Stephane of Teamasters has kindly been sending me samples
once every few years since he opened his webstore way back then. Before the webstore he was one of the first
English/ French tea bloggers and he’s still going strong- Thanks Stephane. I thought I would include this “pre-COVID 19”
note he sent with the samples. It’s
interesting how even a note this simple is so obviously before the virus really
swept the world. Nowadays even the simplest
communications will look and feel much different than this innocent letter. I got lots of emails from people thanking me about the recommendation of the classic Meaghai, more aged, and dirt tasting 2003 Zhongcha that Stephane used to sell for $60.00. Its one of the puerh I have drank the most of in the past 3 years. I think Stephane was most excited about what
I thought about his new budget puerh find, this 2007 CNNP Peacock which he
sells for $40.00 for a full 357g cake (or $0.11/g)…
Dry leaves both exceed expectations of look and smell. They smell rich and velvet with a very creamy
sweet aroma. There is a suggestion of
hay and wood and chocolate but mainly woody sweetness. The leaves smell of moderate humid storage.
First infusion has a nice creamy woody and very nutty camphor
wood taste. There is a bitter suggestion
and a soapy taste. The camphor
aftertaste combines with subtle bitter in a full and rich feeling and mouthcoating.
The second infusion start off like sweet peanuts, a nutty
sweetness with a creamy sweet and rich taste presentation that turns into a
camphor taste and a sweet thrills gum kind of soapiness. There is a pretty distinct nutty flavor as
well as a touch licorice. This blend
seems to have a fair amount of Lincang material in it I would guess. The mouthfeeling is full and slippery
feeling. The throat has an upper opening
feeling where camphor lingers. The
feeling of this puerh is more aged than its 2007 pedigree suggests due to its
moderately humid likely Taiwanese storage.
The third infusion starts with a sunny orangey woody tangy resin
wood like sweetness very similar to the 2003 Hong Kong Henry 7542 Consciousness
Prescription in taste here. Then comes a
very peanut nutty sweetness. Then a
creamy woody tangy finish. The sweet
taste is like Mandarin oranges. There is
a subtle soapy sweet Thrills gum like retuning sweetness. Overall the taste is very rich and robust
tasting with clear flavours. The Qi of
this tea is a touch warming and mild- a comforting tea on this rainy spring
day.
The fourth infusion has a more basic woody onset with orange
peel nuances coming later. There is less
nutty sweetness here but a low camphor taste that comes out. There is a floral woody finish almost soapy perfume
aftertaste that is quite enjoyable.
The fifth has a resin woody taste with a creamy citrus peel
nuance. The taste is less rich and full
now but the camphor still comes in low and pushes out perfume soap and
essential oil of citrus finish on breath.
This puerh is now less slippery and full in the mouth but is still a slippery
mouthfeeling. A smooth taste overall.
The 6th has a woody soapy resin perfume with less
thickness in the mouth and less cooling camphor now. The perfume taste suggests that it should be
semi-aged but the smooth soothing base taste feels like it’s closer to early
2000s aged. The feel in the body is also
very mellow and aged feeling.
7th has a watery woody almost pond and fallen
leaf but more rich watery aged taste. There
is a resin taste to it, and nice smooth flavor with a citrus peel taste and
slight camphor going towards coco in the aftertaste with perfume nuances. Smooth taste and feel and qi.
8th has a 30 second steeping and it pulls out a
thicker creamier and a slight nutty taste there is a bit of sour zest and
woodiness. The perfume and citrus peel
tastes which make this puerh so interesting are very faint now.
I push this into a very long mug steeping and mainly dirt
and woody tastes remain.
Overall, this is a really interesting, a bit unique, and
pretty enjoyable semi-aged sheng. The
big downfall is the stamina which is maybe a bit less than even the most factory
puerh but the first few infusions are interestingly delicious. This puerh is interesting to be because of
its super fragrant distinct strong perfume, Thrills Gum-like aftertaste which
is something you would expect in a semiaged puerh or something even younger
than its 2007 pedigree suggest. However,
this fragrant essential oil like aftertaste is juxtaposed with a deep aged
taste and smooth feeling that you would get from something more aged due to its
moderately humid Taiwanese storage.
There are some larger leaf in the plantation blend which seem to add to
the depth of this puerh. I would guess
this is a blend of Northern puerh- Lincang and Simao. The orange peel/ citrus taste with a strong
woody resin initially reminds me a lot of 2003 Hong Kong Henry 7542 “ConscientiousPrescription”. Although this 2007 CNNP Peacock
is not as strong, deep, or as oily. I’m
not sure I have ever had that distinct resin with orange taste before the 2003.
Anyways, this cake is quite interesting for a $40.00 sheng 357g cake. Its uniqueness reminds me of
another CNNP production of the same year which also has an interesting profile-
this 8891 Red Label. Haven’t tried that
one but it’s been popular as a unique drinker puerh and used to sell for closer
to the Peacock’s pricing before it doubled.
I enjoyed it a lot and I think you will too. Cheers to Stephane of Teamasters for sourcing
this affordable one for us!
Peace
2 comments:
Hi Matt,
Thanks a lot for these detailed tasting notes. I'm glad you also noticed its enticing scent!
By the way, I have another good news: the 2003 private factory cake is available again. I remember that you liked it and described it in an article on your blog in November 2017.
Stephane (TeaMasters),
https://www.tea-masters.com/en/puerh/713-850-2003-spring-raw-puerh-cake-from-small-private-factory.html
You finally found some more!
Peace
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