Twelve Cent Brick

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Honey, Pine, Resin, Smoke, Tobacco, Wood
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by mrmopar
Average preparation
185 °F / 85 °C 0 min, 15 sec

Currently unavailable

We don't know when or if this item will be available.

From Our Community

1 Image

0 Want it Want it

3 Own it Own it

3 Tasting Notes View all

  • “I have gone through multiple bricks of this one in the last 2 years. I opened one up today as it has been a long while since I had tried it. This is a very in expensive brick coming in at $30 at...” Read full tasting note
    77
  • “6.5g:120-ish pot. boiling Brita tap. Rinse was a lot longer than I meant, since slow pour. woody taste and slight bitter initially, along with some florals. some warmth. aftertaste is a crisp...” Read full tasting note

From CNNP

This is a 250g CNNP (Zhongcha) raw puerh brick produced in 2004. It has been stored entirely in Taiwan and has a relatively dry natural Taiwan storage. The tea has a clear sweetness, a bit of old school smokiness, a decent thickness, and good punch and energy. No dankness or wet storage notes. The material is mostly full, robust leaves, not chopped, and interestingly the brick appears to have quite a few seed pods included. We have been looking for more good examples of affordable sheng puerh with some age — enjoy this brick at twelve cents a gram, that will be the price until it sells out! The red sticker was applied to hide a misprint on the wrapper.

About CNNP View company

Company description not available.

3 Tasting Notes

77
9 tasting notes

I have gone through multiple bricks of this one in the last 2 years. I opened one up today as it has been a long while since I had tried it. This is a very in expensive brick coming in at $30 at TWL. The red sticker was applied to hide a misprint on the wrapper. As stated on their webpage “It has been stored entirely in Taiwan and has a relatively dry natural Taiwan storage” and is a lightly compressed brick which easily breaks apart with some prodding of a tool. I always smell light pipe tobacco when smelling the brick dry. Material is a blend with large twisted leaves, stems and possible some huangpian. TWl is correct in pointing out you may run into seed pods in this brick.

Started out at 10 seconds after fast rinse. Easily 6-7 infusions at 180 degrees.

Nice throat/mouth feel and last mouth taste. This is a low priced moderately aged daily drinker with medium thickness and clear/clean liquor. Lasting after tastes of resin and pine.

Flavors: Honey, Pine, Resin, Smoke, Tobacco, Wood

Preparation
185 °F / 85 °C 0 min, 15 sec

Login or sign up to leave a comment.

247 tasting notes

6.5g:120-ish pot. boiling Brita tap. Rinse was a lot longer than I meant, since slow pour.

woody taste and slight bitter initially, along with some florals. some warmth. aftertaste is a crisp sugar, shifting to an almost acidic, dry fruitiness. Some mint. unfortunately, died very quickly after (like two, maybe three steeps in…), and so will definitely not rinse in this pot next time when I’ve already broken up the leaves.

On an unrelated note, I tried my first very dry red this past summer, and subsequently struggle now to apply the term astringency to any teas, but maybe dry reds are on an entirely different level. Then, I accidentally had a not fully ripened Hachiya persimmon the other day, and that really redefined astringency for me. Truly awful.

derk

Astringency and dryness are different concepts to me but sometimes experienced together. I can handle one or the other and see neither in itself as a flaw, but when both appear in the same cup, the experience is often jarring.

Login or sign up to leave a comment.