Yang Qing Hao

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drank 1999 Cangmi by Yang Qing Hao
287 tasting notes

Finishing random sample bags.

2 rinses for tight compression. Somewhat choppy material, at least for the sample. 7.2g/90/212

1. Yang storage, bitter herbal, honey. Some floral (overstepped chrysanthemum tisane?) aspect to aftertaste in throat
2. Similar but more pronounced bitter. Some warming and downing feeling in face
3. Woody bitter. Warming in face

Did fourth and fifth long distracted steeps, but not too interesting otherwise.

derk

This is one I’ll remember for being my first YQH tea but ultimately it wasn’t very memorable.

m2193

The great majority of the YQHs are not especially memorable, but all the ones I’ve tried and own are Yang-stored. I wonder if ones stored by others are faring better?

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5.4/90/boiling

dry: BBQ, sweet
wet: vegetal, mint, smoke, barnyard, shoe polish

1. smoke, bright. pepper-like as well as candy-like sweetness in the aftertaste. settling and sedative
2. bitter, woody, polish. bitterness has a texture to it. Floral note in finish. lingering in breath.
3. something banana like, carrot, and spice.
4. strongly bitter. polish. floral in finish
5. medicinal. tastes like XG Jiaji

I think I stopped here since I had something to go to. It was ok I suppose, ignoring price. It was over a month ago, and I don’t remember anything else about it eliciting strong feelings either way. No idea what the current price is, but I paid $2/g for my sample some years back.

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Have had this tea for a while and despite breaking up half the cake chunks a while back for convenient access, I’m rarely inclined to reach for it. My sessions have been okay, but not very exciting or particularly enjoyable, but not sure if my preferences have just shifted. If I could go back, I would not have caked it

tea123

We call this tuition tea

real_psyence

I’d take a sample off your hands? I loved the Xishi Shenpin and was looking for a cake but only found this…how would you compare them if you’ve tried the 2007 Xishi?

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120/7.

this sample has been sitting untouched in my sample box for far too long. nevertheless, I made two key mistakes today.

1. gram amount. I’ve become a lightweight lately apparently. drinking this alone today made me pretty lightheaded after the sleepy feeling passed. Not as bad as the CYH Ming jing sample experience, but not terribly pleasant.

2. drinking after eating lunch of laksa noodles, which really affected my ability to taste.

so, this is an abbreviated note. i have no intention of purchasing YSSL anyway, though I know out of the YQH lineup it’s a favorite. it started off thick and sweet, and there was a nice cherry and dried fruit note. Lightened quickly, and then woody and a medicated leaven/神曲 note appeared that I usually only get from some of the xiaguans I’ve tried. Not much else to note.

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drank 1999 Cangmi by Yang Qing Hao
1609 tasting notes

One of the older sheng pu’er I’ve had, if not the oldest, gifted by the hand of mrmopar! How many years ago?

Camphor forward with dark and moderately bitter-smokey tobacco and suede taste but rounded by a buoyant, almost sparkling fruity sweetness that most closely resembles ripe papaya. Despite being 23 years old, there’s still a well of astringency that comes out after several steeps, which combined with the rest of the tea’s character, suggests one that has been stored on the drier end. This takes hard steeps pretty well and lasts long enough that both sessions of this sample had to be split up between 2 days.

I see mentions of Yang Qing Hao here and there on the internet; it was nice to finally try one of the teas. Thanks mrmopar <3

Flavors: Astringent, Bitter, Camphor, Heavy, Leather, Oily, Papaya, Round, Smoke, Sweet, Tobacco, Wood

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

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100
I’ve never had a tea that tastes like butter! In the first infusions butter and bacon on a slightly pithy background – the latter then giving way to a supple mix of wood and leather with buttery popcorn and then going from the ~14. Infused in a very pleasant warm sweetness of melted butter. The fact that the texture is also oily and heavy (but not as full as, for example, a velvety LME ) and absolutely soft, reinforces the impression even more and underlines the relaxed and settled character of the tea: you won’t find flowers and bright colors here. Texture, character, depth and versatility – that alone would be enough for a top rating, but the tea also has a very nice, intensive Qi to offer: it works rather gently, but is then very filling and intensively relaxing – but of a lighter/lighter quality than the Qi of Tejipin, which for me is the epitome of Stoner Qi. Really awesome tea!

