91

I tried the 2013 autumn version of this tea and was highly impressed. I think that’s a good indication of where this spring tea is headed. Without even opening the plastic seal of this cake I was met with a pungent aroma of well-ripened apricots. I was very excited to try this cake, but my experience tells me that waiting a day or so improves the flavor of any recently acquired tea that’s just been opened. Actually, with sheng pu’er, a couple of weeks is even better.

I mentioned in my last note for the 2013 version the importance of water quality. Since I’m brewing this at my parents’ house, I know their water differs based on having brewed the same teas with the same brewing vessels both here and at my place. I’m boiling water with special rocks I brought back from China called maifanshi (麦饭石) which I’ve been using for many years. Obviously, a Brita or Pur water filter works just fine. In fact, the rocks aren’t totally necessary, but they definitely make your water taste like natural spring water and bring out the natural sweetness and aroma from the tea.

Back to this tea: I’ve placed the dried leaves in a porcelain gaiwan. The leaves are well intact and the brewed leaves maintain that apricot aroma, albeit less pungent and accompanied by sweet flowery fragrances. Tea soup has a vibrant gold hue. The first steep (that I brewed too quickly) is very pure and has a simple sweetness, but wonderfully buttery texture and aftertaste that only get sweeter as it lingers in the mouth (huigan).

The second and third infusions are very clean, have more pronounced flavor notes of ripe apricot, sugar cane, and flowers, while accompanied by that smooth buttery mouth feel and extended huigan. That wonderful mouth feel and strong yet gentle aftertaste is what brought me back to this tea. I tend to prefer sharp spring flavors to mellow sweetness, but this one is an exception.

On the sixth and seventh steeps, the apricot sweetness is replaced by more flowery notes and a refreshing astringency that’s expected with new tea. The pure taste and powerful huigan are consistent, but the huigan has intensified and is very enjoyable. I plan to return to this tea next year.

Addendum:

This tea just keeps getting sweeter and fuller in the mouth. I’m not sure why teadb rated the Qing Mei Shan as underwhelming. It’s my one of my favorites from Scott’s 2015 line. This is a perfect example of how subjective tea tasting can be.

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

I agree completely with letting the tea wake up for a while.

tanluwils

Yes, and the reason I think sheng pu’er teas requires longer periods to wake up, or a resting period, is due to the microbial activity of enzymes. I’m still figuring it out, but I’ve had good results simply leaving sheng pu’er cakes in ziplock bags.

JC

I need to get a few of those rocks to try myself. I’ve been busy so I haven’t even started looking yet.

Brian

i havent noticed where TeaDB reviewed this tea. can you point me in the right direction?

tanluwils

Yeah, they don’t cover many good teas, actually. However, the young shengs they have covered from YS are some of my favorites. It’s impossible for anyone to accurately assess so many teas back to back. Especially young shengs.

I think YS’s sheng cakes from Qing Mei Shan, Mang Fei and the Wu Liang are the best ways to get genuine gu shu while on a budget. All are excellently processed and still very affordable. Unless you tend to avoid sweetness, it’s hard to dislike Qing Mei Shan and Wu Liang teas. I would order a few samples.

gongpoo

Great review! I gotta try this :) Question- when you say you leave young raws out after receiving them, do you unwrap the nei fei and just leave it sitting for a bit? do you do this with samples or just with cakes? Just wondering what you personally do

tanluwils

Sheng pu’er is quite different from any other tea because it needs some humidity to develop and for flavors to shine. Proper storage is a must – create a controlled environment, but that environment must be relatively warm and relatively humid. No extremes. I live in the northeast US, so I keep my young raw pu’er in a clear, closed plastic bin and have a hygrometer that tells me the relative humidity (RH) level inside the box. Generally speaking, 60 is the minimum RH you want to age your tea. Any lower than 55 will dry the tea, which results in stale, flat flavors. Cakes or opened samples inside the box usually need to acclimate (or rest) before they can be brewed. This can cake anywhere between a week to a year. I usually let the teas acclimate for a couple of weeks as a rule of thumb, but that’s very short for some folks. This is not the case if you’re opening the tea in a climate that’s warm and humid – favorable conditions for pu’er development. Hope that helps.

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Comments

mrmopar

I agree completely with letting the tea wake up for a while.

tanluwils

Yes, and the reason I think sheng pu’er teas requires longer periods to wake up, or a resting period, is due to the microbial activity of enzymes. I’m still figuring it out, but I’ve had good results simply leaving sheng pu’er cakes in ziplock bags.

JC

I need to get a few of those rocks to try myself. I’ve been busy so I haven’t even started looking yet.

Brian

i havent noticed where TeaDB reviewed this tea. can you point me in the right direction?

tanluwils

Yeah, they don’t cover many good teas, actually. However, the young shengs they have covered from YS are some of my favorites. It’s impossible for anyone to accurately assess so many teas back to back. Especially young shengs.

I think YS’s sheng cakes from Qing Mei Shan, Mang Fei and the Wu Liang are the best ways to get genuine gu shu while on a budget. All are excellently processed and still very affordable. Unless you tend to avoid sweetness, it’s hard to dislike Qing Mei Shan and Wu Liang teas. I would order a few samples.

gongpoo

Great review! I gotta try this :) Question- when you say you leave young raws out after receiving them, do you unwrap the nei fei and just leave it sitting for a bit? do you do this with samples or just with cakes? Just wondering what you personally do

tanluwils

Sheng pu’er is quite different from any other tea because it needs some humidity to develop and for flavors to shine. Proper storage is a must – create a controlled environment, but that environment must be relatively warm and relatively humid. No extremes. I live in the northeast US, so I keep my young raw pu’er in a clear, closed plastic bin and have a hygrometer that tells me the relative humidity (RH) level inside the box. Generally speaking, 60 is the minimum RH you want to age your tea. Any lower than 55 will dry the tea, which results in stale, flat flavors. Cakes or opened samples inside the box usually need to acclimate (or rest) before they can be brewed. This can cake anywhere between a week to a year. I usually let the teas acclimate for a couple of weeks as a rule of thumb, but that’s very short for some folks. This is not the case if you’re opening the tea in a climate that’s warm and humid – favorable conditions for pu’er development. Hope that helps.

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Bio

My ever expanding list of obsessions, passions, and hobbies:

Tea, cooking, hiking, plants, East Asian ceramics, fine art, Chinese and Central Asian history, environmental sustainability, traveling, foreign languages, meditation, health, animals, spirituality and philosophy.

I drink:
young sheng pu’er
green tea
roasted oolongs
aged sheng pu’er
heicha
shu pu’er
herbal teas (not sweetened)

==

Personal brewing methods:

Use good mineral water – Filter DC’s poor-quality water, then boil it using maifan stones to reintroduce minerals。 Leaf to water ratios (depends on the tea)
- pu’er: 5-7 g for 100 ml
(I usually a gaiwan for very young sheng.)
- green tea: 2-4 g for 100 ml
- oolong: 5-7 g for 100 ml
- white tea: 2-4 g for 100 ml
- heicha: 5-6 g for 100 ml
(I occasionally boil fu cha a over stovetop for a very rich and comforting brew.)

Location

Washington, DC

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