Shuangjiang Mengku Tea Co., Ltd. (Dragon Tea House)

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Recent Tasting Notes

50

Having now purchased/tasted more pu-erh than I care to admit, I figured my first review should be one of the first few teas that I acquired. I will admit that its price per gram was what attracted me in the first place, and that I should’ve taken experts’ advice regarding “small samples before entire cakes or bings.”

I really wanted to like this tea more than I did. Upon first opening the cake, I noticed the fairly firm compression. Its bouquet presented a sweet wood smell; something akin to entering a 1700s house, or an old cabin in the woods. I was pleased that there was no hint of wo dui, but that was about where the affair ended.

The taste, at least for me, could be best summed up as warm water poured over Wheaties. No matter what “water to tea ratio” or temperature I used, the liquor seemed to have little mouth-feel, body, or even much color. The strongest flavor was the aftertaste; which can be described as somewhat sour or tart, and reminiscent of lima beans. I couldn’t help but feel that the tea tasted tired and weak; no amount of boiling water could coax out any real character.

On the positive side, I noted the relatively low amount of caffeine; this is a tea that might be fairly safe for some as bed-time approaches. Secondly, the mild taste could be appropriate for serving to someone that is hesitant to try a fermented pu-erh.

In summation, this tea reminds me of a Camry “S”. It sounds exciting, because all of the right boxes are checked (old tree, respected factory, already 10 years old, etc.), but it just isn’t the sports-car you were looking for. It sounds good on paper, but winds up being inoffensive and bland. Still, for 400 grams at less than $25, I can’t really be upset if I never drink it again.

Flavors: Lima Beans

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 30 sec 10 g 7 OZ / 200 ML

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83

This is a nice tea with an aged taste. The first thing I noticed was the color of the tea, a dark amber color. Not quite brown but not the yellow of a young sheng. It started out with what I can only call an aged taste. It did not have any wet storage taste. I presume this was dry stored. This was strong flavored in the beginning. I gave this tea ten steeps. It did develop a sweet flavor in later steeps but not an apricoty sweetness. I don’t know exactly how to describe it. Judging by the color of the tea in steep ten I think this would have gone fifteen steeps had I the desire to continue. This is an excellent priced tea for a semi aged sheng. If you can handle the strong aged taste it is an excellent tea.

I steeped this tea ten times in a 120ml gaiwan with 8.3g leaf and 200 degree water. I gave it a 10 second rinse and a 10 minute rest. I steeped it for 5 sec, 5 sec, 7 sec, 10 sec, 15 sec, 20 sec, 25 sec, 30 sec, 45 sec, and 1 min.

Preparation
200 °F / 93 °C 8 g 4 OZ / 120 ML
tea123

I’m guessing you got the 001 version e.g. http://steepster.com/teas/shuanjiang-mengku/17971-2007-mengku-mu-ye-chun-001

I found this strong and intense, but very enjoyable.

AllanK

I don’t know if it is the 001 version or not, but probably.

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