Images and more at https://puerh.blog/teanotes/2004-dingji-yesheng-yqh

Flavors: Butter, Leather, Smoked, Sweet, Wood

Preparation
3 g 1 OZ / 30 ML
derk

Nice to see a new note from you. I hop over to your blog every now and then.

Alexander

Thank you derk, glad you like them! To be honest I’ve been focusing on my blog mainly because I drink lots of rather unknown teas but for such an iconic tea an entry on steepster is mandatory ;-)

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5.3/130 pot. boiling after rinse in gaiwan. light YQH house smell, but also light smoke and fruit. Has been set aside and aired out further.
1st: mushroomy, some bitter and very slight warmth. some sweetness builds in back of mouth, and it’s almost dried cherry-like. maybe some cough drop/apricot notes, but I also just ate my gummy vites earlier.
2nd was darker and almost malty, with lighter aftertaste. quickly falls from here to a more woody and thin tea. sometimes sharp w/ fine astringency on tongue. after 6th, moved to a mug where it gave up. essentially, mushroom note is pretty integrated throughout. not the worst YQH i’ve had, but hardly my favorite.

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5g, 90mL EoT hongni, Brita tap, boiling. cake edges so fair bit of dust, but not much bitterness at all. dry leaf is pretty classic YQH sweet mushroomy. No surprises. 1x rinse, didn’t time but pot has a pretty slow pour. wet leaf is also standard minty herbal medicinal, with something tart and almost acidic in there as well. I already had quite a bit of caffeine this morning, so that could be why, but this tea didn’t affect me much. Some warming and slowing, but people usually seem to report sedative feelings from this. Pretty good texture given water that usually thins out immediately. Taste was essentially linear. Really strong mushroom backbone. There’s hints of floral and medicinal notes occasionally, and some odd nuances similar to tomato and raw olives. Some sweetness in aftertaste, but not very strong. Middling session overall, and tossed into thermos after like 5 steeps total (pushed for long steep times). Thermos was nice texture, but basically no taste and a kind of honeyed edge. Hopefully subsequent sessions will be more exciting because I have quite a bit to work through…

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Finishing random sample packs.

YQH Longtuan Fengmei 5/90/212

some smoke in wet leaf.

Quick rinse followed by 10s steep.

1. Lightly woody, and rounded sweet, floral aftertaste on front of tongue w/ some heady feeling. Decent texture

2. Medicinal and hint of bitter that evolves back into the deep floral that coats the mouth.

3. Darker woody and somewhat floral, somewhat sweet. Some background mushroom like note.

4. Not much taste upfront (maybe sour woody), but a vegetal tinged floral in the breath

5. Mint like but very light

6. Dying out, leaf taste w sweet floral edge

7. Stopped here. Thinned out woody taste, slightly honeyed note

Overall this was pretty nice. Maybe it’s due to its youth, but I’ve been trying to drink through my Qi xiang cake and it’s simply nowhere near as pleasant in taste or feeling. At any rate, I’m no longer in my caking phase, having realized that I do not have puer often enough so I have no plans to buy any.

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YQH Longtuan Fengmei

Thanks to Tykal for the sample!

5.3g, 90mL gaiwan, Brita filtered tap, boiling

Dry leaf isn’t strong, or my perfume today is overwhelming everything else
10s rinse
Wet leaf: initially a hint of the YQH mushroominess, but then quite clean and the usual berry hint and slight smoke of mid aged sheng. Some darker woody aspect as well

5s: slight bitterness dissolving into a bright fruity sweetness. Something about that aftertaste reminds me of
finishing an orange or clementine, though it doesn’t stick for long

12s: some tongue numbing, grassy aspect to taste, but otherwise similar. Mostly mild. A bit slowing, and a bit of a throat aftertaste. Can see why Mattcha calls it cooling

25s: medicinal taste, but not especially bitter. Some sweetness in the throat. Same mild orange like finish in aftertaste.

