I have never tried a puerh from the newly trendy Tong Qing He producing area in Yiwu. Like the trendy Tianmenshan from Essence of Tea last year, I basically have only read about the region before trying it. Last year Yunnan Sourcing pressed a cheaper cake from this region the 2020 Yunnan Sourcing Baihuatan that I really wanted to try, just haven’t put an order through lately. Shah8 made a comment that made me chuckle saying something to the effect that it was likely bought from a man selling maocha from the side of the road if it’s this cheap. David and Yingxi seem to chime in by stating that there is a wide range of quality from this area. This 2021 Essence of Tea Bai Hua Qing goes for $280.00 for 200g cake or $1.40/g must surely be on the higher end?
Dry leaves have a subdued icing sugar creamy sweetness with
a background of wood.
First infusion has a deep layered untouched creamy sweetness
that threads along the profile into the mid throat, very ghostly cooling, sweet
creamy returning a bit, then into the breath.
There is mild suggestions of forest vegetal tastes and some faint bitterness
but too faint here in the first infusion… this first infusion is about long
creamy sweet tastes. The tongue coating
is soft and a bit sticky-grainy but faint here.
Not much throat feeling just a vacuous opening mid-throat. Qi seems to build in the head.
The second infusion is bitter with a sweet buttery and faint
floral with a glimpse of creamy melon custard.
The mouthfeeling is a bit tight and sandy over the tongue. The throat is vacuous. The Qi has a strong influence on the head and
face making my face sweat on this very hot day.
I can definitely feel some astringent bitterness in my empty stomach and
am already contemplating removing some leaf from the pot. Qi seems really active in the face and strong
stuffy head feeling.
The third infusion has a quick moving buttery/creamy sweetness
that gives way to long flat bitterness.
There is lots of tropical fruity taste melody that gets released in the
aftertaste after the bitter taste recedes.
There is a creamy sweetness lodged under the bitterness. Tight mouthfeeling with vacuous throat. It’s pretty delicious tasting despite its
stronger bitterness. There is a bit of
head stuffiness in here for Qi but not too much yet.
The fourth infusion is more creamy sweet and sweet
fruity. There is some mild bitterness
and some almost dirt-wood base taste that mingles with bitter. The tropical fruitiness is highlighted and
seems to expand and join up with creamy sweet tastes in the aftertaste as the
saliva returns over the tongue. The
tongue coat is a thin sticky now and the upper throat is stimulated by the mild
bitter astringency and pushes saliva out.
Qi is kind of fuzzy in the mind… kind of cloudy. The double sweetness of creamy and fruity and
the dance with a bit of bitterness in nice here. Some jaw sensations.
The fifth infusion has a vibrant light airy fruitiness that splashes
up into the mouth. The sweetness gives
way to bitterness before sufficient saliva pools from the upper throat
simulation. The result is a tropical, a
bit sour medley of flavours. The Qi is
heavy in the jaw and stuffy in the head.
Nice salivating tropical fruitiness with a subtle bitterness now.
The sixth infusion is cooled down and tastes of peachy apricot
fruitiness that merges with bitter.
There is a creamy sweet taste in there which kind of dances with the
fruity sweetness. There is a bit of
retuning saliva. Stuffy head feeling Qi.
The seventh infusion has a vibrant juicy fruity burst. The bitterness is just mild for the past few
infusions but appears briefly after fruity sweet tastes as creamy sweet tastes
merge as saliva slides over a mild chalky/sandy tongue. Nice juicy bursts of tastes, a certain lively
sweet fruity taste. Some head
stuffiness. Some lingering fruity aftertastes.
The eighth infusion has a nice pop of juicy fruity vibrant
sweetness that is really nice and clean and just a bit of wood-dirt-bitterness
trails behind it now. Nice tight
mouhfeeling and empty throat with notable upper throat and saliva producing
effect. The aftertaste is more on the
tongue and saliva than on the breath.
Some head stuff and jaw sensations the Qi is mainly directed at the head
and face.
The ninth infusion has a bit of bitter mixed with fruity
sweet taste initially there is some creamy sweetness that comes as the saliva
fills the dry/sandy/chalky moderately full mouthcoating. The aftertaste is a bit of dirt-wood-bitter
taste. This infusion is less sweet and
complex as others and I’m wondering if the puerh is waning here. Face Qi and stuffy mind. There is a kind of looking outside of
yourself introspective Qi thing happening here.
Not really a powerful out of body but subtle.
