1031 Tasting Notes

94

This tea is one of my favourites but since it is not a “premium” tea, I am also happy to drink it casually. This makes it quite fun to follow its progression.

The aroma is more subdued now, but still peppery. It also reminds me of cooked meat, forest, and stewed vegetables.

The tea has a slick mouthfeel and a really good depth of warming flavours while still being bright and refreshing. The taste is well integrated. I can still detect herbs, grapefruit and other citrus fruits, but it is now more woody and nutty. The aftertaste is long-lasting, biting, drying, sweet, and very fragrant with notes of milk, herbs, and grains.

Flavors: Biting, Bitter, Citrus Fruits, Drying, Forest Floor, Grain, Grapefruit, Herbaceous, Meat, Milky, Nutty, Pepper, Stewed Vegetables, Sweet, Woody

Preparation
6 g 3 OZ / 100 ML

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81

A very good white tea that is on the bitter and savoury side of the spectrum.

The aroma is sweet and flowery, but it also reminds me of fur, apricots, and autumn leaf pile.

The first infusion is a bit grassy and warming with a cooling finish. Second one is quite bitter with notes of bark, moss, and grape skins. Later I found also flavours of lamb meat and bread crust.

The tea has a soft mouthfeel and medium body. Its aftertaste is long, sweet, and fragrant with a numbing mouthfeel. There are notes of herbs (sage), white wine, and florals.

Flavors: Apricot, Autumn Leaf Pile, Bark, Bitter, Bread, Burnt Food, Cooling, Floral, Flowers, Fur, Grape Skin, Grassy, Herbaceous, Meat, Moss, Sage, Sweet, White Wine

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 15 sec 6 g 3 OZ / 100 ML

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79

This tea has a familiar Assamica character. It has a foresty and chocolaty character, with a bitter, savoury (tomato vine) and slightly medicinal flavour. The body is light to medium, and the mouthfeel creamy. The aftertaste gives a strong cooling and biting sensation.

Flavors: Biting, Bitter, Chocolate, Cocoa, Cooling, Forest Floor, Tomato, Vegetal

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 0 min, 30 sec 4 g 3 OZ / 100 ML

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74

This is an unusual Gui Fei in that it is not very sweet, rather bitter and vegetal. It has some obvious objective quality, but I am not sure how much I like it personally.

Its dry leaf aroma reminds me of baked fruit (apple pie and pear), roasted nuts, apricots, magnolia flowers as well as shellfish. Wet leaves smell more floral (a bit like Mediterranean bushes), herbaceous (thyme), and earthy.

The liquor is bitter and biting with a cooling aftertaste, but it doesn’t bring so much engagement in terms of particular flavours.

Flavors: Apple, Apricot, Biting, Bitter, Earthy, Floral, Herbaceous, Magnolia, Marine, Pear, Roast Nuts, Shellfish, Thyme, Vegetal

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91

Every session with this tea is a special and unique one. It has a superb depth of flavours and overall gives an intense experience with strong presence in the mouth and a long-lasting aftertaste.

Often as pu-erh tea ages out of its youthful stage, it loses a its floral complexity in the dry leaf aroma. I don’t find that to be happening so much. There is a good complexity to the sweet, herbaceous scent with a note of tropical fruits. After the rinse, the scent reminds me of old green tea, but also peat, chicory, compost, bay leaves, and apples. The tea leaves a strong aroma also in the cup, where one can smell honey notes.

The liquor has a buttery, numbing and mouth-watering presence with an astringent finish. The taste is brothy and savoury at first. There is a vegetal aftertaste with notes of leek, peppers and umami that is also a bit spicy and sort of salty. Later steeps are more floral and bitter and remind me of FF Darjeeling tea a bit. There are also flavours of celery stalk, sugar beet and amber ale. The aftertaste becomes very intense at times. It’s character is mix of sweet and savoury ones.

Flavors: Apple, Bay Leaf, Beer, Bitter, Bread, Broth, Celery, Chicory, Compost, Floral, Green Bell Peppers, Herbaceous, Honey, Leeks, Peat, Pepper, Salty, Spicy, Sugar, Sweet, Tea, Tropical Fruit, Umami, Vegetal

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 15 sec 7 g 3 OZ / 100 ML

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79

This is quite a sweet tea for an aged oolong. It also has the espected metallic and medicinal taste, and a soft buttery mouthfeel. The aroma is fruity and toasty at first. After the rinse, it gives off notes of peat, angostura bitters and orange.