Untimed: woody medicinal and some bitter notes. Also, agree with Mattcha’s honey and black licorice notes. This tea is more subtle and lighter in taste than the other YQHs which seem to fluctuate within a narrow spectrum. Bit of a heady feeling here.

KamJoved remainder since it’s midterm season. From what i remember, the slight melon note can pop up here and there, as well as some of the usual YQH mushroom, but in a much more delicate way than usual. I don’t know what the deal is with this cake, like if it’s because it’s young or what, but at moments, delicate and refined seemed apt for this tea, and that is not a descriptor I would use for a single other YQH I’ve tried. As Marco has reviewed somewhere, YQH taste tends to shift within a narrow range. But this is very different from typical YQH. Feeling-wise, it seems a bit unfocused and not too comfortable, but not sure what is just me vs. tea. I did eat beforehand, but had all the symptoms of an almost immediate, sharp blood sugar drop and had to take a break from the paper I was reading on the side since I couldn’t focus at all.

Overall I liked this tea. It tends to be on the lighter side, and notes are more subtle vs. the generally broad and darker YQH tastes. So do I like it enough to cake? Last September, I was quoted $260 USD from a different Taiwanese seller, before currency exchange, shipping, and logistics costs. At $260, I would cake it without hesitation, though it’s not really worth the hassle to me of doing so + given my backlog of other cheap teas to finish off, so I won’t. At the current $450 (90c/g) pricetag from Emmett, absolutely not. One likes what they do, sure, but this certainly does not feel worth near $500.

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5g, 90 mL in gaiwan. Was stored w Qixiang cake ordered direct from Yang in Oct., so dry leaf still has some of the characteristic sweet particular to YQH smell, even after breaking up 100g or so into a separate tin and stored separately for a month or so now. None of the characteristic Yang storage is present in taste, which surprised me. I tried a Hou De stored YQH Yiwu Chawang recently, and that very much retained YQH characteristic storage tastes, so expected more of the same here. Tastes like an upgraded Qixiang. Couldn’t judge on effects because really short on sleep back when I had this and had been drinking through an oddball variety of things one after the other at the time.

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drank 2006 Snow Buds by Yang Qing Hao
287 tasting notes

Thanks to Tykal for the sample!

5.5g, 90mL gaiwan. Brita tap, quick rinse. There’s a persistent bitterness running throughout the steepings that completely squares with the one time I overbrewed the tea flowers “tea” from Little Red Cup Teas. Slightly sweet in the same bready and then distinctly sharply bitter way. The time away from Yang’s storage helped a bit, not much of the Yang storage note, and the mint/mushroom in taste are at a minimum. A search in CT server and on LP’s Etsy and seems others noted little to no astringency and bitterness, so my experience seems out of the ordinary. Perhaps due to the particular leaf of the sample, this was not great taste wise. Feeling seemed okay, bit lethargy and drowsiness that most YQH teas impart for me. Afterwards, had a bit of a stuffy heady feeling and then was not as comfortable. I probably could’ve continued steeping, but couldn’t stand the bitterness today and stopped around steep 6-7. Scared to try the Yehgu I ordered…

Wet leaf pics (https://imgur.com/a/zBBih18). A mix of colors here. Yabao, pu, and something else?

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Thanks to R2 for the sample via Hou De!

2005 Yang Qing Hao Yiwu Cha Wang

7.2g, 90 mL gaiwan, 212f Brita filtered tap

Seems to be one of the less popular YQHs, so curious to see how it is.

Dry: a sour woodiness, maybe some leather and mushroom

In prewarmed gaiwan: stronger sour mushroom note

15s rinse

Wet: smoky, woody, slight sweet

8s: sour and bitter, resolving into mushroom initially and then light minty sweetness in throat, w/ slightly floral aspect. Reminding me of the jincha aftertaste from my session with that a while back. Slight heady feeling. Good texture.

