1999 Aged Liu An Basket of Anhui

Tea type
Black Tea
Ingredients
Not available
Flavors
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Sold in
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Caffeine
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Certification
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Edit tea info Last updated by nasieo1
Average preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 2 min, 15 sec

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  • “2g tea in 50mL yixing Flash rinse, 205 degree water 1st 10 seconds Woodsy, aged, sweetish, no bitterness 2nd 30 seconds Very similar to first, but a little richer; strongly reminiscent of an aged...” Read full tasting note
    78

From Yunnan Sourcing

Anhui varietal of black tea processed in the traditional “wo dui” method. “Wo dui” or fermentation piling process is a precursor to the method used to produced ripe pu-erh. This basket of tea has been aged 10 years and produces a aromatic almost sweet liquor with a deep red color. As you drink this tea smell the cup (between pours) and you will a notice it smells alot like ripe pu-erh.

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1 Tasting Note

78
311 tasting notes

2g tea in 50mL yixing

Flash rinse, 205 degree water
1st 10 seconds
Woodsy, aged, sweetish, no bitterness
2nd 30 seconds
Very similar to first, but a little richer; strongly reminiscent of an aged puerh.
3rd 1 min….and out to 3-4 minutes by the 8th infusion, still similar—woodsy tea. Quite nice, pleasant, but not really revelatory.

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 1 min, 0 sec
Matti Kalliokorpi

Where did you find a 50ml Yixing teapot? Those are rare :-)

teaddict

Before the yixing envy starts, bear in mind that the only things I am sure of regarding my tiny pots is that they are ceramic of some kind, hold tea, and cost $5.99 apiece from Wing Hop Fung, my local Chinatown tea shop. Even so, it took a year or so of stopping in every 2-3 months to get a little set of them.

Here’s most of the ‘family’ out for their scrub and restart on seasoning:
http://www.flickr.com/photos/debunix/4557338076/in/set-72157621917341148
And probably the best closeup for looking at the clay of this group
http://www.flickr.com/photos/debunix/4319889299/in/set-72157621917341148

TeaGull

I don’t care if they’re only $5.99, I’m still jealous. I need to try to find some like these.

Matti Kalliokorpi

Pots like these are eminently usable. No matter if they’re zisha or not. Teapots from Guangdong are more frequently small than those from Yixing. Perhaps at least some of these are from Guangdong. The way the chinatown shop name is romanized sounds like the owner might be from around there.

teaddict

Unfortunately, my shop seems to have stopped carrying these—the ons I’ve seen in the past year have a single spout hole, and these have a six hole strainer.

TeaGull

That makes a big difference, the six hole strainer. Sometime, you can fix a bit of stainless mesh over the single hole to prevent it from clogging frequently.

teaddict

Should add: found a place where I’d more carefully documented the volumes and these little pots are mostly 60mL—only one of them was really 50mL. I did pick up an even tinier pot, listed here by Dragon Tea House on e-bay as 40mL, but my measured capacity (full to the brim, too full to put lid on without spilling) is 30mL.

http://cgi.ebay.com/Mini-Flat-Xi-Shi-Yixing-Zisha-Clay-Tea-Pot-40ml-/230391946760?pt=LH_DefaultDomain_0&hash=item35a46e1e08

It’s so small it’s not easy to fill without spilling from my full-sized kettle, but it was brilliant with a spot of very expensive aged puerh from Essence of Tea.

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