Pu Erh Dante

Tea type
Black Pu'erh Blend
Ingredients
Pu Erh Tea
Flavors
Mushrooms, Wet Earth, Earth, Marine, Mineral, Smooth, Vegetal, Wet Moss, Wet Rocks, Grass, Wood, Honey, Moss, Fishy, Peat, Autumn Leaf Pile, Leather, Loam, Peat Moss
Sold in
Bulk, Loose Leaf, Tea Bag
Caffeine
High
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by JulieWyant
Average preparation
Boiling 3 min, 15 sec 2 g 9 oz / 271 ml

From Our Community

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39 Tasting Notes View all

  • “I am officially, certifiably crazy. I tried this about a year ago, and it’s been one of the VERY few (only?) teas I couldn’t even get past the 1st sip. But I’ve decided to get back into pu erhs...” Read full tasting note
    70
  • “Sipdown no. 110 of the year 2014. My inaugural use of the Yixing pot! It may not have been the best choice because I had very little left, not really enough to fill the 140 ml pot to one third or...” Read full tasting note
    77
  • “2/3/14 3rd and last of a pu-erh flight. 3g/100ml gaiwan/212F Washed. This tea showed well in the gaiwan, and was easily my favorite tea in this tasting. The dry leaf had a pleasant...” Read full tasting note
    67
  • “I can’t pronounce the name of this tea for the life of me, but that hasn’t stopped me from enjoying it! Steeped for an extra minute today, and I’m not sure if it unlocked an extra something special...” Read full tasting note
    70

From Adagio Teas

One of the five main types of tea (white, green, oolong and black being the others), pu-erh tea stands apart with its uncommonly soft earthy flavor and woodsy tones. Unlike all other teas, pu-erh (pronounced ‘poo-err’) is actually aged. The tea leaves go through a natural fermentation process before the tea is gently dried. This creates a cup with zero astringency and a deep, rich body. Pu-erh is extraordinarily smooth and deeply refreshing. Our Pu erh Dante (the shou variety of pu-erh) gives a clean, damp forest aroma, dried mushrooms, leather, and earth. Some sweetness of figs or dates and a slightly creamy flavor. Mellow and grounding. If the flavor is too strong for you, simply dilute with water (which, interestingly, doesn’t work for many other teas). Pu-erh is extremely versatile – you can steep it for as little as 30 seconds or 30 minutes, whatever pleases your palate. It won’t get bitter and is great for multiple infusions.

This two-year-old shou (ripened) Pu Erh recalls the deep petrichor essence after the rains and the mellow smells of the forest floor at once sweet and earthy. Our artisanal grower, Xiao Zhang Luo, instills into each leaf of his Pu Erh love and experience. We extended his tea’s light, essence of lush mountains and fresh air with a fruity combination of mango, papaya, coconut, and apple to please the veteran tea drinker and novice alike. Rinse the leaves for 45 seconds, then discard the water before steeping fully. Brew 30 seconds or 30 minutes, it never gets unpleasantly astringent.

Pu Erh Tea | High caffeine | Steep at 212° for 3-5 minutes.

About Adagio Teas View company

Adagio Teas has become one of the most popular destinations for tea online. Its products are available online at www.adagio.com and in many gourmet and health food stores.

39 Tasting Notes

56
412 tasting notes

1st steep, 4oz water, 4g leaf (after 15 second rinse)

It’s a rather lovely reddish-brown color; there’s certainly a barnyard aroma, but it’s bringing back rather fond memories of a brief spate of horseback riding lessons I had in middle school, so I’m okay with that. I’m not going to try to break it down further – barnyard=hay/dirt/manure/horse. I’m not getting the fish that some others mentioned, fortunately. There is zero bitterness or astringency, and some sweetness. I’ll be curious to see how the flavors evolve.

2nd steep: I didn’t imagine it, there is a bit of an oily sheen on the surface of the tea, just after it’s poured. This faded as the tea cooled. Same dark red-brown color, same sweet barnyard taste, but slightly lighter in flavor and texture.

ETA: Ended up getting 5 steeps out of this, all 20-30 seconds, before it started getting weaker. My tin was very old, inherited from a former roommate and buried in a drawer, so your mileage will likely be better.