8s: similar, stronger bitterness in an almost aspirin-like way. Stronger sourness stuck on tongue like the time I tried the 06 Double Lion, but neither as lasting nor as gripping. Aftertaste is the floral minty, but doesn’t hit throat as much.

16s: still good texture, woodier in taste. Bitterness initially like aspirin, but also like oversteeped jasmine tea. Very mushroomy in taste, slightly in aftertaste with the lighter floral backdrop

45s: pretty bitter in aged medicinal way + mushroom, w/ slight floral aftertaste. Not as good on texture.

1 min: dying off it seems. Drinkable, but not notable, classic aged sheng taste.

1 min.: definitely weaker

Thermos’d the rest. Was admittedly very tired and fairly distracted during today’s session with it being midterms and all, but this was disappointing and felt weak even though I went in with low expectations knowing that it’s one of the least liked YQHs. At any rate, current price from YQH price list of $340 for 500g is totally baffling given how it performs more or less like the jincha.

Thermos overnight: quite bitter, undertones of the sweet floral and mushroom, but very much caffeinated w jitters in effect

mrmopar

Hype for sure on some YQH teas.

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3.7/90. Taste is much of the classically Yang house taste profile, but pretty soft, some lightly pear like floral in aftertaste. Very approachable, not much bitterness or astringency at all until the kill steep. Good tea for a rainy night, but drowsy pausing feeling makes it not usually something I want to reach for. was surprised that the effect was still so strongly present at something like 60-75% of my usual ratio

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Probably not going to write detailed notes for this one again since I did it once and lost them. That was my first time trying YQH, and it was a sample from LP. I was quite enamored by that inital session and caked it not too long after. Having tried it again yesterday, I definitely would not have made the same decision if I could go back in time. It’s not that I think this is tuition tea. This is enjoyable for its own reasons (qi is pretty pleasant, not as intense as I remember some other YQHs being), but downsides are the relative lack of complexity and change from steep to steep and needs pushing a few steeps in. Forced (I.e. pushed long steeps) bitterness doesn’t resolve to be as sweet as I’d like, but this is also in the context of some particularly sweet non-puer lately. I’ve been trying not to look at teas always in terms of cost and moreso context, but I really cannot wholly divorce the two. Taste and preference are subjective of course, but I really think there are better options at this price point. I would 100% not pay what I paid for it again, and I’m not sure I can recommend caking this even at the current sale price from LP, which brings it to about 50c/g. Agree with a tea friend that this is a very pretty cake though!

Now that I’ve sold everyone on this with my lukewarm review, if anyone ever finds themself interested in buying half a cake, I’m happy to split mine. LOL

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Gongfu Sipdown (1597)!

Thank you Togo for the sample!

Though I debated saving this aged sheng for a more special occasion, my fondness of Yiwu and curiosity clearly got the best of me! It’s no where close to brewed out yet, so I’ll have to come back to it later tonight. However these first few steeps were so sweet and captivating and the absence of astringency was notable! The rich syrupy notes of pomelo and lemon practically dominate these infusions but find balance with the slight green edge, woodier undertones and soft notes of spices and camphor in the finish. I’m excited to see what the rest of the session will hold, and also somewhat scared to see how much a full cake of this might cost – tempting as it is to check!

EDIT I did end up finishing the session during a live stream with The Rabbit of Tea on IG and it was incredible! Shifted a bit away from being more fruity and instead leaned more into the smoky/spiced and camphorous realm with that same woodiness. Still tasted somewhat of sweet pomelo throughout, though!

Tea Photos: https://www.instagram.com/p/CY9310DOdLN/

Song Pairing: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i73eUf7SQZM&ab_channel=JasonCollett-Topic

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85

This tea is a great example of YQH productions. It has a pleasant taste profile which makes it easy to drink, soft mouthfeel, strong huigan and expansive aftertaste. Above all, however, it presents a strong, dreamy qi that is anything but aggressive. It is surely a feel-good kind of tea. Even with heavier brewing parameters, It also lasts for a while, easily surpassing the 200ml/g mark.

