This free sample came complimentary from my last purchase from Puerh.uk. It’s not yet listed on either Puerh.uk site or the ChenYuan Hao site yet. A bit different than the other 2023 ChenYuan Hao I sampled a few months ago as it is in a dragonball shape not sample from cake, and it is a blend. You can’t help but wonder if this has any resemblance to the famous 2005 Chen Yuan Hao Shanzhong Chuanqi when it was fresh off the press?
Saturday, December 30, 2023
2023 ChenYuan Hao Shanzhong Chuanqi Dragonball: Fresh Subtle Spacey Gushu
Thursday, December 28, 2023
2006 Chen Guang-He Tang Spring!Yiwu Chawang: Aged Etherial Yiwu Gushu!
This is a rather expensive cake apparently- it’s the spring version of the famous Autumn 2006 Chen Guang-He Tang Autumn Yiwu Chawang. Paolo Of Puerh.uk has some if you are looking to sample it…
Sunday, December 24, 2023
Famous Puerh in the West: 2006 Chen Guang-He Tang Autumn Yiwu Chawang
Friday, December 22, 2023
2012 Legend of Puer Bangdong Shen Gu You Lan: Good Value Gushu!
Saturday, December 16, 2023
2014 ChengShunHao / ZiZaiXi Gui: Dense Savoury Sweet Power!
Tuesday, December 12, 2023
2005 Nan Qiao Purple Peacock: Leathery Sweet Deep Energy
Monday, December 11, 2023
2006 Nan Qiao Bulang Double Lion: Straight Up Bulang-ness!
This is one of the premier Nan Qiao cakes offered by TeasWeLike. This is the second Bulang Double Lion release, the first being the famous and twice the price 2005 Nan Qiao Double Lion. This 2006 Nan Qiao Double Lion goes for $165.00 for 357g cake or $0.46/g and is billed as a good value proposition compared to the 2005. These are actually quite different… let’s see if it’s worth it to pay less…
Saturday, December 2, 2023
2004 Ai Lao Natural Malaysian Storage: Recommend Aged Value
We have all tried lots of Ai Liao area puerh in our lifetime. It was a staple of the early Gushu movement of teas as featured in Yunnan Sourcing’s first releases amongst many others. Despite all the fresh Ai Lao area puerh I’ve consumed I have never tried any that was substantially aged. I wondered aloud the last time of consumption what exactly could Ai Lao puerh possibly age into? … and finally now we have our answer… well sort of…
“I’ve seen that wrapper before “ is something that has inevitably entered into the consciousness of all long time puerh drinkers… when I saw this 2004 Ai Lao Natural Malaysian Storage ($120.00 for 400g cake or $0.30/g) on the TeasWeLike site. It’s most definitely of old school factory production and pedigree. I don’t think we can really expect the Gushu productions of Ai Lao that we have gotten to know will age similar to this old school tight compressed chopped leaf… so now I’m getting pretty excited about finally finding out how this stuff could sort of theoretically age out…
Dry leaves have a sweet plum cherry sweet odour with slight fallen leafy background.
First infusion is left to cool and is an oily sweet plum cherry slight sour woody viscus treat. There is a woody resin almost bready base taste. Quite oily and mouthwatering. Obvious fruity aged tastes. Slight cool mouth and open throat. Happy qi feeling.
Second infusion has a woody resin sweet bready taste with fruity sour pops of fruity flavours underneath. Sour cherry, sour berries- sweet and sour dominate here. Still nice oily mouthfeel with a faint mouth dryness. Slight warming.
Third infusion has a woody sour fruit taste over an oily slight silty dry mouthfeeling. Sort of woody bready sweet faint sour fruit left in the mouth. Nice happy vibe with some mild warming.
Fourth infusion has pops of sour cherry with woody almost mushroom taste. Slight roast incense underneath now. Has a bit of oily texture but with an increasing dryness in the mouth, gums, roof slight squeaky dry. Slight relaxing energy.
5th has a rich woody fruity sour taste. There are layers of an almost sugar sweetness, a woody base and sour fruity sweetness. A bready almost fruity sweetness is left in the mouth. Nice happy relaxed feeling.
