I got this 300g tuocha as a free gift from Tea Urchin. If you put a larger order in they
sometimes/randomly gift you a big gift like a whole tuo cha, a large bag of fresh
Maocha (I got this one before), even 200g cakes or 100g mini cakes! Free samples are a way vendors traditionally sharesome of their tea. I think this is the
only Western facing puerh vendor that gives bigger gifts away. I was hoping to review some of these that I acquired
over the years from Tea Urchin. I think I got this one a years or so ago. I wanted
to review this one first primarily to compare to my blogging buddy Alex
Dry leaves are a creamy sweet and fruity sweet pungent
mouthwatering smells. Smells really
complex and delicious…
First infusion has a light fruity watery sweetness. It is quite watery and flat but decently
sweet. There is a paper bag and almost
slight bitterness to it. The mouthfeeling
is grainy and slight tight.
The second infusion is left to cool and has a very caramel,
strong fresh pungent cooling kind of minty herby taste. Lots of complex tastes. Nice fresh herbal with some orange rind, some
mild bitterness and a mix between fresh herbs, caramel fruity sweetness and
bitterness. Flat, slightly grainy, sandy
profile.
The third infusion has a flat caramel woody bitter onset
followed by a complex herby onset with some citrus tastes to it. There is a mild citrusy sour sweet returning
sweetness. The mouthfeeling is tight,
grainy, almost puckering. The Qi is
warming and makes me sweat. A mild
effect on the mind with not any bodyfeeling noticed.
The fourth infusion has a bitter juicy caramel and citrus
taste which ends herby. The mouthfeeling
is dry grainy and quite puckering now.
There is an almost floral citrus finish aftertaste that comes after
cooling pungent herbs.
The fifth infusion has a bitter orange blossom sweet taste
it has more of a bitter fruity orange taste and less herbal pungent taste
now. The mouthfeeling is sandy
puckering. There is some cool throat. Qi is mild with a bit of warming.
The 6th infusion has a bitter orange peel and
floral bitter onset subtle almost herb mid profile with some cooling. There is
some faint coco emerging in the saliva minutes later.
7th has a bitter orange rind and floral onset
with dry, flat sandy and slight puckering mouthfeeling. The throat is mainly just cooling with not
much simulation there. The stimulation
comes from the tongue and mouth being bitter.
The infusions are getting bitterer as they go.
8th was left to cool and is a bit coco and fruity
floral. This puerh is descending into a
fruity floral base taste with some bitter pith and coco.
9th has a bitter coco brackish dirt kind of taste
with some faint citrus fruit and bitter orange peel and florals in the
aftertaste. A flat puckering but full
mouthfeeling resumes with less coolness in the throat. Nice warming feeling with an otherwise mild
Qi feeling.
The rest goes into the mug for long steepings… oily vegetal bitter
with a subtle coco bitter with nice floral nuance. Flat, grainy, and slightly puckering
mouthfeeling.
This is a nice factory tuo likely from Mengku maybe Simao. Still feels quite young, bitter, and vegetal with
a strong sweet/ floral inclination. This
younger and colder and drier stored presentation is contrasted with a Qi that is
pretty mild with mainly warming feeling that can only come with age. Likely stored dry maybe in Kunming the first
half of its aging before spending the rest in Shanghai storage… A fair enough
everyday drinker that could be stored for another 15 years. I would have guessed this tuo to be 2005-2007
material, I think, but that warming feeling gives it away to be a bit older, I
suppose. I think a lot of my stored
cakes might turn into something like this that is a bit conflicting between
cooler and more preserved tastes with a bit warmer, almost aged Qi. I surprisingly enjoyed this puerh a lot!
Vs 2006 Shuangjiang Mengku Arbour King Brick. Similar, storage and compression and material
location the Shuangjiang Mengku definitely has some older material in the blend
with a much more produced long cooling aftertaste more complexity in its sweet
floral and euphoric high Qi. The taste
is similar with a bitter vegetal floral taste.
This tuo is a bit older and more warming Qi it also has more of a herbal
profile also much more intensely bitter.
These are actually quite similar with the 2006 Arbour King being a bit
more complex in Qi and flavor.
Peace
Nice review - really encourages me to revisit this tea, since my last notes are quite a bit dated.
ReplyDeleteAnd very interesting thoughts regarding the conflict between taste and qi: teas stored in western climate (without additional environment control like Marco does) definitely develops in a different direction then teas in Asia (had the opportunity to compare the 2012 EoT Bulang after some years of different storage and will soon/someday update this with another comparison), which doesn't have to be a bad thing though. Especially boutique sheng might profit from this, since they usually are more delicate in nature, but on a rough factory sheng it's another topic...
Alex,
DeleteI look forward to seeing that re-visit of this Xiang Yin tuocha!
I agree that it isn’t a bad thing. For this puerh it is interesting that it remains intensely bitter fruity floral and fresher but yet is warming and aged enough that it is no long harsh on the body, quite the opposite, it is comfortably warming on the body.
Peace
Thanks for the review. I haven't had anything from Tea Urchin in years, and it's nice to know they're still doing well.
ReplyDeleteI think I know who made this tuo: https://babelcarp.org/babelcarp/babelcarp.cgi?phrase=xiangyin&define=1
Lew Perin,
DeleteThanks Lew I will update the title of this post!
It is a great honour for me that you still take time to read some of the posts here.
Tea Urchin, although being pretty low key these days, are celebrating their 10th anniversary with a release of some puerh this year!
Peace
Oh, thanks for the info Lew - and thank you so much for your work on Babelcarp, it's a real treasure of knowledge!
ReplyDelete