In terms of specific notes, there are aromas of whiskey and licorice root. I can’t detect much bitterness or astringency at all. The taste is a little sour and woody with notes of apple and straw among others. In any case, this is certainly not the tea beaming with complexity.

Flavors: Apple, Licorice, Sour, Straw, Sweet, Whiskey, Wood

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec 7 g 3 OZ / 100 ML

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72

This one is similar to other YQH productions, but also more pungent at the same time. However, neither the taste profile nor its texture is particularly engaging and I didn’t find the cha qi to be very pleasant either.

Dry leaves have an aroma of almond shells in a Chinese medicine shop, while after the rinse I can smell wood in a fireplace too. The taste is woody, herbacecous and somewhat sour. There are notes of sage, burned butter, nettle as well as a protracted camphor one. The aftertaste has both some bitterness and biting sourness.

Initially, the liquor is quite thin and astringent. Once the leaves open up, the mouthfeel is rather airy, creamy and a little bubbly.

Flavors: Almond, Biting, Bitter, Burnt Food, Butter, Camphor, Fireplace, Herbaceous, Medicinal, Sage, Sour, Traditional Chinese Medicine, Wood

Preparation
Boiling 0 min, 15 sec 7 g 4 OZ / 120 ML

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2007 Yang Qing Hao Huangshan Lingya

6.1g, 80 mL shuiping, Poland spring bottled water

Dry leaf has classic sweet mushroomy smell of YQH

20s rinse

Wet leaf has sweet, almost incense-y smoky smell along with the sweet mushroomy note

8s: a mushroomy, slight medicinal sourness with a slight sweet aspect that fades almost immediately. Slight minty cooling on aftertaste that recedes back into a mushroomy note

9s: a lightly woody medicinal bitterness, similar sourness to before, but much less of the mushroom. Something citrus/tang like to it. Leaves tongue dry, but a shifting sour taste to slight sweet aftertaste slightly in throat. Definitely tastes like something my mom would make me drink when I was sick as a kid. Calming drowsiness, slight warmth

9s: crisp woody medicinal taste. Slight bitterness, much lightened from before. Sourness also lightened. Astringent again, leaves tongue and teeth feeling dry. Much lighter aftertaste.

10s: initially an oddly chalky candy like taste a la Smarties. Sweeter overall taste, but retaining general woodiness and slight sour medicinal taste from before. Still drying on the tongue, slight sweet aftertaste. Slight warming. Caffeine is kicking in.

12s: slight dark fruity aspect, generic slight medicinal clean aged sheng taste otherwise. Still astringent

15s: lightly fruity, sort of generic YQH taste. Can’t really pick any notes out. Slight drying

17s: similar. Not really an aftertaste other than slightly dry tongue, but aroma in back of mouth and upper throat

23s: same generic mushroomy, clean crisp YQH taste

37s: a slightly plum note amidst the rest of the slightly bitter YQH slight mushroomy background. Slightly bitter aftertaste

37s: darker taste, slightly drying. Slight sweetness/floral aspect to aftertaste. Can’t quite find the words for it, but I’m enjoying it

37s: similar

40s: gentle sweetened profile. A little drying

1 min: light Chinese herbal medicine taste. Still drying

1 min. 30s: lightly plummy aftertaste, but taste not too interesting, though comforting. Slight warming settling in again

2 min: a medicinal, slightly plummy taste, though light. Slightly drying

3 min.: a light, very slightly plum note

5min.: much lightened. Will move to thermos.

overall: light warming, relaxing qi. Made me want to nap, but caffeine kept me unable to actually fall asleep. I expected to like this better based on other reviews/tasting notes, but the drying aftertaste of many teas really kept me ambivalent to this one overall, so if this were still for sale from YQH, wouldn’t be one I’d cake

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drank 2007 Xishi Shenpin by Yang Qing Hao
287 tasting notes

2007 YQH Xishi Shenpin
7.0g, 100 mL gaiwan, boiling, complex syrup water

Dry leaf has a dark mushroomy smell

17s rinse

Wet leaf has taken on a minty herbal hint as well

7s: soft and minty, with a brothy aspect. Slight sweet aftertaste.