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec

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76
42 tasting notes

Wow this smells different than my typical black morning tea (Ceylon Sonata). This was the last sealed bag in my black sampler from Adagio. Maybe the name Dante scared me off since I didn’t want to end up in the inferno?

It steeped cloudy which startled me, has a very different nose from any other black tea I’ve tried. The smell reminds me of rain on clay if that makes sense with a hint of dust, smoke and dark spice added in, something my wife adds to the Indian curry for flavor, maybe black cardamom? The taste is fairly mild in comparison to the smell, tough to compare to anything since I’m not sure I’ve tasted something like this before.

The aftertaste is long and layered in that it starts with a black tea flavor and ends with a bit of astringency and bitterness almost 5 seconds after swallowing. All in all this one goes in the “needs further research” pile since my first impression isn’t bad, but it might need a different approach to steeping/preparation.

I used two heaping teaspoon fulls with just under 2 cups of water.

Preparation
Boiling 3 min, 0 sec

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100
30 tasting notes

As far as I understand, this tea is not exactly a high end pu erh. I am not a pu erh expert and, in fact, this is the only pu erh I’ve tried. I have nothing bad to say about it, I really like the strong earthy flavor and aroma. I normally brew it in a gaiwan and can get 5 or 6 infusions. I normally fill the pre-heated gaiwan with enough leaf to leave it almost full after they unfurl, the first infusion is only a second long or so to wash the leaves. Then I just infuse for 10 seconds at a time until the flavor gets weaker and then double the time.

This is a good, inexpensive introduction to pu erh teas. I might experiment with other higher end pu erh teas soon.

Preparation
Boiling 5 min, 0 sec

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60
59 tasting notes

This isn’t a great Pu-erh by any measure, but it is drinkable. It brews a deep red cup of tea with an earthy and slightly fishy aroma. The taste is more earthy than fishy. The first steep is flavorful, while the second is pretty weak. Don’t think I’ll buy it again, but if someone offers me a cup down the road I’ll drink it.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 5 min, 0 sec
Cofftea

Have you tried the rinsing, highly concentrated, short steepings method yet?

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75
11 tasting notes

This was my first experience with a pu-erh tea. I steeped it for about 4.5 mins at about 200. It has a pretty interesting flavor to it. You can taste the earthy flavor it has to it. The smell (while not bad at all) has a small seafood smell to it. This smell does not transfer (completely) over to the taste. Do not get me wrong this is a pretty good tea, but if you do not like earthy teas this one is definitely not for you.

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50
135 tasting notes

A standard shou. Would probably be alright as an introduction to pu-erh, but not something I’d get for its own sake. One nice thing about it is that it’s available from Adagio, which is a more popular company for Western customers than many other places which offer pu-erh. As such, it might help introduce a lot of people to pu-erh – as well as possibly to hei cha in general – who might not otherwise have known anything about it.

Flavors: Mushrooms, Wet Earth

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50
1217 tasting notes

This is another sampler that came to me a few summers ago from Meowster’s cupboard destash, so thanks Meowster! I honestly don’t have the highest expectations, though. For one, because it is a pu-erh, the one type of tea that despite me trying again and again, it just always taste like dirt or swampwater to me and I can’t quite understand why it’s considered the “fancy coffee” of the tea world and be a “true tea connoisseur” you should be drinking expensive puerh and nothing else… when it tastes like dirt or swampwater. I’ve been okay with a few flavored puerh blends I’ve tried, but that leads to my second point… the only other Adagio pu-erh I’ve tried was their Pu-erh Chorange, which I personally found awful, like a very fake, artificial-tasting orange was dropped in a pile of dirt. So… ya. Maybe the sheer age of this sampler at this point may have improved it?

So, this one falls into the “swampwater” realm. Again, not really a flavor I enjoy, but I suppose it is slightly more preferable than the “dirt” ones. It’s like a strong, vegetal, marine/earthy taste. It isn’t undrinkable and actually very smooth for what it is. There is an earthy taste that lingers in the aftertaste, as well as some minerality. It actually is better than the Pu-erh Chorange, since it doesn’t have that awful artificial orange flavoring smothered over the top of such a conflicting flavor. But it still isn’t really a flavor that is for me. I wonder how many pu-erh samples I’ll try, trying to convince myself to “like” this stuff because proper tea-drinkers are “supposed to like it”…

Flavors: Earth, Marine, Mineral, Smooth, Vegetal, Wet Earth, Wet Moss, Wet Rocks

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 3 min, 0 sec 1 tsp 12 OZ / 350 ML
AJRimmer

Yep, I have similar feelings toward pu erh. I don’t really get it.

gmathis

I feel the same way about Earl Grey. I feel like I really need to like it to be a well-rounded Steepster, and I try, but it’ll never be my favorite.

tea-sipper

Adagio has the WORST puerh I’ve tried… at least years ago anyway. So I doubt it’s the age of the sample.