Flavors: Apricot, Fruity, Medicinal, Metallic, Orange, Peat, Sweet, Toasty

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 30 sec 5 g 3 OZ / 100 ML

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79

This is a very floral and bitter tea. It shares similarity with pu-erh from proximate localities such as Naka and Hekai, but it is noticably less mineral than the former tends to be.

The aroma is nutty and vegetal with notes of wild garlic and ghee. The tea has a watery texture that’s unremarkable, and a bitter-sweet taste with cooling high floral notes. The aftertaste is quite long-lasting and floral again. It brings also a strong drying sense. There are further flavours of apples, bay leaf, baked lemon, and green olives. Throughout the session, I also feel a pleasant chest warming sensation.

Flavors: Apple, Bay Leaf, Bitter, Butter, Cooling, Drying, Floral, Garlic, Lemon, Nutty, Olives, Sweet, Vegetal

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83
drank Qi Lan by Nannuoshan
1031 tasting notes

A decent rock oolong that is pretty easy to brew and enjoy.

This one has a multilayered aroma when dry; including notes of brownies, fruits, nuts, coffee, and orchids; unlike later in the session. The first infusion tastes sour, yeasty and milky, with an aftertaste of nectarines and sweet wood. The tea has a nice mouthfeel that’s astringent but not abrasive. The rest of the session gives a more warming and floral vibe. There are some more savoury steeps with butter flavour. Interestingly, I find it impossible to overbrew this tea, which is certainly not a given among yancha.

Flavors: Astringent, Butter, Coffee, Cookie, Floral, Fruity, Milky, Nectarine, Nutty, Orchid, Sour, Yeasty

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 15 sec

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87

Another Lao Man E, this time a white tea. Even though it’s from 2023, the oxidation level is fairly high.

While one may expect that for white tea, the quality of the material is paramount, here we have a plantation tea that works very well as a white tea.

Dry leaves smell of sawdust and fur, while wet ones more like cumin and incense. The tea is medium bodied and has a really distinctive character that sets it apart. You have the classic grapefruit bitterness present in many Lao Man E teas, but also many woody, nutty, mineral, and herbaceous notes. It is both smooth and a bit astringent, sometimes reminiscent of gin, at other times of burnt butter. The aftertaste is then more sweet and flowery with notes of apricot and gardenia flowers for instance.

Flavors: Alcohol, Apricot, Astringent, Bitter, Burnt Food, Butter, Cumin, Fur, Gardenias, Grapefruit, Incense, Mineral, Nutty, Sawdust, Smooth, Woody

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 0 min, 15 sec 5 g 3 OZ / 100 ML

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83

This must be one of the most expensive shou I ever tried. While it is surely a nice experience, not lacking in any respect, it also doesn’t have any particular wow factor. Thus in relation to the price ($0.84/gram) I cannot recommend it. Overall, I find that this tea has a higher degree of fermentation than what I often associate with my favourite examples of the category.

The leaves offer a very fast extraction, but one need not worry about excessive bitterness. The taste is nutty and savoury rather than bittersweet. It is metallic and reminds me of Guinness at times. The aftertaste has notes of yeast and meat broth, but also a very long-lasting brown sugar sweetness. The liquor texture is a bit watery overall, with some drying and pulling sensations that stay for a long time and provide for an engaging session. Cha qi is pretty noticeable too, but I wouldn’t buy the tea because of its energy either.

Flavors: Beer, Biting, Bitter, Broth, Brown Sugar, Drying, Metallic, Nutty, Olive Oil, Sweet, Umami, Yeast

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec 8 g 5 OZ / 150 ML

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Profile

Bio

Hi, I am a researcher in math, physics and computer science. Apart from teas and mathematics, I enjoy sports and traveling, as well as music of all kinds. Connect at https://rateyourmusic.com/~Togo

I had been drinking Japanese green tea for a while before discovering the world of tea in 2017. I rarely drink blends and generally avoid artificially scented teas. Other than that I try to keep it varied.

My rating description:
100 _ Unforgettable tea, an experience that changes your life.
90 – 100 _ Excellent tea.
80 – 90 _ Very enjoyable, I will buy again.
70 – 80 _ I enjoyed it, but I most likely won’t be buying it again.
60 – 70 _ Decent.
50 – 60 _ Average, forgettable.
40 – 50 _ I didn’t really like the tea, but it is drinkable.
0 – 40 _ I would prefer to avoid the tea.

Location

Innsbruck, Austria

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