9s: wet leaf has a slight incense like aspect. Muted bitter taste. Slight warming, relaxing

15s: still a muted woody base. Similar slight warming and relaxing. Slight sweet, crisp aftertaste

23s: slight medicinal bitter with a mushroom hint. Sweet aftertaste, slight numbing in mouth, slight warming mostly in back and back of neck. Slightly drowsy

32s: medicinal bitterness. Slight sweet aftertaste. Relaxation and warming

20s: soft and rounded woody taste, with a slight sour medicinal note. Slight sweet aftertaste.

30s: comforting medicinal profile. Slight sweet aftertaste but fades almost immediately

45s: a sour, slightly bitter medicinal

30s: a bittersweet mushroom

1 min: slight bitter, herbal, medicinal

2 min: much stronger bitter than before. A coating bitterness lingers in aftertaste. Slight warming.

2 min.: bitter mostly receded. A sort of hollowed mushroomy taste. Slight warming.

3 min: slightly bittersweet.

5 min: not too much taste

20 min.: a tart, almost bitter and bright fruity. Will thermos the remainder.

Overall: This particular tea made me feel too tired to complete work but also too caffeinated to fall asleep. Thus, this was probably the wrong choice when I was supposed to be diligently preparing for exams, leading to overall none too pleasant connotations when I struggled on my primary midterm this morning. Shh, let me scapegoat this tea in peace. Was interesting to try, but didn’t quite command the current $/g ($2/g) for me. The cake price is especially hard to argue for when you can get similarly interesting offerings from Yang for half the price or lower (though apparently YQH has had erratic price shifts somewhat recently). I’m not sure if I would’ve caked prior to price increase, but I certainly would not with the current pricing.

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drank 2006 Tianpin by Yang Qing Hao
287 tasting notes

2006 YQH Tianpin

7.1g, 100 mL gaiwan, 212f, complex syrup water

Dry leaf has a dark aged herbal mushroomy smell

17s rinse

Wet leaf smells of slight mint and dark fruity notes

8s: tart, fruity aspect, and a slight brothy aspect with slight medicinal bitterness. Heating and relaxing. Sweet light fruity juicy (almost pineapple like) aftertaste.

10s: more medicinal bitter with sweet aftertaste. Slight cooling in mouth.

12s: a spiced medicinal. Slight drying. Sweet aftertaste that moves slightly to throat.

18s: lighter than before, with a slight mint edged sweet aftertaste

25s: similar

45s: darker and stronger. Astringent. But overall nice. Seems like this might need to be pushed on steep timing either from the tea or the water (TDS was 75 when measured)

1 min.: general herbal medicinal profile. Complex syrup water probably at play, but light sweet aftertaste is lasting and pleasant.

1 min.: general aged mushroomy herbal taste

2 min.: stronger bitterness, slight astringency and itchy throat

3 min.: something like a stray cherry skin note amidst water. Not much taste otherwise.

5 min.: soft woody base. Will thermos remainder

Overall: seemed to be lacking in much qi for me. Not the most exciting tea to begin with, and a rather poor value proposition when $/g ($1.60 at time of writing) is taken into consideration.

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2007 YQH Jin cha

7.1g, Brita filtered tap, 212f, 100 mL gaiwan

dry leaf: dark herbal, slight mustiness

1x 10s rinse

wet leaf: barest hint of smoke, aged sheng dried fruits

5s: stronger smoke and woody aroma in wet leaf. bitter initially with hint of mushroom. Bitter in that medicinal sort of way. Aftertaste is crisp and floral immediately, almost perfumey, before shifting to something seemingly like either mint or kale (in that dry leafy green sort of way)

7s: very strong bitterness vs. previous cup, leaving tongue slightly dry before floral aspect moves in and quickly shifts to an arugula/kale like edge. the floral edge is really quite pleasant. I can’t stand the later steeps of oolongs that start to obtain the soapy florals, but this is that intense floral without the soapiness. aftertaste is concentrated in the front of mouth, but slight in throat/back of mouth. If you’ve smelled Diptyque’s Do Son before, this floral reminds me of that in some way lol.

