huff- very deep and aromatic.
The first infusion delivers a strong unnami and saline burst
right off the bat. I’m left distracted
trying to think of a puerh that I’ve ever tried that was more savory…. There is
a woody depth to this tea and strong minty pungent taste then long sweet with
fresh cut floral smell. The aftertaste
is long and candy like. The mouthfeeling
is very quick thick and coating on the tongue and mouth.
The second infusion delivers more very salty and savory
unnami. The onset tastes like salted
yarrow chips. The mouthfeeling is very
very thick and coating and the throatfeeling is deep. This is a very strong autumnal
production. The Qi is starting to float
the head and make me happy. A long
floral sweetness follows. There is a
calming and heavy body sensation that is immediately apparent.
The third infusion has an intense minty pungent and savory
onset. The mouthfeeling is really strong
and intense with a deep throat feeling.
This is quite powerful. There is
some strong underlying bitterness on the tongue and astringency in the
throat. Long floral taste remains. This puerh has a strong presentation of all 5
flavours: Salty, Sour, bitter, Bland, and Pungent tastes. The most prominent being the Salty. Very interesting and powerful puerh. The body feeling is quite strong and I space
out and float.
The four starts like a very dense salty saltine like
sweetness with bitter and sour mixed in.
The sweet taste comes after a cool returning sweetness and brings a
distinct taste of flowers and long candy on the breath. The mouthfeel is very thick very strong and
goes into the deepest to deep mid throat.
The head floats and the body has almost a shiver to it.
The fifth infusion starts with a very thick liquor of
moderate to strong bitterness, strong intense saline and salty yarrow chips and
layers of woods underneath. The taste
presentation is very dense and strong and thick. The body feel is intense, with an unusual
heaviness with arms floating and dangling.
The Qi pushes my mind far into a creatively opening spacy, very intense
and wonderful.
The sixth infusion is smoother, almost finishes buttery and
floral sweet. The thick minty and salty
saline tastes emerge first. I let it sit
a few minutes before drinking and it’s a bit less bitter. The bitterness here is never off putting but
is moderately strong.
The seventh is sweeter throughout again but it starts more
bitter which stretches throughout the infusion the mouthfeel is strong and a
long buttery aftertaste is found that turns to candy on the breath. There is lots of nuance here. My body is outside itself right now. My mind is free and a bit spacy. My breath slows and thoughts are clear.
The eighth infusion starts with layered taste of bitterness
with salty and minty tastes underneath.
The long sweetness comes in like an undulating wave as the bitterness recedes. My mind and body is overpowered by the Qi.
The ninth infusion starts with a dense soup of salty unnami
thick taste of woods and some sweetnesses underneath a pungent mint and a sweet
rolling floral sweetness. Qi is very
floating in the head and has a nice body floating sensation. The mind is free and relaxed.
The 10th starts with a thick sweeter woody briney
onset. It has a soup and broth like
taste here. The aftertaste is sweet with
some florals. There is a minty nuance in
there as well throughout the infusion.
The 11th has a thick onset. A brothy and dense taste that is thicker in
the broth than it is on the tongue now.
The tongue is slippery and almost sandy.
The floral nuance lingers on the breath.
Mind is super relaxed.
12th this tea I mellowing out here. It is quite sweet, buttery, floral tasting
with a moderate-mild lingering bitter taste.
The taste has a juicy sweet feeling to it, it’s a touch brothy but the
saltiness is much reduced now. A
lingering floral sweetness and mild coolness lingers. In the body the Qi feels strangely at home
and not aggressive but in the mind, mouth, tastebuds, and throat it’s a different
story.
13th has a bit more punchiness bitter initially
but then a thick soupiness takes hold the taste evolves interestingly
throughout the profile
The 14th has an incredibly clear orchid aroma and
taste to it after the slight sour and bitter move quickly into a long rolling
sweetness. The mouthfeeling is sticky
and strong and the throat opens deeply.
The 15th and 16th deliver then soupy
flavours of mainly sweet tastes, the thickness here is of note, the bitter is
much less and there is more astringent and sour bitterness that moves
quickly. I am pretty spaced out…
Overall, this has some really powerful Qi sensations. I don’t recall ever drinking a single estate puerh
this cheap with such strong body sensations.
This puerh really punches above its weight in this department. The taste is alright, a very nice taste
actually a bit of a unique very savory taste mixed with some Mengku charms. This one is all about the intensity of the
bodyfeeling and overpowering effect on the mind.
Just yesterday, I started to doubt that my experience was
this positive so I used up the rest of the sample which was about 2/5 less leaf
than I normally use. This session was
very salty and savory tasting which is a very interesting taste profile- I don’t
have in any puerh in my possession with this profile right now. But the Qi was almost more intense than I
remembered it- It really ran me over.
