Fall 2016 Jingmai Natural

Tea type
Pu'erh Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
Citrus, Pineapple, Sour, Vegetal, Floral, Fruity, Grass, Nectar, Sweet
Sold in
Not available
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Matu
Average preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 15 sec 7 g 4 oz / 120 ml

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3 Tasting Notes View all

  • “i really enjoy William’s teas, but i can’t say i really like this one. it has no negative issues like bitterness or smoke or harsh aroma. but the positive effects are near to none also. the aroma...” Read full tasting note
    60
  • “A quick session for today while scrambling to get my holiday shopping out of the way on a somewhat decent schedule for once. Light and fruity in a citrus way in the standard young Jingmai fashion,...” Read full tasting note
  • “This is the first puerh I’ve gotten into from my Farmerleaf order. I was very pleasantly surprised by this. It’s really dirt cheap, coming in at about $0.06/g if you buy a 357g cake. The aroma...” Read full tasting note
    81

From Farmerleaf

Our autumn production of 2016 is very refreshing. We managed to get a steady supply of excellent one bud/two leaves grade over two weeks. We called this tea Lawasa, which you can find stamped on the cakes with the Chinese characters 腊瓦萨; this is not Chinese but Dai dialect.

Jingmai mountain is partly inhabited by the Dai minority, Yubai, the co-owner of this website, belongs to this ethnicity. The Dai people celebrate a major festival that runs from August to October. It is called the “closed-door festival” during which the old folks should dedicate time to their spiritual life. Every week, a celebration day is held at the temple until the “open-door day” which marks the end of the three-months-long festival. “La” means tea in the Dai language and “Wasa” designates the period during which the closed-door festival runs, from August to October. Hence the name “La Wasa”.

This tea has a distinctive fragrance, something you couldn’t get in spring. The mouthfeel is light; some oiliness can be felt on the tongue, and the scents linger pretty well. It is a very good daily drinker and suits to those who want the fragrance of Pu-erh tea without its bitterness.

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3 Tasting Notes

60
16 tasting notes

i really enjoy William’s teas, but i can’t say i really like this one.
it has no negative issues like bitterness or smoke or harsh aroma.
but the positive effects are near to none also.
the aroma is only slightly there, like when you want a hot shower and you get lukewarm water or you need a strong beam in the shower but only get a third of the pressure.
yes, it’s autumn, and of course it’s not that powerful, but this one combines the lesser autumn power with a lukewarm aroma.
the aroma itself has no interesting tones for me while the ones it has are rather good than bad ones, but they are so powerless.
the price for it is very low, like 10 euro/100g, so the price is ok, but you have to ask yourself the question: would you want a great tea for an appropriate amount or a tea that has near to no power and near to no intense aromas for for less money.
maybe it’s because the bushes are young and it’s autumn..
maybe some people might enjoy it nonetheless, but for me it’s between :/ and :), and that’s just 50 points here. i add 10 points for quality and rather good than bad aroma, but i can’t really give it a full 67 smiley face. sorry.
aroma is like: sheng, mild, slightly sour, slightly autumnal sweet fruity
intensity starts slowly (first steep is watery) but you can get quite a lot of steeps from it.

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec 8 g 5 OZ / 160 ML

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106 tasting notes

A quick session for today while scrambling to get my holiday shopping out of the way on a somewhat decent schedule for once. Light and fruity in a citrus way in the standard young Jingmai fashion, the flavor has a sour pineapple tinge in addition that I found interesting. There’s a bit of a honeyed tone that you can pick out if you search for it in the early steeps, but it succumbs to the focal sour citrus flavor quickly.

This is one of their cheaper teas, I believe, and an autumn production. While it is not particularly complex in flavor profile, it is very approachable, possessing a decent vegetal depth to the fruitiness while having no astringency and very little bitterness to it, I’d say it was quite solidly pleasant for the price.

I liked the pineapple notes I got from this (I’ve only had one other tea that I got pineapple off of before) and consider it quite light and pleasant, although this is not difficult to turn distinctly unpleasant if oversteeped. It is surprisingly generous with the resteeps at this price point as well, and I’m curious to see how that pineapple flavor would age, but I prefer something with a little more complexity to my tea, so I’m looking forward to see how the taste progressions change as I drink my way up the ladder of Farmerleaf’s offerings.

Flavors: Citrus, Pineapple, Sour, Vegetal

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 7 g 3 OZ / 100 ML

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81
485 tasting notes

This is the first puerh I’ve gotten into from my Farmerleaf order. I was very pleasantly surprised by this. It’s really dirt cheap, coming in at about $0.06/g if you buy a 357g cake. The aroma off the dry leaves, which looked nice and green with some silver strands in there as well, was sweet and floral. After a rinse, I smelled mostly tobacco, and a green floral note, maybe with a bit of honey.

This tea is a light one – maybe the best illustration I’ve seen thus far of the differing characteristics of Autumn vs. Spring puerh. It’s got an airy sweetness to it – with boiling water, it was a bit grassy and vegetal. With 200F water, that flavor was more of a clean corn sweetness (it still vexes me that I can’t list that as a flavor on Steepster). The finish, bleeding into a slightly lasting aftertaste, is a rush of aromatic floral taste. Not sure what kind of floral it is – maybe honeysuckle? There’s also a barely tangible fruity undertone present throughout most of the session – it came and went, and I couldn’t pin it down. Probably the fruitiness which is often part of Jingmai teas. It has a surprising longevity to it, going 15 or 16 steeps. Despite the light and crisp, almost green tea-ish flavors, it does leave a bit of a lightly oiled feel in the mouth, especially in the earlier steeps.

I really need to do something to get my different floral flavors down – anybody have any suggestions? Should I go to a florist and just smell all the flowers, taking notes like a weirdo? Should I chew on them? Incense? Oils? Anybody have any experience with this? I guess it sounds a little crazy. I can tell that different floral flavors are different, but can’t place them due to lack of experience.

Anyways, regarding this tea – It’s a great value for a light daily drinker. After seeing that this is indeed a quality tea, I’m really looking forward to getting into the rest of my Farmerleaf order.

Flavors: Floral, Fruity, Grass, Nectar, Sweet, Vegetal

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 0 min, 15 sec 6 g 3 OZ / 100 ML
Rasseru

you’re like me. I have rose & floral in my repertoire.. ha

i just did a quick google & you can get it for wine & spirits.. but not flowers..? I bet theres some way to buy a kit somewhere

Rasseru

I meant you can get a ‘masters aroma kit’.. i saw a wine one with 88 different wines to smell. that with flowers would be cool

Haveteawilltravel

Mine arrived yesterday. I stuck them in storage to nap, and I’ll be digging into them soon.

Matu

Rasseru – I’ve seen those before. The wine ones can run a few hundred dollars if I recall though! o.o

Haveteawilltravel – Awesome! :D Mine have been here around two weeks now.

Inkay

I can’t wait to try these, but like Haveteawilltravel, mine just arrived so they’re resting. I also relate to the challenge of placing floral flavors and scents, particularly because they can trigger migraines for me so I avoid them. But I’d definitely like to be able to identify them while tasting, since it’s usually subtle enough for me in tea.

Thanks for taking notes, definitely making me look forward to trying this even more!

Simon Sim

I have bought the 2015 version. When I first tasted it, it was rather bland. But when I re-tasted it after one year, to my surprise, it has transformed to a fruity, pineapple like taste. So I bought 2 mini cake of the 2016 version and kept it for future drink.

Matu

Awesome! They’re certainly priced in a way which makes it easy to pick up a couple to hang on to.

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