Black Beauty 2009 Meng Hai Imperial Ripe Pu'erh

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Earth, Sweet, Wet Wood, Dirt
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Roswell Strange
Average preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec 9 g 4 oz / 120 ml

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From Bitterleaf Teas

Our Black Beauty Gong Ting ripe Puer is made of imperial grade tips that give it a more delicate, sweet quality. In this case, the tea has been able to age beyond what you would expect of a typical ripe Puer in the same amount of time.

Clean and smooth, this is a ripe Puer that can be enjoyed from the first infusion, without the need of a “wake-up” rinse. An excellent choice for an affordable, everyday drinker.

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4 Tasting Notes

79
15662 tasting notes

Cupped some of this ripe pu’erh early yesterday evening; very smooth & medium bodied w/ very clean notes of mahogany wood, petrichor, and just a hint of dark, black cocktail cherries. I actually resteeped the cup leaf twice as well, and both resteeps were quite nice. There was no way I would have gotten a fourth infusion though.

Photos: https://www.instagram.com/p/CAK56nvAVCV/

I was also tagged by a friend on insta to share #sevendaysofteapets so this was day one of that!! This tractor teapet was an extra little gift from a potter last year in a teaware order. While I’m sure it was a random inclusion, I actually love it because it reminds me of home, back in the prairies!!

Song Pairing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TeU1sn8KUgU

"Youngest"

When I made my account, I didn’t know song pairings were a thing on Steepster but it was something I wanted to do because music is so important to me. Needless to say I flailed with excitement when I clicked your link – I am a HUGE Glass Animals fan. I can barely contain myself waiting for July.

Martin Bednář

Song pairings… I don’t know who came with it (was it you Roswell Strange?); but I enjoy and now and then I ad some too! Even it is not a song I was listening to it while drinking, it can be song which was stuck in my head or something. It is sometimes really amazing how we can have same or completely different likes on songs, some songs are somehow strange to pair with particular tea, but sometimes it is just right! And how many songs I found out with it!

Nattie

I’ve always wondered how people choose their song pairings

"Youngest"

@Nattie – That was going to be my next question! I am curious whether Roswell chooses songs of the moment, simply logs what they are currently listening to, or if the song is specifically chosen based on the flavor profile of the tea. Regardless, I am into it.

Roswell Strange

@Martin – While I am DEFINITELY not the first person to ever pair music and tea, I do believe I was the first person to actively start doing it/writing about it here on Steepster.

@Nattie & Youngest – Sort of both? Sometimes I have a specific song or genre of music stuck in my head and so I pick a tea that I think feels appropriate for that. However, sometimes I start with the tea and then I try to find the right song/band/genre that “feels right” while I drink it. Typically I listen to many songs during a session, but the one I usually share here on Steepster is whatever stood out the most to me in the moment.

Martin Bednář

@Roswell Strange — haha, of course. I meant here on Steepster; not worldwide :)

Nattie

Thanks for explaining, that’s super interesting! I usually read while drinking tea, if I’m not busy with other things, but the song pairings have always intrigued me and I think I might give it a go.

ashmanra

There was a man on here years ago who did song pairings…I will try to remember who it was. He didn’t stay active long, though. There were a few of us who started doing it back then but didn’t keep it up. I did very few.

tea-sipper

ashmanra, are you thinking of tunes&tea? If so, I can’t believe I remembered, but I suppose the clue is in the name: https://steepster.com/tunes-and-tea I also just spotted a review they did eight years ago about my favorite tea – Special Teas Earl that I just mentioned the other day.
Also can’t wait for more Glass Animals in July!

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80
1758 tasting notes

It would seem like I drank a different tea from the other reviewer on this one. Once I got past the wet storage flavors I found it quite nice. Not dirty or cloudy but clear and crisp. There was a fair amount of fermentation to it with an earthy note but I did not notice anything particularly unpleasant at all. In fact the wet storage notes covered up the fermentation taste to some degree. By the fifth or sixth steep all the wet storage taste and fermentation taste were gone and what I was left with was fairly nice. A bit of a light fruity note with an aftertaste of the wet storage taste or wet wood. Yes I guess in reality there was a little bit left of this throughout all twelve steeps but is was only a major factor for five or six steeps.

I steeped this tea twelve times in a 110ml teapot with 8.3g leaf and boiling water. I gave it a 10 second rinse. I steeped it for 5 sec, 5 sec, 7 sec, 10 sec, 15 sec, 20 sec, 25 sec, 30 sec, 45 sec, 1 min, 1.5 min, and 2 minutes. There were a few more steeps left to this tea but I didn’t want any more caffeine.

Flavors: Earth, Sweet, Wet Wood

Preparation
Boiling 8 g 4 OZ / 110 ML

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20
526 tasting notes

I have a been a bit spoiled with my Shu puerh consumption, so I am difficult to please. I wish to state this at the beginning, so if you’re a different Shu drinker than I, please disregard my harsh words. As I stated, I am very picky with my Shu consumption, for I have heard too many horror stories of the disgusting lake bile out there categorized as the “ripe”. This is a gong ting loose, so I didn’t go in with absurdly high expectations. The description reads “smooth, clean, and does not require a rinse”. I will disagree firmly with all three counts. First, I do not know of many Shu puerhs (or puerhs in general) that should ignore a rinse. Second, this was a very harsh drink. Third, a prominent cloudy factor and dirty notes were constantly encountered. Now, into some more details:

The dry leaf is small and tippy with a slight aroma of fresh soil, minerals, and minor cocoa. I warmed my yixing and scooped the bits inside. I washed the leaves and began my brewing as usual; however, I used flash steeping, for this leaf did not need the extra time to open up, for it was loose leaf. The initial flavor was brandishing and drying on the tongue. I would put it as bittersweet heavy dark cocoa. The brew was coarse and chalky. I thought maybe it was my water, so I changed and cleaned the kettle quickly, and I reboiled a fresh pot. Turns out, it was not my water. The brew continued in a simple statement of dirty tasting. The drink was very harsh to get down, but it wasn’t a pleasant harsh such as: leather, mineral, or dark wood; rather, it was just plain dirty tasting. I kept brewing, for maybe it was going to improve. I experienced a slightly decent period around the fourth steeping when the harsh features tuned down and it was of the earthy Menghai profile Shu; however, the next steep brought this back into the Sahara dryness category. I then gave up soon after. This might be Shu for someone that likes the extreme Shu, but I am not in that group of drinkers. I have had some bitter Menghais before, but this one takes the bing (cake, get it lol).

https://www.instagram.com/p/BRbg57CAZek/?taken-by=haveteawilltravel&hl=en

Flavors: Dirt

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec 9 g 4 OZ / 130 ML
Bitterleaf

I knew someone was bound to notice when started cutting our gong ting with dirt to save costs…

I’m kidding, of course, but still sorry you had an unpleasant experience with it!

Cwyn

This one might get better with a few years on it.

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