2007 White2Tea Repave Pu-erh Tea from White Two tea

2007_Repave_2Tea Information:

Leaf Type:  Pu-erh

Where to Buy:  White Two Tea

Tea Description:  

Repave was made with aged puer tea material from 2007, which was stored in Menghai for 7 1/2 years prior to being pressed in November of 2014. The soup is already a dark bronze color, sweet and soft. The material is from Hekai. This is the second and final pressing of this material. Some of the wrappers were stamped incorrectly as 2006.

Learn more about this tea here.

Learn more about White Two Tea’s Tea Club Subscription here.

Taster’s Review:

Smooth!  Really, really smooth and mellow!

That’s my first impression of this tea.

To brew this pu-erh, I grabbed my gaiwan and heated the water to 190°F.  Then I eyeballed a measurement of leaves – what looked like about a bamboo scoop of leaves – and put them into the bowl of the gaiwan.  The leaves of this sample have been cut from a cake that probably looked like the cake in the photograph above.  Some of the leaf pieces are individual leaves, but most of them are chunks of several leaves that I pried apart carefully with a knife.

Then I poured enough of the hot water into the gaiwan to cover the leaves and I steeped it for 15 seconds.  Then I strained off the liquid and discarded it.  This is the “rinse.”

I’ve found that this simple ‘rinse’ procedure is the big difference between a cup of pu-erh that I can enjoy drinking versus a cup of pu-erh that I would rather discard.  So, if you find pu-erh to be too earthy or just off-putting, I recommend trying the rinse!  It really does make a HUGE difference!

Then I filled the gaiwan with more water and this time, I steeped the tea for 45 seconds and strained the liquid into my favorite “little” teacup.  It holds one gaiwan-full of tea.  How much is that?  I don’t know.  I’ve never actually measured it.

My first cup is SMOOTH.  Mellow.  It has a lovely sweetness that is somewhere between a deep molasses and a buttery caramel.  It’s earthy – but it isn’t an off-putting or overwhelmingly strong earthy flavor.  It’s beautifully mellow at this stage.  There are distant mineral-y notes.  This first cup disappeared quickly because … I really enjoyed it!

The second cup is just as smooth as the first.  The flavor is deeper this time.  Still very sweet and that sweetness is still very molasses-y/buttery caramel.  I taste less of the earthy notes that I tasted in the first cup now, but the distant mineral notes are still there.  This cup seems to be all about the sweet and that’s quite alright by me.

This tea just seems to keep on getting sweeter with each infusion!  The third cup is even sweeter than the first two.  With this cup, I am picking up very little earthiness (an occasional earthy tone here and there) and the aforementioned mineral notes are softer now.  This is just SWEET.

Later infusions offered the same sweet, molasses-y taste, and I liked that the earthiness mellowed out significantly by the fourth cup.  I don’t know if it’s that my palate has become more acclimated with the sweetness of this tea or that the flavors are just now emerging, but I am starting to discover some soft floral notes.

A truly lovely pu-erh – this is one you’ll fall in love with!

2006 Fengqing Raw Pu-erh Tea Tuocha from Teavivre

2006 Fengqing Raw Pu-erh Tea TuochaTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Pu-erh

Where to Buy:  Teavivre

Tea Description:

Tuocha, a compressed tea in hollowed hemispheric shape, is mainly produced in Yunnan. This 100g Tuocha is from Fengqing, Lincang, Yunnan.

The materials of Tuocha are from Fengqing large tea speices. Fresh tea leaves will be made into dry tea in traditional craft method after being picked, then will be pressed into nest shape. The appearance of Tuocha reminds you of mountain. While smelling the faint scent of Sheng Pu-erh, you will have the feelings of being in beautiful scenery of Yunnan.

Sheng Pu-erh has strong flavor for first sip. Yet the sweet aftertaste will bring you a wonderful impression. You can feel a hint of sweet as sugarcane remaining in your mouth. 

Learn more about this tea here.

Taster’s Review:

 Sweet!  This Fengqing Raw Pu-erh Tea from Teavivre has an enjoyably sweet flavor, a sweetness that is balanced with notes of sharpness and notes of vegetation, wood and earth (think mushroom).   As I continued to sip, I started to pick up on notes of stone fruit.

I like that with the very first infusion (following a 15 second “rinse”) the flavor is strong and well-defined.  I could taste these flavors with this first cup, I didn’t have to wait until the third or fourth cup to start experiencing the lovely flavor.  I usually find that Pu-erh tends to have a mellow flavor, but this is a bold Pu-erh, and I’m appreciating the differences that this tea offers.

