90

My sample is a nice, loosely pressed piece of cake with medium sized green leaves. Smells very “green.”

Brews a medium yellow. This is a medium strength young sheng with medium-low bitterness. Super strong honey aroma and flavor, the bottom of my cha hai smells just like warm honey. Other notes of green wood, clay, wildflowers, and grain/baked goods.

This is a very nice tea, especially for being on the cheaper end of YS’s 2016 lineup. It’s a shame though how pu’erh prices have gone up since I started the habit, I remember when I bought the 2012 Wuliang in 2012 it was only $25-ish.

Flavors: Clay, Flowers, Grain, Green Wood, Honey, Mineral

Preparation
205 °F / 96 °C 0 min, 15 sec 5 g 3 OZ / 90 ML
tanluwils

I really liked this one. Very clear and pale liquor. Clay is an interesting note!

tperez

It’s a good tea! I guess you could also call it a “mineral” taste, but it reminded me of the smell of the clay when I took some ceramic classes.

tanluwils

Water quality and brewing devices will always influence the tea. What did you use to brew?

tperez

Purified bottled water and a small jian shui pot, so maybe the clay flavor came from the pot, but I haven’t noticed it in other teas

JC

I’ve had some teas being influenced by the clay more than others, I’d recommend trying it in different vessels, but I’ve had Puerh taste like minerals before.

tanluwils

Yes. I remember Scott’s Qing Mei Shan, Ku Zhu Shan, Huang Shan Gu Shu and others having more mineral elements in later steeps.

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Comments

tanluwils

I really liked this one. Very clear and pale liquor. Clay is an interesting note!

tperez

It’s a good tea! I guess you could also call it a “mineral” taste, but it reminded me of the smell of the clay when I took some ceramic classes.

tanluwils

Water quality and brewing devices will always influence the tea. What did you use to brew?

tperez

Purified bottled water and a small jian shui pot, so maybe the clay flavor came from the pot, but I haven’t noticed it in other teas

JC

I’ve had some teas being influenced by the clay more than others, I’d recommend trying it in different vessels, but I’ve had Puerh taste like minerals before.

tanluwils

Yes. I remember Scott’s Qing Mei Shan, Ku Zhu Shan, Huang Shan Gu Shu and others having more mineral elements in later steeps.

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Profile

Bio

Tea addict since around 2011.

My favorites are pu’erhs, blacks/reds, and roasted oolongs, but I have a growing interest in good whites, and sometimes enjoy greens.

Currently trying to get an education, working a part time job, expand my ceramics/pottery skills, and trying to make the best of existential crisis.

Other than tea I love the outdoors, ceramics, guitar, and diy/building things.

I started a tea blog in February 2018, though admittedly I haven’t updated it much lately.
TheMellifiedCup.Wordpress.com

When I give a tea a numerical rating it’s simply meant to reflect a balance of how well I enjoyed the tea and how it compares to others of the same style. I don’t follow any universal rating criteria, and my ratings are mainly meant for my own use, to remember what I though of a tea and if I want to repurchase.

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Clearwater, FL

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