Mastress Alita

@gmathis : I actually went through a phase when I did not like bergamot at all either. And it lasted for quite a while. Something in my palate changed, and I started to like the flavor over time, but it was still more gradual than a sudden change. I started by having flavored EGs that were a lot lighter on the bergamot, and even now I tend to not like the ones that are really harsh bergamot bombs or ones that pair bergamot with a strong Ceylon base which tends to come off a little too citrusy too me. But I definitely went through a full-blown “don’t like EG” phase before my palate changed and the flavor grew on me (I still don’t like grapefruit, and find bergamot “similar” to it, at least to me, which makes me wonder if one day I’ll start liking the taste of grapefruit, as well…)

@tea-sipper: Well, they say pu-erh “gets better” with age, hense why I wondered if it being old would’ve actually done it some favors in this rare case.

mrmopar

@AJRimmer we may have to change your outlook on that.

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557 tasting notes

oooooo funky stuff!!!
i kinda like it tho

ashmanra

Hi, Thomas! How are you?

Tommy Toadman

Hello, I am great, How are you?
I am glad to see people still here on steepster, I’ve missed it so much.
Do people still do swaps on here? i been away for so long

ashmanra

I think there are still some swaps! Check the discussion threads, there might be even a traveling tea box! Doing well, other than the existential dread, ha ha!

mrmopar

Swaps are still done old friend! I am glad to see you back on here.

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53
7 tasting notes

At first, the smell reminded me of a pasture/very earthy. After a couple of sips, I get a strong grassy and wood undertone. I grew to like it a little more by the end. The earthiness can be a lot to handle if you aren’t use to it. This is my first pu’erh, so I’m slowly learning.

Flavors: Earth, Grass, Wood

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 3 min, 0 sec 1 tsp 12 OZ / 354 ML

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67
201 tasting notes

Huh. This was the very last holdout of my previous two adagio sample orders. I had been holding back on it because I needed a reason to try it. I didn’t want it to just be an ordinary day tea. I have heard lots of different things about Pu-erh and I wanted to make it memorable.

Well, Fast Forward to today. My grandma is at deaths door. The project it will be a few hours, a day at most. I refuse to go see her in this state as 1. she is completely unresponsive so it’s not like she would know I was there, and 2. I can’t stand to see her like this. I don’t want to be there when the end arrives.
So here I am. Brewing a very special cuppa, in honor of my grandma.

I couldn’t remember the recommended instructions I had read on here for this one. So I winged it a bit. First, a 30 second rinse. Then, a 30 second steep. I gotta say, once I was able to get a proper mouthful of this, it was like a flavor explosion in my mouth. The fishy notes I smelled on the leaf didn’t translate into taste. Instead, I get a bold, rich, earthy flavored tea with faint notes of honey and woodiness. I can definitely taste the tea itself, and it surprisingly isn’t bitter. I really like this. I was so scared I wouldn’t but I actually thoroughly enjoy this tea. I guess to sum it up, this tea is definitely a keeper. It’s literally my first cup of Pu-erh, and if this is any indication, I’m going to enjoy trying others. Can’t wait for that resteep!

Flavors: Earth, Honey, Moss, Wood

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 30 sec
AJRimmer

Every time I try a pu-erh, there’s always a few moments of hesitation as I fear the worst! Usually turns out okay though. Best wishes to you and your family! <3

Shanie O Maniac

Thanks. Appreciate that. I’m still drinking it right now. I’m on steeping number 3. It keeps on going. The more I drink it the more I like it.

mrmopar

Sorry about your grandmother. I saw my grandmother on a machine at 15 and I made my father take me home. Not how I wanted to remember her.

On another note though, glad the puerh was a good experience for you.

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