Later infusions surprised me with even stronger flavors!  I still experienced the amazing sweetness, fruit notes (I think I even tasted a hint of grapefruit!) and woodsy tones.  Full-flavored with notes vegetation, but this isn’t like the same kind of “vegetation” that I’d experience if I were drinking a green tea.  This is more like the vegetal flavor you’d experience from a woodsy mushroom.  It’s deep and earthy and flavorful, but in the distance you can taste notes of vegetation.

A deep sweetness – the description above suggests a “sugarcane” like sweetness, and I agree with that assessment – is present throughout the sip, from start to finish.  It lingers in the aftertaste.

A really enjoyable pu-erh experience!  I managed eight infusions from this tea and I suspect I could have gotten even more – the flavor wasn’t quitting!  This tea has many different flavors to explore – a delightfully complex tea.

And when I visited Teavivre’s webpage for this tea, I noticed that this will be part of the #3 Sale Round from August 4 through August 5.  Mark your calendars!

Fengqing Wild Tree Yesheng Raw Pu-erh Tea Cake 2013 from Teavivre

Fengqing Wild Tree YeshengTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Pu-erh

Where to Buy:  Teavivre

Tea Description:

This raw pu-erh cake is grown and produced in Fengqing, Yunnan, which is the origin place of DianHong black tea. This Wild Tree Yesheng Raw Pu-erh Cake is harvest in spring of 2013. Between March to May, after harvesting the fresh leaves, tea workers will process them: fixation, rolling, drying, sifting, and then store the leaves in carton boxes.

As the workers use iron pan for fixation, and roll the tea with their hands, the leaves do not have good looks as machine-made leaves. Yet regarding on quality, this Wild Tree Yesheng Pu-erh Cake is a green food from nature, in the mists and clouds on high mountains. It is a tea worth being in your collection list.

Learn more about this tea here.

Taster’s Review:

The dry leaf aroma of this 2013 Fengqing Wild Tree Yesheng Raw Pu-erh Tea Cake from Teavivre is almost non-existent.  This surprised me, only because I’m used to Pu-erh having some aroma, but I didn’t smell much of anything when I smelled the dry leaf.

Conversely, the wet leaves have a strong vegetal scent to them that immediately made me think of peas.  Granted, peas are not my favorite vegetable (that’s putting it mildly) and because of that, they are not a food that I’m smelling on a regular basis.  But when I smelled these wet leaves, green peas is what came to mind.

For those of you who are like me: timid when it comes to Pu-erh tea because of that strong, earthy and sometimes fishy taste and smell, you can rest assured that you won’t experience that with this Pu-erh.  This is a very young Pu-erh, and it tastes much more like a green tea to me than it does a Pu-erh.

It has a vegetal taste, but it’s a remarkably smooth vegetal note.  It doesn’t have that “crisp” or “lively” sort of vegetative taste that you might experience with a typical green tea.  Instead, this has a very mellow vegetative taste.  It doesn’t taste grassy.  It tastes like mild steamed vegetables:  like spinach, perhaps, only milder and sweeter.

There is a buttery note to this too, something I don’t typically experience with a Pu-erh.  So, imagine that aforementioned extra mild, sweet spinach, topped with mushrooms that have been lightly sauteed in butter and then topped with thinly sliced almonds … only the almonds are raw.  It has that sort of creamy, buttery taste that you might experience with a raw almond.

Later infusions brought out more savory flavors to the vegetal tones.  Notes of salt and seaweed were contrasted by some newly emerging fruity notes.  The flavor becomes deeper and more complex with each new infusion.

I like in “wild tree” teas like this that I can almost taste the “wild” in them.  There is a note to these teas that I don’t often find in the more conventional farm grown teas.

I would recommend this Pu-erh to those new to Pu-erh so that they can experience some “different” Pu-erh teas, as well as fans of green tea.  It’s a really unique tea experience … one definitely worth trying.

Fengqing Zhuan Cha Raw Puerh Brick Tea 2005 from Teavivre

Fengqing Zhuan Cha Raw PuerhTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Pu-erh

Where to Buy:  Teavivre

Tea Description:

The Fengqing Zhuan Cha Ripened Puerh Brick Tea 2005 is small but has full weight of 240g. The brick is in the size of 13.5 cm long, 9 cm wide and 1.5 cm high, which makes the tea easy to store. Brick tea is a kind of compressed pu-erh tea. This Raw Pu-erh Brick Tea has yellow and bright liquid, stronger flavor than ripened brick with strong astringent taste. Yet the bitter taste differs from other teas’. A strong sweet aftertaste comes after the liquid fills in your mouth, as well as the long-lasting mellow flavor promoting the secretion of saliva. The sweet aftertaste still remains even half a minute later. This Raw Pu-erh Brick is picked in 2005’s spring and summer, and pressed in the same year. Aged Pu-erh Brick teas will become more profound after years of store. It is regarded as an eatable antique in China.

