Arby said

Could use a little bit of pu'erh help

So I’m looking into buying a few mini cakes (100g) from Yunnan Sourcing and came across this cheap mini cake: http://yunnansourcing.com/en/yunnan-sourcing-teas/2173-2012-yunnan-sourcing-yi-dian-hong-ripe-pu-erh-tea-mini-cake.html

It was released in 2012, so it has had some more time to age by 2017. In the description it says this has a “bite” to it, and I’m worried it might be bitter or astringent in some way. My question to the pu experts here is how do you think it will taste now? It is ripe, so I’m hoping it will not be bitter like a few younger shengs I have tried. I don’t mind fermented/storage flavour as long as there is no bitterness, smoke, or mushroom/fungal flavours. I’m looking for a tea I can drink now, but I prefer to buy a pressed cake/square over looseleaf/mini tuos.

8 Replies
mrmopar said

The bite should have subsided a bunch. It may have a slight mushroom note but it should be leaning more towards a bittersweet chocolate or a date note. It will not have notes like young sheng has. It will be on the different part of the spectrum.

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onjinone said

Hard to say but I would imagine it having a bit of the fermentation flavor due to age and earthiness that is common in a lot of Gong Ting grade teas. Bitterness shouldn’t be an issue if it’s brewed correctly.

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AllanK said

Ripe puerh is usually not astringent. I have tried that line of mini cakes, don’t remember which years. I remember liking it but don’t remember if there was any real bitterness to it. There should be a few reviews for that mini cake on Steepster if you look it up.

AllanK said

On a side note there will still be a fair amount of the fermentation taste to that one. I find it takes as long as twenty years for a ripe puerh to totally clear of fermentation.

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apefuzz said

I drank one of these cakes a year or two ago. Not quite sure what YS was referring to with the “bite.” It certainly doesn’t have any bitterness, smokiness, etc. I remember it being particularly smooth and earthy-sweet. Lots of cereal (cream of wheat) notes. If you brew it hard and heavy, you may get a cacao “bite” to it. Sometimes, depending on your palate, you may pick up on a very slight bourbon-like note. Maybe that’s the bite.

In any event, I would absolutely recommend this cake to anyone looking for a good ripe experience.

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Arby said

Thank you for all your help guys! I’ll try ordering this one then.

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Dxniel said

Personally I wouldn’t worry too much about the age or puerh if they are already ripe.
I can’t comment at all on the tea cake you asked about, but I know this tuo is very good: http://yunnansourcing.com/en/xiaguan-tea-factory/3711-2010-xiaguan-ft-xiao-fa-tuo-aged-ripe-pu-erh-tea-tuo-in-box.html
Its about the same price and from 2010, so even older. I really like this tea and I order them whenever I run out, regardless of the year of production, as long as they are ripe and below $10 per 100g.

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I recently finished drinking one of those. Do not worry about “bite.”

This is well-crafted shu puer that practically cannot be oversteeped.

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