6th has a sweet roots and woody ciccory sweetness. The mouthfeel gets slightly tighter and drier with each infusion but still a touch of oily texture. This infusion has a warm spice almost Ginseng taste note here. Less fruity and sour and more sweet and spiced. Nice mind relax happy.
7th infusion has a nice deep rich sweet woody taste upfront with slight resin and incense. Sweet rich woody bready taste dominates with still some oily texture.
8th has a sweet flavour woody rich almost jam sweetness with some faint bitter astringency nice chalky silty mouthfeel. Uplifting happy qi. Mild warming. Slight incense smoke in distance but mainly woody sweet.
9th I steep out the next day… and it’s a mild sweet mild sour woody taste… slight gripping mouthfeel with a very faint chalky bubble gum taste which did not come up in the session or sessions before.
Vs 2003 Shuangjiang Mengku (Rongshi) Da Xue Shan Wild- when I started to sample this 2004 Ai Lao I immediately found lots of similarities between these two. Both Northern puerh with areas close in proximity, almost identical production year, both old factory productions with tight compression, very similar natural Malaysian storage taste. The big difference is that the Da Xue Shan is a wild tea not conventional variety and as such there is lots more space with less dense flavour but on the other hand a bit stronger Qi. The 2004 Ai Lao has much more complexity and more evolution across the session. It’s much more dense, delicious, warming- my favourite is the woody resinous taste and oily texture in the first few infusions! The 2003 Da Xue Shan is at the low-ish end of acceptable occasional drinker tea. It’s quite touchy for getting a delicious session- if too much leaf or steeped with an overly heavy hand it becomes astringent woody brackish. Sometimes the session ends this way if you are pushing out long infusions. The 2004 Ai Lao can sometimes get a touch sour if steeped too heavy. The 2003 Rongshi Da Xue Shan Wild was actually restocked and the price doubled since I purchased it to only $0.24/g whereas the 2004 Ai Lao is $0.30. The Ai Lao is in my mind at least three times better! Great work on your sourcing TeasWeLike!
The description on the TeasWeLike site seems like a half hearted endorsement though. It states, “ perhaps not as exciting as its southern counterparts, but an attractive and affordable example of aged puer nevertheless”. Can anyone answer me which Southern puerh offering on the TeasWeLike site is as cheap, as aged, and as engaging as this 2004 Ai Lao Natural Malaysian storage????? I will have a hard time not reordering this one!
Sunday, November 26, 2023
Black Friday Puerh Purchases: The Hunter and the Hunted
I find the Black Friday/ Cyber Monday marketing of Western facing puerh vendors rather interesting. I had written about it for a few years in a row a few years back. The last time I really paid attention to Black Friday puerh sales was probably the last time I actually purchased something from Black Friday which I believe was a cake of 2020 Tea Encounter Guafengzhai Chaping Gushu. The real reason is for the lack of attention is that I have actually purchased less puerh (good job!) and almost no fresh puerh over the last two years. The exception being this interesting 2023 Tea Encounter DuoYiShu there is only 2 cakes left, and it’s even on sale now and I can’t believe this is not sold out yet… for those interested in fresh puerh Black Friday Cyber Monday sales!
Friday, November 24, 2023
2003 CNNP Yellow Mark: Red Rose Tea Puerh!
This 2003 CNNP Yellow Mark was the first to be released as an individual cake from the Colours of Malaysia Quarter Cake Set at TeasWeLike. The 357g cake goes for $ 225.00 for or $0.63/g. I’m wondering if it was my favourite from the set…
Tuesday, November 21, 2023
2004 Yao’an FuYuanChang Yiwu: Malaysian Factory Smoker
I actually sampled this 2004 FuYuanChang Yiwu in a blind sampling from Marco last year. I understood it well even as a blind sampling but it also piqued my curiosity as to what the other cakes in the Colours of Malaysia Sample Set might be like? So I finally ended up purchasing a set! After finishing these notes I went back and read my blind notes from last year on this same puerh and they are much better! Haha! Part of it simply speaks to how my evaluative sessions at work have gone downhill a bit but mainly it also speaks to the superiority of blind sampling. There is something about blind sampling that really dials you into a session…