Learn more about this tea here.

Taster’s Review:

Although I’m not always enthusiastic to try a pu-erh, after having tried a good number of pu-erh teas from Teavivre without disappointment, I found myself actually looking forward to trying this 2005 Fengqing Zhuan Cha Raw Puerh Brick Tea.

After a quick rinse (15 seconds), I infused my first cup for just 45 seconds and achieved a very strong, deep flavor with notes of mineral and a somewhat salty/savory note.  The description above suggests “promoting the secretion of saliva” and that’s what I’m experiencing from this tea.  The salty note from the tea encourages my mouth to begin watering.

This is earthy but not in the same way that a ripened pu-erh would taste.  This is more earthy/vegetative sort of taste.  I note hints of kelp.  By mid-cup, I start to notice some bitter/tart notes that brighten the overall flavor.

I steeped this tea eight times before I was ready to move on to something else – but I do suspect that this tea would have kept going strong for at least two or more infusions!  With each infusion, I noticed a deeper flavor than with the previous cup.  The flavor keeps developing.

I’ve often used the word mellow to describe a pu-erh but I don’t think that word applies to this tea.  The savory/bitter notes are very unique to me.  I don’t consider myself an expert when it comes to pu-erh, in fact, I think of myself as just the opposite.  Pu-erh is the tea that I feel least knowledgeable about, and with each new experience, I feel as though I’m learning something new and after each experience, I feel as though I’ve so much more to learn!

That said, I can’t recall a tea quite like this one before.  It has a brine-like flavor to it … but not a fishy-brine taste.  The brine here reminds me more of a vinegar-ish type of taste, the savory/bitter/salty notes you might experience from vinegar.  The earthy notes here are very mushroom-y.

A very intriguing tea!

Fengqing Raw Pu-erh Cake Tea 2006 from Teavivre

FengqingRawCakeTea Information:

Leaf Type:  Pu-erh

Where to Buy:  Teavivre

Tea Description:

This Raw Pu-erh Cake Teavivre choose is from the representative Pu-erh production area Fengqing.  Fengqing is the original place of the world-wide famous Dian Hong Tea.  And it is also a classic place of Yunnan Pu-erh.  It is a place in Lingcang which is one of the four famous Pu-erh production areas.  The taste of Fengqing Pu-erh is mellow and sweet, deeper than Pu-erh in other production area.  And it usually has the flowery flavor of Dian Hong Tea.

This Raw Puerh Cake is special for the two seasons resource from the same Arbor Tea Trees.  Some are picked on March which we called “Ming Qian” or “Chun Jian” leaves.  This is the best tea leaves in Spring Tea because it contains more nutrition and tastes mellow.  Some are picked on September which we called “Gu Hua” or “Paddy Flower”.  This is the best leaves for Autumn Tea because the aroma is stronger lasting longer.  The Autumn Tea (Paddy Flower Tea) also has special flower fragrance.  This Raw Puerh Cake is made by the two kinds of tea resource which were carefully blended by certain proportion.

Learn more about this tea here.

Taster’s Review:

I know I’ve never made any secret about my first disappointing experiences with pu-erh but since those early days, I have learned the way to brew the tea for the best flavor and I find that I now enjoy an afternoon now and then sipping on pu-erh tea.  And I’m really enjoying this Fengqing Raw Pu-erh Cake Tea 2006 from Teavivre.

The dry cake has an earthy scent to it, but I found the aroma to have more of a vegetal scent than an earthy one.  But the reverse is true for the brewed tea:  I’m finding the fragrance of the brewed liquid to smell more earthy than vegetative.

The flavor is both vegetative and earthy.  The first infusion (following a 15 second rinse) tasted light and slightly dry.  Earthy tones, yes, with hints of vegetation.  It is quite mellow with a slight brine-like taste to it … I can almost taste a hint of salt, and I think that’s where I’m getting the aforementioned dryness from.  Overall, I found my first cup to be lightly sweet and pleasant, with a mild, soothing taste.

I noticed more earthy notes begin to emerge with the second infusion, and a slight mushroom-y sort of flavor.  The brine-y note from the first cup was no longer present, however, the dryness remained (although it was significantly less noticeable in this cup).  Still mellow, the flavor deepened with this infusion, and it is still sweet and enjoyable.

With subsequent infusions, the earthy notes began to subside a little, making way for a more well-rounded flavor that I found to be both sweet and savory, with it leaning more toward the sweet than the savory.

I enjoyed the mild character of this tea.  It was soothing and relaxing to sip, and especially nice after eating something spicy (wings!) … I found that it helped calm my belly after that meal.  A very pleasing pu-erh!