The 10th has those pops of vibrant fruitiness initially
with a lagging bitter-wood-dirt that finishes off the aftertaste with not much
saliva producing or the creamy sweetness that follows. Still lots of face Qi and contemplative Qi.
11th has a juicy light fruity taste light airy
very sweet light honey notes. A creamy returning
sweetness. Very bright and pure very tasty with a retuning sweetness. Over sticky sandy tongue. Finishes bitter bland woody dirt.
12th has a very sweet initial taste of florals,
pops of fresh fruit, very vibrant and pure fruity sweetness here with a slow
lagging bitterness that turns into creamy sweetness as some saliva returns over
the sandy sticky moderate tongue coating.
The Qi is nice and contemplative but is building into an enlivening
feeling.
13th I do a long 5 minute infusion here… oops… a
strong juicy fruitiness initially very strong pure and vibrant like nectar or
juicy tropical blend of sweetness there is only very very mild bitter now and a
bland-woody-dirt taste in the aftertaste.
The long mason jar steepings of the wet leaves tells me this
puerh could have easily gone a good 5 more steepings at flash steepings with tones
of flavor. The result is a very bright
fruity vibrancy throughout with very little bitterness now and a full sticky sandy
full mouthfeeling that finishes with a stone-dirt kind of finish. There is a bit of mild throat stimulation and
nice contemplative Qi.
Puerh is all about the vibrant shinny pure sweet fruitiness
that is basically undisturbed after the bitterness and how the retuning saliva
dances with different sweetnesses as the upper throat becomes stimulated. It reminds me of sort of like Gaoshan Zhai area puerh with an influx of bitterness and Forest like aftertaste. The Qi becomes this very contemplative thing
as mild face and jaw sensations un-disturbingly exist harmoniously. Although bitter, it’s only really strongly
bitter in the first 5 infusions and this bitterness is essential to the
structure and interplay of saliva producing, and changing sweetness. The bitterness never seems harsh in the body…
this is a really good puerh. It’s unlikely that I will try a better 2021 puerh
this year but I still can’t bring myself to shell out the $280.00 for this one.
I know the description of this puerh on the site says that “It’s
not particularly a tea that we’d recommend for beginners but for old tea
drinkers”. I disagree and think that
beginners should sample this puerh and follow the notes above as well as Shah8’s
notes below to get a better understanding what makes this puerh so good. You can learn a lot from a puerh like this.
Vs 2020 Lao Jie Zi- Shah8 compared these two and I just
happen to be drinking this one today.
These two both have a very similar Qi feeling in the mind which is of
deep relaxation Lao Jie Zi is more slowing and Bai Hua Qing more contemplative-
both quite powerful in a calming and harmonious kind of way. The Lao Jie Zi has
a lighter limb bodyfeeling with a body Qi that is directed to the limbs and the
Bai Hua Qing has more concentrated face and jaw sensations directed at the
face. Everything else is quite different
I think with the Lao Jie Zi having no bitterness and only a very subtle
astringency. The Bai Hua Qing having
strong bitterness and astringency for the first part of the session. The taste is also quite different but has
similarities in its stone and woody qualities but these are pretty minor. The Lao Jie Zi has subtle mild pure subtle flavours
that reveal themselves singularly where the Bai Hua Qing has powerful bursts of
flavours that interweave and cross with each other to create a complex
effect. The Lao Jie Zi has very faint
throatfeeling where the Bai Hua Qing has a very stimulating saliva producing
effect. These are very different puerh
tea. The Lao Jie Zi’s brilliance is its
subtle nature where the Bai Hua Qing is its strength.
Alex’s (Tea Notes) Tasting Notes
Peace
4 comments:
I blindly bought a Bing of this one and am really glad about it - love that tea! This is exactly the kind of puerh I'm looking for - like you said: you can learn a lot from such an tea :-)
Regarding these newly trendy areas....what was happening with the tea before these areas became trendy? was it sold as something else or used for blending?
Alex,
If I only purchase one fresh 2021 Bing this year let it be this one!!!! Hahaha I keep praying it will sell out and stop tempting me. That was a good blind cake for sure.
Peter,
That’s exactly what some of the most hardcore puerh drinkers try to do… they try to figure out by sampling puerh that came before in search of puerh that either is an early example of that newly trendy area or at least contains some of it blended. It’s actually really quit hard to do this because it’s difficult to determine what each subregion will age into if you have never had an aged sample.
It’s a great question and a deep one.
Peace
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