9s: more subdued bitterness. upfront taste is lighter. Aftertaste is lacking. Not much in the way of florals, only a light mint/vegetal edge that quickly disappears. Nothing lingers like before.

12s: Bitterness w/ just a slight sweet edge, almost a honeyed floral. Slight floral reappears, and disappears almost as quick in aftertaste. mouth drying is rather disappointing and unpleasant when not accompanied by the previous burst of florals.

23s: a mellowed honey before a light bitterness appears and disappears almost immediately. I can’t remember ever having a tea that went from 100 to 0 so quickly

30s: same as before, but even lighter

40s: same as before, but less honey, more bitter

1 min: the same boring light sweet w/ barest hint of bitter. I’m sure there’s more interesting bagged tea out there. Capping this session for the thermos, and probably won’t update. I wouldn’t bet on this becoming anything interesting.

No real qi to speak of, which I thought might’ve been due to water, but same as AllanK’s review below seems to confirm that. I had this on an empty stomach, and I’m shaking as I’m typing this, so the caffeine is definitely there.

I know this is basically the cheapest tea in Yang’s lineup, but wow is this disappointing overall. I’ve never been so impressed by something as early as steep 2 (post-rinse) to being as disappointed by the remainder. AllanK’s review seems to suggest longevity, but I might as well have stopped by steep 3 from this session. This was a single session purchase for me, and I doubt I’ll order more. I suspect this might lend itself to grandpa style brewing better, so it’s more consistent overall. Steep 2 was incredibly impressive to me, which is what makes this overall so disappointing. Like the brilliance of fireworks, and then poof, gone. If JHCW felt like a musical composition, this is a magic trick, and then everything disappears. If this review sounds dramatic, I promise it’s because the tea was too. what in the world?

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drank 2006 Blended Brick by Yang Qing Hao
287 tasting notes

2006 YQH Blended Brick

212f, mix of Brita filtered tap and Poland Spring, 100 mL gaiwan, 6.0g

dry leaf smells lightly dark and mushroom earthy

1x 5s rinse, which smells almost like a shou. Very clean, but also musty and earthy in that sort of shou way. Something crisp and sweet on the edges. Leaf material is pretty choppy in my single session sample.

5s: aged sheng woody medicinal. Easy drinking and leaves a sweet, crisp aftertaste that fades.

10s: slight bitterness in additional notes from previous cup. some weird and very offputting element that I can’t really describe is present as well. A light sense of the tea lingers in throat and mouth

32s: very pretty burnt amber color. stronger bitter woody medicinals. bitterness slightly lingers.

1 min: dried woody medicinal w pill-like bitterness, same as before. not a strong aftertaste, but generally tea just feels lingering in mouth, which is interesting. slight warming in upper body (back, upper arms, and light sweat on forehead)

1 min 15s: less interesting. Continued woody sticks w tiniest hint of florals and sweet in ending, w the sugared floral like aftertaste that sits in throat.

1 min 30s: bitter woody medicinal again.

2 min: similar

2 min 30s: bitter and less complex than before. drying in throat

3 min: fading a bit. weakened bitterness, emphasizing the darker woodiness

4 min: boring, but if this taste profile with crisp wood and light sweetness in the edges was in a cheap daily drinker, I would tong immediately. easy easy drinking, all the way

5 min: bittersweet water lol

10 min: very light wood, w touch of water.

tossed into thermos, but not expecting anything much. I’ve also realized all my thermos’d teas are starting to taste the same (not in a bad way though… I don’t mind), so I can either figure out how to deep clean the darn thing or just go with it. will not update unless it blows me away for whatever reason

overall: some warming effect. Taste is nothing memorable, but when it was available for purchase, not too expensive (relative to YQH, that is). Doubt I’d reach for it often if i owned a brick due to taste profile. wish I hadn’t lost my notes for Jinhao Chawang, bc in some parts, this brick gave a similar aftertastes, but much less refined, less sweetness, and stronger bitterness than the JHCW.

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