The power and strength of this puerh is such that I don’t even need to
leaf it as much. This is really a great bargain
for those who love intense body sensations and mind exploding Qi. This is the one. I would even say it’s close to but not quite
as intense as the 2018 Zheng Si Long Gedeng I purchased a few months ago at almost 4x the price.
Scott only pressed 99 cakes of this puerh, it is extremely limited
but why hasn’t it long sold out if it’s as amazing as I’m making it out to be?
I think it lacks the “cool factor”. It’s one of those crazy amazing puerh that is
just sitting unnoticed because..
1-
It’s autumn
production. I used to also snub autumnal
puerh so I don’t blame those who do this but, to be honest, you are overlooking
some puerh that may be much better than spring productions. This one doesn’t have that vacuous taste
profile which plague a lot of autumnal pureh.
Tasted blind, I doubt even a highly educated pallet could identify this
one as Autumn.
2-
It’s not
from Southern Xishuangbanna. If its
not from Southern pureh producing regions then it won’t age well or is in some
way inferior. I also can’t blame people
for this one either because I also favor the South. But readers know I also love Menku area puerh
and am pretty familiar with its awesomeness.
3-
Its not
from a famous puerh producing region.
Where is Nan Po Zhai??? I’ve actually
never heard of this region before until reading about it on the Yunnan Souring
site. Why? Because its actually the closest region to
the 3rd most famous puerh producing region, Bing Dao. Scott explains in the video tasting of this
one that it almost always gets falsely sold as Bing Dao and no one really
markets this stuff as Nan Po Zhai… but that’s great news because Bing Dao is
famous…
4-
Scott
listing the KG of his productions rather than number of cakes pressed. The average person doesn’t probably do the calculation
to see how many cakes are produced from the KG of raw material that Scott
usually lists. I noticed that the 2019
productions now list how many cakes are produced which will clue some people in
to how limited some of Yunnan Sourcing productions really are.
5-
Wrapper. Ok this wrapper is pretty cool but not as
cool as most of his other ripe or spring 2018 Lucy themed wrappers. In in the end if the wrapper isn’t cool and I can’t personally identify with the branding… then how could the puerh possibly
be any good?
6-
Scott
presses way too much. I honestly
should not be complaining about this but really I think it is a wonderful thing. But the average person just simply can’t
navigate and sample that many productions in a year. Easy for some to fall through the cracks especially
considering the above. I emailed Scott
specifically to recommend me a very specific qualities of puerh irregardless of
price or region and he supplied me a crazy long list of recommendations. I
personally narrowed them down then sampled a bunch this one really stunned me (lots
more reviews to come).
7-
Anti-
Yunnan Sourcing bias. There is
something that some people find not cool about Yunnan Sourcing. IF you don’t identify with the branding you are
restricting yourself for superficial reasons and will miss out.
8-
Unusual
taste profile. This puerh has a
really unusual taste profile that has to be one of the most savory puerh I have
sampled before. It almost tastes artificially
salted at times. I think this unique
taste profile as well as the heavy Qi could be overlooked in some people who
are putting more weight into the taste of the puerh rather than the feel of it.
Peace
Thank you.
ReplyDeleteLooking forward to trying it.
M
YS was always increasing prices in mid-Spring. Do they increase prices in Autumn too now? Wow...
ReplyDeleteI'm curious if you are getting any discounts or benefits for promoting teas so actively? Thanks.
Pankra,
DeleteI forgot to hyperlink this in the article:
https://teadb.org/when-do-vendors-raise-their-puerh-prices/#comments
Here Scott explains how he raises the Autumn productions around Sept 15th Annually.
Hahaha no I didn’t get any discount for this strong endorsement. Actually I feel a little uncomfortable promoting so strongly. normally I wouldn’t do this but because I know for certain about the predictable price increases and the unlikelihood of another sale within the next month I decided to strongly endorse now as opposed to posting this in a month and having those interested pay 25% more.
Peace
Joao posted this comment in yesterday’s post but it should belong here:
ReplyDeleteHi Matt, did you also try the autumn 2017 production from the same village? 2017 was an interesting year for tea and I wonder if it also exhibits the same Qi and bodyfeel that you describe.
My reply:
No haven’t tired it as a comparison. It wasn’t recommended to me in the very long list that Scott had initially provided for my inquiry.
See here:
https://yunnansourcing.com/products/2017-yunnan-sourcing-autumn-nan-po-zhai-ancient-arbor-raw-pu-erh-tea-cake
Peace
I bought two cakes of this stuff blind after reading this and they just arrived. It is fantastic, thanks for the tip! I will now always trust your taste in tea.
ReplyDeleteShadAdams,
ReplyDeleteI guess we have similar taste in puerh tea! I’m glad you took advantage of the sale. It came out real cheap after the discount. Mine is probably on a boat somwhere... hahaha
Wonder if their are any teas from Bitterleaf this year that have this strong Qi sensation? I should sample... hahaha
Peace