Panlan 105 Yancha Oolong

Tea type
Oolong Tea
Ingredients
Oolong
Flavors
Campfire, Mineral, Ash, Charcoal, Floral, Fruity, Honeysuckle, Roasted, Sweet, Wet Rocks
Sold in
Loose Leaf
Caffeine
Not available
Certification
Not available
Edit tea info Last updated by Daylon R Thomas
Average preparation
Not available

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From Hugo Tea Company

NOTESSPORTS DRINK | ASH | BUBBLY
2021 lot in stock as of 06.10.21. Roasted in mid-May. Expect fresh charcoal and intense minerality.

PANLAN 105 is a huang guan yin cultivar yancha (“rock tea”) from lower Wuyi, Fujian province, China. This early spring production was hand-plucked, sun-withered, manually bruised to light oxidation (think qi lan / bai ji guan), pan-fried to fix, shaped by hand in cloth sacks, and aggressively roasted in 3 rounds over charcoal pits in the classic rock tea style. Shan, our producer at Panlan tea farm, is old school—he roasts with a heavy hand, taking as much pride in his raw material as his process, and ensuring his teas will age gracefully (light roast yancha being more prone to staling). Roasted in mid-May, this lot has spent the last month airing out and settling into our storage climate.

Developed in the 1980’s, huang guan yin tea trees (also referred to as “105”), are a genetic cross between jin guan yin (itself a cross between tie guan yin and huang jin gui) and huang jin gui. Mouthful, right? Interestingly, most modern tea cultivars are cross-breedings of original (or “mother”) trees, other cross-bred cultivars, or some combination thereof. But what’s important is how a tea’s lineage informs its production and, ultimately, flavor. In 105’s case, the tea is early-budding and well-suited to cultivation in harsh, rocky microclimates like Wuyi, and offers flavors and aroma not unlike tieguanyin—florality, some salinity, and slight tang, characteristics ideal for development in roasting. Shan transplanted these teas from the zhengyan (“proper rock”) gardens of Wuyi national park to his zhoucha (“island tea”) garden decades ago; the trees have since developed hearty, far-reaching roots that extract minerals from deep in the soil. Agrochemicals are not necessary on Dafeng mountain, where these trees grow at a staggering 1000 meters elevation.

PANLAN 105 offers exhilarating layers of hard spring water and wood charcoal on top of persistent hui gan (“returning sweetness”, a lingering sweetness in the throat) and unmistakable yan yun (“rock feeling”, a sense of minerality in yancha). Producer Shan’s heavy roast prevents this light-oxidation oolong from offering too much in the way of sourness. Instead, the experience is easygoing through a lengthy gongfu session. Compared to higher oxidation rock teas, PANLAN 105 is the perfect late summer yancha. Flash-rinse to shed some roast, and gently steep at a moderate weight in water just under 200ºF for the intended experience.

VINTAGESPRING ‘21
STYLEYANCHA (“ROCK TEA”) [HUANG GUAN YIN/105]
CULTIVARHUANG GUAN YIN (“YELLOW GODDESS OF MERCY”)
REGIONYONG’AN, FUJIAN, CHINA
LOCALEPANLAN TEA FARM
ELEVATION — 1000 METERS
PRODUCERSHAN ZHONG
NOMENCLATUREHUANG (黄)—"YELLOW" | GUANYIN (观音)—"GODDESS"

STEEPING PARAMETERS
(use freshly boiled spring water)

modern, large format
[300 ml+ vessel — BOLI, large teapot]

5 grams — 195°F (90°C) — 2 minutes

traditional, small format
[150 ml- vessel — gaiwan, small teapot]

6 grams — 195°F (90°C) — 10 seconds
(rinse recommended)
+10-15 seconds each additional steep

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3 Tasting Notes

70
9 tasting notes

the notes on the bag are “sports drink, ash, bubbly” which is very… vague but this tea really is that interesting. every time i drink it i have to eat some plain rice or something to balance it out, because it really is an overwhelming flavor… a delicious, interesting flavor, but overwhelming. idk how to describe it!

Flavors: Campfire, Mineral

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85
1726 tasting notes

Sip down. It works better for tumbler/grandpa style than the Panlan Robe did, though gong fu is best to prevent it being overpowered. I like this one because it’s typical yancha in it’s characteristics, but the mineral, ash, honeysuckle, fruit combo make it stand out a little more and you can still get them brewing it thermo. I might rate it higher, but it’s at least an 85 for me.

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